In George Orwell's famous allegorical novel about the evils and inhumanities that intertwine in totalitarian states and their methods of government and representatives called Animal Farm, George Orwell does much more than simply expressing the torment and fear of animals The Russian people survived under the rule of Joseph Stalin. reveals the painful truth about the ever-present quality of fragility and betrayal between the human race, social structures, and individual values through symbolic characters, events, and even the reader's inner thinking as they analyze the ever-evolving complexity that is the Animal. farm. An example of Orwell's display of this human trait of mutiny is in the old major's speech in the stable, he does this in a way that one might not immediately see as an act of betrayal, instead he lets the context and common sense of the reader to lead to this revelation of a hard human truth. The old major shows the basis of treachery in his desire to overthrow a ruler who has allowed him to live by his own hands, shelter and means of labor. He resented the hand that fed him into the role of superior when in reality he received the most luxurious of all animals, a life well lived, wisdom, respect, and an inheritance among all the other animals on the farm. This shows how the root of human betrayal is ingratitude and taking for granted everything one has given you, but in your greed you see their actions as injustices and therefore justify treasonous acts because of your resentment towards their class, belonging or even way of life. , also shows that human beings can abandon and defame the institutions, influential people and places that have shaped who they have become and instead of being kind and loyal betray them for their own personal gain or... in the middle of paper.. ....the outside of you giving up your morals out of fear and allowing your fear to give way to the suffering of not only yourself but those you care about. The final act of betrayal was on the part of the pigs when they transformed into humans, they allowed themselves to become everything they hated, thus betraying their values and morals for material luxuries and complete control, proving that we as people often allow our own search for material. things go against everything we believe, everyone we love, and everything we could have been if we hadn't succumbed to the plague of betrayal. In conclusion, Orwell's novel not only taught you lessons of oppressive abuse by governments out of need for power but of sacrificing one's integrity, loved ones and oneself by committing various acts of betrayal that affect one's soul, the one's body, the lives of many and the future of all.
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