Animal Farm Study Guide Answers Key
Mr. and Mrs. Jones | Own The Manor Farm; Mr. Jones is selfish in that he does not always take good care of his animals. |
Old Major | Prize-winning boar; old; respected by the other animals. |
Bluebell, Jessie, and Pincher | Farm dogs; Pincher is male. The puppies of Bluebell and Jessie will become Napoleon’s personal guard and hit-squad. |
Boxer | Work horse who can do the work of three horses; not intelligent, but faithful to principles of Animalism and does what he is told. Has amazing self-discipline and loyalty |
Clover | Motherly mare; has given birth to four foals but they were sold. Faithful follower of Animalism. Can read only a few letters. |
Muriel | White goat; she can read better than the horses can, so she reads the Commandments for Clover. |
Benjamin | Cynical donkey; oldest animal on the farm; refuses to get involved in either side of debates; loyal friend to Boxer. |
Mollie | Vain and silly mare who pulls the Jones’s carriage whenever they ride into town. She enjoys a life of luxery; leaves Animal Farm to escape the work (traitor |
Moses | Mr. Jones’s pet raven; a spy and tattle-tale. Animals hated him because he tells silly stories and does no work |
The Cat | Is interested only in what is best for herself; not trustworthy; totally selfish. |
Napolean | Lively boar being raised by Jones for sale. Ardent believer in Animalism, organizes committees to accomplish goals; reads Mr. Jones’s books and comes up with idea for the windmill. Leads animals in The Battle of the Cowshed and is wounded. |
Snowball | Large, fierce-looking boar being raised for sale. He doesn’t talk much but works behind the scenes to get his way. (He’s a sneaky plotter.) |
Squealer | Most persuasive speaker; can tell animals that black is white and they believe him. Hops from side to side and whisks his tail when he talks. Serves as mouthpiece for Napoleon. |
The Sheep | Act as a group and have no individual character. They are totally controlled by Napoleon, who uses them to harass anyone who would argue against him. |
Mr. Pilkington | Owns Foxwood farm. Lives a life of leisure, hunting and fishing, and is careless about his farm. |
Mr. Fredrick | Owns Pinchfield farm.Tough shrewd man constantly involved in lawsuits; manages his farm very efficiently, cheats Animal Farm; blows up their windmill. |
Mr. Whymper | A solicitor (lawyer)Liaison between Napoleon and the neighboring farms. |
For what purpose did Major call the meeting of the animals? | He wanted to tell them about his vision of a happier time for animals, a time when the animals would live together as equals without being controlled or abused by mankind. |
After they vote and decide rats are “comrades”, Major summarizes his points for the animals to remember. These are the principles of Animalism | *whatever goes on two legs is an enemy; whatever goes on four legs or has wings is a friend;*animals must not come to resemble man;*do not adopt man’s vices—no sleeping in beds, smoking, drinking alcohol, engaging in trade or using money*no animal must tyrannize over another animal*no animal must ever kill another animal*all animals are equal, no matter whether weak or strong, clever or simple |
What is “Beasts of England”? For what does it stand? | the song that inspires the revolution; it represents the hope of the animals for a better future |
Why did the pigs get the job of teaching and organizing? | The other animals recognize that the pigs are more clever than the others, so they |
are trusted to take on the responsibilities of organizing and teaching the others. | … |
What actually brought about the rebellion? | Farmer Jones had been away all day on business and when he returned he got drunk instead of feeding the animals, so they were very hungry. They broke into the food stores and when Jones and his farm hands tried to chase the animals away from the food, the animals fought and ran the men off the farm. |
What were the 7 commandments? | 1. Whatever goes upon two legs is an enemy.2. Whatever goes upon four legs, or has wings, is a friend.3. No animal shall wear clothes.4. No animal shall sleep in a bed.5. No animal shall drink alcohol.6. No animal shall kill any other animal.7. All animals are equal. |
Who gained leadership of the animals? Why? | Someone was needed to organize the animals so that they could work efficiently, and since the pigs were the cleverest, they got this responsibility. |
Describe the animal’s flag? | The animal’s flag was green to represent the fields, and had a white hoof and a horn on it. |
What happened to the milk and apples? How did Squealer explain the use? | The pigs were eating the milk and the apples. Squealer explained that all the thinking and planning they were doing required this extra nutrition. |
What was the Battle of the Cowshed? | Jones with the help of other farmers attempted to take back the farm, but the animals fought them off. |
What was Snowball’s role in the Battle of the Cowshed? | Snowball was the brave leader in the battle. He planned the animal’s strategies in advance and fought along side them, even being wounded. |
Describe the relationship between Napoleon and Snowball | they dont agree on anything |
What topic divided the animals? Which pig was for and which was against? | Snowball introduced the idea of building a windmill that would produce electricity and make the animals’ work easier. He was very ambitious and drew up plans for the windmill. Napoleon looked at the plans, then urinated on them, not saying a word |
How did Napoleon get rid of Snowball and gain full control of the animals? | Napoleon offered to teach the nine puppies born to Jessie and Bluebell. He secretly trained them to be his personal guard, and then had them chase Snowball off the farm. |
How did Squealer justify Napoleon’s take-over to the others? | Propaganda: persuaded the animals that Napoleon had their best interests at heart and that he would be like a father and make the best decisions for their welfare—that they might make mistakes if allowed to decide matters for themselves. Since they all agreed that the pigs were the smartest animals, the other animals trusted Napoleon to take care of them. |
What two sayings did Boxer adopt | “I will work harder” and Napoleon is always right.” |
Why did Napoleon in fact change his mind and decide to have the animals build the windmill? | He wanted to unite the animals—he won over the followers of Snowball. |
For what purpose did Napoleon begin trading? | The animals could not produce all they needed to make the windmill work—the mechanical parts—so they needed money to buy these things, therefore, they would have to trade some of their produce. |
Why did the pigs say they had to move into the house? | They needed a quiet place to work because they had to do so much thinking. |
Who did Napoleon blame for the windmill disaster? Why? | Snowball was made out to be a spy and sore loser who wanted to destroy the farm since he could not run things his way. |
Why did the hens have to give up their eggs? | Napoleon needed more produce to sell to get money, so he told the hens that they would get no food until they agreed to give up their eggs. Nine died before the rest capitulated. Though the hens obviously had been starved to death, the pigs put out the story that they had died of an infectious disease caused by living in unsanitary conditions, propaganda aimed at blaming the victims of tyranny for their own deaths. |
How has Snowball’s role been changed by the end of Chapter 6? | Napoleon with the help of Squealer have convinced the animals that they don’t remember things correctly, and that Snowball had fooled them all because he was really working for the humans from the start to destroy the farm |
Why did Napoleon begin executing animals? | He wanted to make the animals aware that anyone who opposed him might be executed, so they would be too afraid to question his decisions or argue. |
Whom did Boxer blame for the executions? What was his solution? | Boxer still trusts Napoleon, so although his mind is troubled, he believes the fault must lie in the animals themselves. |
Why did the animals sing the “Beasts of England” song slowly and mournfully as they | … |
were gathered on the knoll? | Even though man had been run off the farm, their dream of a happy future was not coming true. |
Why was the singing of “Beasts of England” banned? | The song reminded the animals of the original principles of Animalism, and Napoleon wants them to forget. Squealer tells them that the song is silly now because the revolution has been achieved and so they don’t need to sing it. |
In what ways has Napoleon set himself apart from the other animals? | *He does not mingle with them—no meetings.*has a private room in the house*has special titles (Father of all Animals, Comrade, Napoleon)*has a guard to protect him*poem written in his honor*a food-taster to prevent poisoning*holidays established in his honor |
How did Frederick cheat Napoleon? | He bought wood from Animal Farm, but paid with forged bill |
What moved the animals to attack Frederick and his men at the Battle of the Windmill? | They used dynamite to blow up the second windmill. |
Why was Comrade Napoleon “dying”? | he was drunk and got hug over |
What special treatment did pigs and piglets get? | Besides eating all the apples and milk, their food rations are not reduced during the hard winter. The other animals must stand aside and give them right-of-way when they are out walking. All the piglets were fathered by Napoleon because he is the only boar (porkers are neutered pigs) and his children get to wear green ribbons on their tails. They also are to have a special school built for them to attend |
What happened to Boxer? | Boxer worked so hard that his lung gave out and he needed to retire; but Napoleon sold him to the butcher to be killed and made into glue and dog food; Squealor put out the lie that Napoleon had paid for hospitalization, and that Squealer himself had been at Boxer’s bedside when he died. The pigs used the money to buy whiskey. |
The animals on the farm worked hard. What was their comfort in retirement? | They were not working for man; they were working for themselves and were free. |
What was Clover startled to discover? | The pigs had learned to walk on their hind legs. |
What commandment took the place of the Seven Commandments? | All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others. |
What did the other animals see when they looked in to the farmhouse? | They saw the pigs playing cards with the men. Then a fight broke out over a card game, and the animals could not tell the pigs from the humans. |
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Animal Farm was published on the heels of World War II, in England in 1945 and in the United States in 1946. George Orwell wrote the book during the war as a cautionary fable in order to expose the seriousness of the dangers posed by Stalinism and totalitarian government. Orwell faced several obstacles in getting the novel published. First, he was putting forward an anti-Stalin book during a time when Western support for the Soviet Union was still high due to its support in Allied victories against Germany. Second, Orwell was not yet the literary star he would quickly become. For those reasons, Animal Farm appeared only at the war’s end, during the same month that the United States dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The tragically violent events of the war set the stage well for Orwell’s fictional manifesto against totalitarianism.
Study guide for Animal Farm by George Orwell, with plot summary, character analysis, and literary analysis. Animal-farm-study-guide-the-mcgraw-hill-answer-key 1/7 Downloaded from blog.onshoreoutsourcing.com on May 17, 2021 by guest Books Animal Farm Study Guide The Mcgraw Hill Answer Key As recognized, adventure as skillfully as experience not quite lesson, amusement, as competently as promise.
Animal Farm was Orwell’s first highly successful novel (the second being 1984), and it helped launch him out of the minor fame of an essayist into the stratosphere of acclaimed fiction. Despite publishers’ initial hesitance toward the book, the public in both Britain and the United States met it with enthusiasm. In the United States alone, it sold 600,000 copies in four years. Animal Farm was translated into many languages, proving its universal reach.
Animal Farm is an allegory or fable, a fairy tale for adults. Orwell uses animal characters in order to draw the reader away from the world of current events into a fantasy space where the reader can grasp ideas and principles more crisply. At the same time, Orwell personifies the animals in the tradition of allegory so that they symbolize real historical figures. In their own universe, people can become desensitized even to terrible things like deception, mistreatment, and violence. By demonstrating how these things occur in an allegorical world, Orwell makes them more clearly understood in the real world. For instance, in Animal Farm’s public execution, Orwell lays bare the matter of execution by having the dogs rip out the supposed traitors’ throats. In this scene, the reader is led to focus not as much on the means of execution as on the animalistic, atrocious reality of execution itself.
Animal Farm is also a powerful satire. Orwell uses irony to undermine the tenets of totalitarianism, specifically that of Stalinism.
Animal Farm Study Guide Answers Key English
Almost instantly after the novel’s publication, it became the subject of revisionism. In one instance, the CIA made an animated film version of the book in which they eliminated the final scene and replaced it with a new revolution in which the animals overthrow the pigs (see the 1999 Hallmark film version for another change in ending). They distributed the film as anti-communist propaganda, which is ironic when one considers the novel’s own censure of the propagandist rewriting of history. This revision and others over the years (whether in changing the story or interpreting it) contributed to the public’s general misunderstanding of Orwell. Though he was staunchly anti-Stalinist, he was certainly not a capitalist. In fact, he was a revolutionary socialist. During his lifetime, Orwell did little to detract from his skewed public image. He was a man of contradictions--Louis Menand calls him “a middle-class intellectual who despised the middle class and was contemptuous of intellectuals, a Socialist whose abuse of Socialists ... was as vicious as any Tory’s.”
Animal Farm is universally appealing for both the obvious and the subtle messages of the fable. While the allegory’s characters and events are deeply or specifically symbolic, Orwell’s narrator softens some of the punches by including a gentle and un-opinionated narrator. The third-person narrator is outside the animals’ world, so he does not relate any of the lies, hardships, or atrocities firsthand. Rather, he is a quiet observer.
Moreover, the narrator relates the tale from the perspective of the animals other than the dogs and pigs. In this way, the narrator’s approach to the story resembles Orwell’s approach to life. That is, just as Orwell developed empathy for the working class by experiencing working-class life firsthand, the narrator’s tale is based on the experience of someone who is not quite an insider but no longer just an outsider. The narrator’s animal perspective, as well as his reluctance to opine, fits well with the naivete of the animal characters.
One example of the narrator’s indifferent approach to the tale is evident when the pigs use the money from Boxer’s slaughter to buy a case of whisky. Rather than relating this event in stark terms, the narrator states impartially that on the day appointed for Boxer’s memorial banquet, a carton arrives at the farmhouse followed by loud singing and “the word went round that from somewhere or other the pigs had acquired the money to buy themselves another case of whisky” (126). The scene also exemplifies how the narrator’s naïve perspective produces an drily ironic effect.
Here are two other examples of ironic humor in the novel. In Chapter I, the narrator describes “Beasts of England” as “a stirring tune, something between ‘Clementine’ and ‘La Cucaracha’” (32). Anyone familiar with those two songs knows that they are childish ditties. In Chapter IX, the narrator reports that the pigs find “a large bottle of pink medicine” in the farmhouse’s medicine cabinet. They send it out to Boxer, who is deathly ill. We can assume that the medicine, being pink, is the antacid Pepto-Bismol, hardly useful to someone on his deathbed. By lightening his allegory with ironic humor, Orwell makes the story more palatable without taking away from his message.