Friday, October 26, 2012

Chapter 4 - Animal Farm:

In this chapter , You see how the animals stick to their plan with not doing anything that the humans want. The animals are all on their own. Animals everywhere are finding out about what the animals have done, theyve made history, and all these other creatures look up to them. They even changed the name from "Manor Farm" to "Animal Farm." to let everyone know that they are in charge now. At least thats what they thought. Mr. Jones and the humans eventually came back to retrieve what was theirs and to take over again. At first, the humans were winning. The geese, and ducks didnt do much to stop them. But once they got into the barn, once again, the animals won. The horse even killed the human, but he felt bad because he didnt do it intentionaly. I feel like this chapter shows that when you want something really bad, and you go to extremes to acheive that, that it can affect other people too. They wanted the barn to themselves, and they got to keep it, but with consequences. This shows a big level of revolution.

1 comment:

  1. Great analysis of the plot and summary again. What is this "big level of revolutions?" How do you define "big level?" I want more evaluating, connecting, creating, inferring, predicting, questioning, and vocabulary building. What do you believe Orwell's message is? How does he use satire to send this message about humanity? 6.5/12

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