Who gained leadership of the animals why

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Who gained leadership of the animals why

Answered by Cat on 27 Feb 02:36

That would be Napoleon. He was manipulative and strong willed. Napoleon, one of the three pigs who originally helped spearhead the rebellion on Manor Farm, becomes the supreme leader of the animals over time. As he is a clever pig, beyond simple intelligence, he implements education programs for the young, drives Snowball from Animal Farm, has his enemies butchered, and engages in human behavior once forbidden.

Animal Farm In Animal farm by George Orwell there is a big leader and many followers. I will only be focusing on two main characters in my opinion. Which is leader and a follower and how the leader takes over and the follower loses his freedom. The leader in my opinion is Napoleon. I chose him because he runs the whole farm and changes the rules that all the animals agreed on and wouldn’t break the rules. Napoleon gains all this power by raising 9 big black scary dogs and Napoleon gets them on animals when they do not follow his rules. This is reason why none of animals stand up to him because of those dogs. Since he has those big dogs he can do whatever he wants to the farm and tell the animals what to do. Napoleon does not give the hard working animals food or any free time you have to keep that in mind as well. He makes the animals work basically for free ! Napoleon is just chilling this whole time while all the animals are working , he is drinking, eating ,sleeping in Mr.Jones bed. Nobody in the farm likes him , everyone is just too scared to stand up to him. This is…show more content…
I chose Benjamin because he is working a lot on the farm and making the windmill. Of course him and Boxer are the hardest working and that is because of their strength. Benjamin does not like what he sees what is happening to the farm , not one bit of it. He is too scared to step to Napoleon because of his nine dogs. So Benjamin is working really hard following the orders Napoleon gives him, he isn’t getting fed or anything barely getting enough sleep. So Benjamin gets tired of this and talks to all animals in the farm and they talk about standing up to him. They all get together and attack Napoleon and the nine dogs could not stop ALL the animals. So finally Napoleon gets kicked out of the farm all because Benjamin took a little bit of action to stop it all. That’s takes a little bit of leadership if you ask me. So I guess he was a Leader and

Thus, Snowball is a leader who looks forward and considers the future of his nation, while Napoleon thinks only of the present, since his vision of the future is one in which he is in full control over animals who have no time for leisure activities. (This is again emphasized when Snowball argues for spreading news of the rebellion so that eventually all animals will rise against oppression, while Napoleon wants to create a stockpile of weapons that he can then turn, if needed, on his own citizens.) In short, Snowball's vision of life with the windmill is like Moses' Sugarcandy Mountain: An immensely desirable yet fantastic place.

Note that Benjamin does not endorse either pig, and their slogans have no effect on him. Like the reader, he is doubtful of Snowball's scheme and wary of Napoleon's maneuvers. All Benjamin believes is what he knows for sure, the sum total of which is that, "Windmill or no windmill, life will go on as it always had gone on — that is, badly." This cynical remark is perhaps the most important statement in the entire novel, for despite all of the ideologies, plans, battles, schemes, debates, betrayals, sound, and fury of the animals, the end result is that they return full circle to the exact same life they tried to avoid. As he does several times throughout the novel, Orwell speaks directly to the reader through Benjamin.

Napoleon's newfound power is based wholly on the threat of violence, as demonstrated in his "winning" the debate with Snowball by driving him off the farm. His decision to end all debates reflects his insatiable need for power: Debates, when conducted in the spirit of inquiry and discovery of viewpoints, are crucial to a government that wants its citizens to take part in their own rule. Napoleon, however, views debates as "unnecessary" because he will permit no questioning of his command and wants to silence any dissention. Like Big Brother, the personification of the all-powerful government in Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four,Napoleon begins to become an unapproachable, godlike figure. Note that when the four porkers object to the way in which Napoleon seizes power, the dogs begin to growl, and the sheep bleat their "Four legs good" slogan over and over. This combination of relentless propaganda and threats of violence comprise Napoleon's philosophy of leadership — the same philosophy behind the government in Nineteen Eighty-Four. Napoleon's disinterment of Major's skull is his way of allying himself with the beloved father of Animalism — another piece of admittedly brilliant propaganda.

Squealer displays even more of his skill at doubletalk in this chapter. As he did previously with the milk and apples, Squealer paints Napoleon's crimes in a light that makes Napoleon more like a martyr than a dictator. Calling Napoleon's takeover a "sacrifice" and stating that leadership is "not a pleasure," the officious pig manages to — as was said earlier about him — "turn black into white." Even more invidious is Squealer's ability to rewrite history: He tells the animals that Snowball's part in the Battle of the Cowshed was "much exaggerated" and (once Napoleon decides to proceed with the building of the windmill) that the idea for it was Napoleon's all along. Again, as in Nineteen Eighty-Four, Orwell attacks the ways in which those who rise to power revise the past in order to keep their grip on the present and future. These "tactics," as Squealer calls them, allow Napoleon to always present himself in the most favorable light — and, if an animal still objects, the three dogs accompanying Squealer serve as ample deterrent. Faced with Squealer's "skipping" words and the mouths of the dogs, an animal has hardly a choice but to submit to the new regime.

Glossary

publican a saloonkeeper; innkeeper.

harrows frames with spikes or sharp-edged disks, drawn by a horse or tractor and used for breaking up and leveling plowed ground, covering seeds, rooting up weeds, etc.

binders machines that both reap and bind grain.

Who takes leadership in Animal Farm?

Napoleon. The pig who emerges as the leader of Animal Farm after the Rebellion. Based on Joseph Stalin, Napoleon uses military force (his nine loyal attack dogs) to intimidate the other animals and consolidate his power. In his supreme craftiness, Napoleon proves more treacherous than his counterpart, Snowball.

Which animals take a leadership position after the animals take over the farm?

Main Character Analysis: Napoleon (pig): - Based on Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin, he emerges as the leader of the Farm after the Rebellion. - He consolidates his control over the farm with the violent force of his nine attack dogs, having raised them as puppies; these directly symbolise Stalin's military force.

Why did Napoleon begin executing animals?

Why did Napoleon begin executing the animals? He wanted to stop the rebellion against him by threatening the animals and keep them afraid of him.

Why did the animals confess to being traitors?

Afraid that their crimes will be discovered, the animals confess them because they are unable to stand the strain of their guilt. The terrible atmosphere of fear and death that now characterizes Animal Farm is discussed by Boxer and Clover at the end of the chapter.