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This book might rid you of your slogans

Erik Marty van Mechelen
2 min readJan 5, 2021

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If read closely, Animal Farm by George Orwell may go a long way to disarming you of your slogans.

After doing away with Mr. Jones, the human owner of Manor Farm, the animals collectively establish Animal Farm with a foundation of equality among and between each species, from duck to dog, from pony to pig.

A series of predictable slippages first waters down their enthusiasm, then dilutes their autonomy in work, and finally removes their agency — minimal to begin with — usurped by the self-appointed brain workers, the pigs. Having asserted themselves, the pigs represent the reemergence of hierarchy at the very dawn of the revolution against their evil human keeper who for them, has forced such a framework upon them.

The pigs further assert themselves, moving into Mr. Jones farmhouse and dictating the unequal approach to running the farm. Naturally, infighting ensues: the brutish Comrade Napoleon ousts the feisty Snowball — inefficient debate, already stripped from the animal collective, is further purged even from the ruling ranks.

The animals’ hope-filled anthem, Beasts of England is abolished by the emboldened tyrant Napoleon.

The Seven Commandments are discreetly altered by the chief propagandist, Squealer, at Napoleon’s behest; new words are painted onto the barn-side. ‘No…

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Erik Marty van Mechelen
Erik Marty van Mechelen

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