1.2 George Orwell’s Satirical Style
George Orwell is famous for his two final fictions, Animal Farm and Nineteen Eighty-Four. These two works are sometimes understood to defend capitalism against socialism. But as Orwell was a committed socialist, this could not have been his intention (Todd, 2016). Orwell's criticisms were directed not against socialism per se but against the Soviet Union and similarly totalitarian regimes. Instead, these fictions were intended as Public Choice-style investigations into which political systems furnished suitable incentive structures to prevent the abuse of power.Example of the basic principles of the unconscious aspects of Orwell has recorded group psychological function. Everyone who reads it can not only identify and describe the phenomenon and the phenomenon of displacement while maintaining unthreatened due to animals. Set by people other than the transfer of classification issues, Orwell was able to "Animal Farm" to avoid psychological complications inevitably in a novel, and then make their own theme, simple political truth. Because of the political climate, "Animal Farm" was not released until August 1945 when on one level, which is in the form of a fairy tale in the form of the communist Soviet satire, many authors think it has a broader and deeper range. A sociologist suggested that it applies to another level and beyond all human government general revolutions; and with these intentions not only appear at the appropriate time, but continued all the time, so that they as a continuous story (Brady, 2016).2 References 文献
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