Political Symbolism in George Orwell’s Animal Farm
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Abstract
This study examines Animal Farm through the lens of semiotics, interpreting
the novella as a political allegory that communicates complex ideological messages
through signs and symbols. It takes theories from Roland Barthes, who writes symbols
as ideologically created cultural signifiers shaped by codes, myths, and ideology that
uncover hidden power relations. Charles Baudelaire, who believes symbolism to be a
poetic device that causes moral, religious, and political truths that are impossible to
state directly and Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, who perceive symbolism within
cultural production as a symptom of material circumstance and class warfare. Within
this framework, Orwell's text encodes political meaning into setting, object, and
character to denounce totalitarian regimes and revolution ideal treachery,
particularly in the Russian Revolution and Stalinism. Stalinist government is
embodied in Napoleon, the Seven Commandments change as ideological tools, and
the windmill symbolizes empty promises of progress. The farm itself is a mini-state
ruled by propaganda and coercion. In reading the semiotic systems contained in these
works, the study reveals how Orwell uncovers political deception structures and the
erosion of justice and truth and ultimately establishes the continued timeliness of
Animal Farm as a work commenting on authoritarianism and the semiotics of
political oppression. Each element within the text, from the individual of Napoleon (as
a signifier of Stalinism) to the evolving Seven Commandments and the symbolic
windmill capabilities as a signal machine that constructs and conveys political
meaning. Through this semiotic framework, the study reveals how Orwell’s use of
allegorical signs and symbols exposes the mechanisms of political deception and the
erosion of reality and justice. Ultimately, this semiotic analysing enhances know, how
of Orwell’s narrative techniques and underscores the enduring relevance of Animal
Farm as a complicated critique of authoritarianism and the semiotics of political
control.
Keywords: Semiotic, Allegory, Imagery, Symbolism, Satire, Paradox, Political Power
Dynamics, Authoritarianism
