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ANIMAL FARM

DIORAMA
By Siddharth Gianchandani 10G
A SHORT SUMMARY
OF THE NOVEL
The novel "Animal Farm" by George
Orwell is an allegory in which he
displays the failed ideas of Animalism
propagated by a pig named Old Major.
Old Major inspires the animals to
conduct a revolution against their
dictatorial leader Mr. Jones. While the
revolution is successful, the situation
in Animal Farm does not get better.
The pigs, being the most educated,
establish their autocratic rule and the
working-class animals such as Boxer
are left in the ruins.
Sugarcandy
mountain

Mr Jones

Old major Moses


Sno
wb
all Benjamin
Boxer
Napoleon
Geese

The 3 sheeps
AN EXPLANATION
OF MY DIORAMA
My diorama attempts to convey the
spread of the multitude of ideas in
Animal Farm and how the naïve
working-class (boxer, the 3 sheep,
geese, and Benjamin) were influenced
by them. Old Majors animalism,
Napoleon's propaganda, Snowballs'
commandments, and Moses sugar
candy mountain. Ideologies such as
these spread around the farm like
wildfire, and the working class was
unable to differentiate and protect
themselves from these ideas. Ending in
their own demise.
CHARACTER DESCRIPTIONS
Old major - The conductor of the orchestra of ideas in Animal farm. His
dream heavily influenced the events. and therefore, is standing on a
podium in the center of my diorama

Moses - The raven who spread stories of Sugar candy Mountain, the
paradise to which animals supposedly go when they die.

Snowball - An idealist who throws his heart and soul into spreading
Animalism and the seven commandments worldwide.

Napoleon - The corrupt opportunist leader who spread false information


and propaganda to continue his rule in Animal Farm.

My Jones - The once ruler of Manor farm. His head sticks out of the side to
show how the fear of him coming back was used by Napoleon as propaganda

The 3 sheep, boxer, the geese and Benjamin - The working class animals
who were fed ideas and were unable to protect themselves from it
CONCLUSION
This diorama holds importance not only in history, but today. In the
21st centaury, ideas are now spreading faster than ever. False
information and propaganda will always exist in our societies and only
some will be differentiate between the right and wrong. Others, if not
educated, will be caught amidst the wildfire of ideas like the working
class in Animal Farm.

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