• Title/Summary/Keyword: George Orwell

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The Voice of the Imperial in an Anti-Imperialist Tone: George Orwell's Burmese Days

  • DONMEZ, Basak AGIN
    • Cross-Cultural Studies
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    • v.28
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    • pp.5-16
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    • 2012
  • First published in 1934, George Orwell's Burmese Days, which can be read as an example of both descriptive realism and fictional realism, is considered to be a colonial example of British literature because of its publication date. However, based on the personal experience of the author as an imperial officer in Burma, the novel has an anti-imperialist tone, which can also make it possible to read it through postcolonial eyes. As a result, the novel stands as an example of ambivalence since it has both the colonial and the postcolonial perspective; both the colonizer and the colonized are portrayed with their own flaws, adding to the impact of what can be called "Third Space." This is why the voice of the imperial is heard in an anti-imperialist tone in Burmese Days, through which Orwell presents a critique of colonialism with a from-within approach.

The Research on Snowball in by John Halas and Joe Batchelor (존 할라스와 조이 베첼러의 <동물농장>에서 스노볼에 대한 연구)

  • Yun, Young-Seok
    • Cartoon and Animation Studies
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    • s.36
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    • pp.19-44
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    • 2014
  • is an animation by John Halas and Joy Batchelor, based on Animal Farm by George Orwell, screened in England, 1954. by John Halas and Joy Batchelor showed true occasions in history, such begins with Bolshevik Revolution which broke out in October of 1917, through new economic policy called NEP, monopolization of power by Stalin, and Moscow Justice as a fable. in positioned real people from Bolshevik revolution as characters as in allegory, due to its fable-nature. However, descriptions in by John Halas and Joy Batchelor differs with by George Orwell from the middle of its story. In by John Halas and John Batchelor, Snowball is killed by Napoleon, unlike in by George Orwell, which Snowball is thrown out by Napoleon. showed Stalin as Napoleon, and Trotsky as Snowball in its characters. Satire description on Stalin's reign of terrorism after Bolshevik Revolution was same in both by George Orwell and by John Halas and Joy Batchelor; however, the view on Trotsky was different with each other. Therefore, this paper is written to describe allegorical factors of Bolshevik Revolution in by John Halas and Joy Batchelor, as well as to reinterpret the value of Trotsky and Russian Revolution by researching Snowball in .

Studies of Character's Symbolism in (<동물농장>에 나타난 캐릭터의 상징성 연구)

  • Choi, Don-Ill
    • Cartoon and Animation Studies
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    • s.38
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    • pp.115-132
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    • 2015
  • An animation is a tool to represent the consciousness of an author. It is a medium that converts his/her consciousness to time by the means of spaces. Image is the most inherent element among the elements of an animation. Character is the element that has the very core function among the elements of an image because a character is a shape that can deliver a story through various actions and facial expressions. In this context, is a representative satire animation that describes a ranked and unequal human society and selfishness and absurdity of human beings existed in the human society, based on the original work of George Orwell. Therefore, this study aims to study what the work tries to satirize through the meanings and symbols that the characters, animals, and spaces in the work. As a result of the study, it was found that the characters appeared in the work are metaphoric symbols that imply the meanings of each character, not just simple characters or spaces. In the work, the farm is a symbolic space that symbolizes a human world. John, a human being, is described as a dictator in an absolute Russian monarchy who suppresses people. Old Major, a pig, is described as an old pioneer that preaches the appropriation of a revolution while Snow Ball, a pig that follows the Major is described as a naive leader that dreams to establish a real socialist state where everybody lives equal, through successful revolution. Another pig, Napoleon is described as the more greedy dictator than human being. He killed Snow Ball for his private ambition and suppresses and exploits the same race, animals. That is, setting man and various animals in the relation of dominant class and subordinated class, the author generates conflicts among characters. Although the characters pursue an ideal society through revolution, it requires another revolution in the process, which expresses repetitive contradiction of human history in a symbolic and strong way.