animal farm : a “fairy story”

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ANIMAL FARM: A “FAIRY STORY” Fairy Tales, Parables, Fables & Allegories

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Fairy Tales, Parables, Fables & Allegories . Animal Farm : A “Fairy Story”. We are getting ready to read Animal Farm by George Orwell. Yesterday/last night you read about Orwell in his bio. Now you have the book in front of you. You will notice that it is subtitled a “fairy story.” - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Animal Farm : A “Fairy Story”

ANIMAL FARM: A “FAIRY STORY”Fairy Tales, Parables, Fables & Allegories

Page 2: Animal Farm : A “Fairy Story”

FAIRY STORY We are getting ready to read Animal

Farm by George Orwell. Yesterday/last night you read about Orwell in his bio.

Now you have the book in front of you. You will notice that it is subtitled a “fairy story.”

What does that mean?

Page 3: Animal Farm : A “Fairy Story”

“FAIRY STORY” A “Fairy Story” is the same thing as a

fairy tale.

Can you name any fairy tales you know? Turn to your neighbor and take one minute to discuss. Write down as many as you can.

Page 4: Animal Farm : A “Fairy Story”

FAIRY TALES The fairy story, or fairy tale, is a type of folk literature

found all over the world. It involves a highly imaginative narrative told in a simple manner easily understood and enjoyed even by children. While they do not have a moral, fairy tales instruct by placing their characters in situations that they have to overcome; children who hear the tales can imagine what they would do in a similar situation. Fairy tales, also, often involve animals that can talk. Orwell gave his work the subtitle "A Fairy Story." The reader can surmise that the story told in Animal Farm is universal, with implications for every culture or country, and that it will be easily understood. Using "fairy story" to describe his novel is another bit of irony, because the political story behind the tale is far from the light entertainment the term implies.

http://www.answers.com/topic/animal-farm-novel-4

Page 5: Animal Farm : A “Fairy Story”

THE MASSACHUSETTS ELA FRAMEWORKS

The Massachusetts English Language Arts Curriculum Frameworks, however, describe a fairy tale as “A story written for, or told to, children that includes elements of magic and magical folk such as fairies, elves or goblins. (110)

Which as you will see doesn’t really sound like it would apply to Animal Farm.

Massachusetts English Language Arts Framework June, 2001

Page 6: Animal Farm : A “Fairy Story”

PARABLE In common parlance, a parable is a story or short

narrative designed to reveal allegorically some religious principle, moral lesson, psychological reality, or general truth. Rather than using abstract discussion, a parable always teaches by comparison with real or literal occurrences--especially "homey" everyday occurrences a wide number of people can relate to.

Well-known examples of parables include those found in the synoptic Gospels, such as "The Prodigal Son" and "The Good Samaritan." In some Gospel versions, the parables are announced with the phrase, "The Kingdom of God is like . . . ."

Technically speaking, biblical "parables" were originally examples of a Hebrew genre called meshalim (singular mashal), a word lacking a counter-part in Greek, Latin or English. Meshalim in Hebrew refer to "mysterious speech," i.e., spiritual riddles or enigmas the speaker couches in story-form.

http://web.cn.edu/KWHEELER/documents/Parable_Allegory.pdf

Page 7: Animal Farm : A “Fairy Story”

FABLES A Fable is a short, simple story that

teaches a lesson. A fable usually includes animals that talk and act like people (Massachusetts English Language Arts Framework 110).

Hmmm, this sound more like Animal Farm.

Have you ever heard of Aesop’s Fables?

Massachusetts English Language Arts Framework June, 2001

Page 8: Animal Farm : A “Fairy Story”

THE MISCHIEVOUS DOG

Page 9: Animal Farm : A “Fairy Story”

THE CROW AND THE PITCHER

Page 10: Animal Farm : A “Fairy Story”

THE HARE AND THE TORTOISE

Page 11: Animal Farm : A “Fairy Story”

WHAT DO THEY HAVE IN COMMON? What did these fables have in

common?

Take one minute to think of (and write down) all the commonalities among these three stories.

Page 12: Animal Farm : A “Fairy Story”

ALLEGORY An allegory involves using many interconnected symbols or

allegorical figures in such as way that in nearly every element of the narrative has a meaning beyond the literal level, i.e., everything in the narrative is a symbol that relates to other symbols within the story.

The allegorical story, poem, or play can be read either literally or as a symbolic statement about a political, spiritual, or psychological truth.

The word allegory derives from the Greek allegoria ("speaking otherwise"): The term loosely describes any story in verse or prose that has a double meaning. This narrative acts as an extended metaphor in which the plot or events reveal a meaning beyond what occurs in the text, creating a moral, spiritual, or even political meaning. The act of interpreting a story as if each object in it had an allegorical meaning is called allegoresis.

http://web.cn.edu/KWHEELER/documents/Parable_Allegory.pdf

Page 13: Animal Farm : A “Fairy Story”

WHAT IS ANIMAL FARM? Is Animal Farm a Parable? A fable? A

Fairy Tale? An Allegory?

After reading the story we must ask ourselves these same questions. How do you define this story?