Asked by p

What is Orwell’s primary reason for writing chapter 10 of Animal Farm?

He wants to show that he has no interest in politics or history and instead desires just to entertain his audience through satire.
He wants to show that the pigs have become identical to the human farmers, just as Stalin and other communists became like the aristocrats they replaced.
He wants to show the transformation from Animal Farm back to Manor Farm through a series of humorous and ironic scenes that keep readers in suspense.
He wants to show that all the literary elements of his novel work together to produce a work of literature that presents life on a farm run by greedy and dangerous animals.

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
He wants to show that the pigs have become identical to the human farmers, just as Stalin and other communists became like the aristocrats they replaced.

Chapter 10 is the culmination of Orwell’s political allegory: the pigs adopt human habits, walk on two legs, trade with farmers, and the animals can no longer tell pig from man — a direct critique of how revolutionary leaders (notably Stalin) became as corrupt and oppressive as the rulers they overthrew.