Wednesday, March 25, 2020
Historical Background To Animal Farm Essays (912 words)
  Historical Background to Animal Farm    Historical Background to Animal    Farm    Karl Marx was a German scholar who lived  in the nineteenth century. He spent most of his life studying, thinking  and writing about history and economics. A many years of study, much of  it spent in England, he believed that he understood more deeply than anyone  who had ever lived before him why there is injustice in the world.    He said that all injustice and inequality  is a result of one underlying conflict in society. He called it a 'class  struggle', that is, a conflict bet the class of people who can afford to  own money- producing businesses, whom he called 'capitalists' or 'the bourgeosie',  and the class of people who do not surplus money to buy businesses and  who are therefore forced to work for wage whom he called 'workers'.    Marx said that, because it was always in  the economic interest of capita to take advantage of or 'exploit' workers,  nothing could persuade capitalists change their ways. In other words, peaceful  progess toward equality and socia justice was impossible. The only way  to establish justice, he said, was for t workers to overthrow the capitalists  by means of violent revolution. He urged workers around the world to revolt  against their rulers. "Workers of the worl unite!" he wrote. "You have  nothing to lose but your chains."    Another thing Marx taught was that organized  religion, the churches, help capitalists to keep the workers quiet and  obedient. Religion, according to Mar 'the opiate of the masses'. The church  tells working people to forget about th injustice they meet in their lives  and to think instead of how wonderful it wi in the after- life when they  go to heaven.    Marx, with his colleague, Engels, spread  his ideas in two famous books, Capital' and 'The Communist Manifesto'.    In the early years of the twentieth century,    Russia was ready for the ide Marx. The Russian people were extremely discontented  with their ruler, Tsar Nicholas II, who had little interest in governing  and was neglecting the count badly. Making conditions even more miserable  for the people were the hardships the First World War and a particularly  cold winter.    By 1917, the Russian people were desperate  enough to accept a revolution. fact, they got two for the price of one,  the first in March when the Tsar was deposed and a provisional government  was set up. Then in November a political called the Bolsheviks led a further  rebellion which ousted the provisional government. The leaders of the Bolsheviks,    Lenin and Trotsky, began to build a Russia, one built on the ideas of Marx,  where everyone was equal, where all property was owned by 'the people'  rather than by capitalists and where the wo were in control of the goernment.    Not long afterward, Communist Russia was  attacked by Britain, America and France, who wanted to get rid of the communist  government. They were afraid th workers in their own countries might be  inspired to imitate the example of Rus Trotsky, a highly intelligent and  energetic communist leader, led the defence Russia with great success.    After Lenin's death in 1924, a power struggle  began between Trotsky and a leader within the Communist Party named Stalin.    While Trotsky was a brilliant intellectual and an idealist, Stalin was  a simpler, quieter sort of person, wh based his power not so much on plans  and ideas as on alliances with other memb of the Communist Party. While    Trotsky believed in Russia's trying to assist wo all over the world to  rise up in communist revolutions against their bosses, S wanted Russia  to take care of its own business. The rivalry between the two leaders went  on for several years.    Eventually 1929 Stalin gained the upper  hand and drove Trotsky from Russia. Stalin later up a scheme to industrialise  the backward country which he called the Five-Yea Plan. It included a number  of Trotsky's ideas which Stalin had previously opposed. As Russia developed  under Stalin, members of the Communist Party took for themselves many privileges.    All the original communist ideals of Marx received service, but it became  clearer and clearer that members of the Communist Party becoming a ruling  class that was not equal to non-members.    Most important of all to Stalin was ensuring  that he remained in power. H often used the most brutal tactics. Chief  among his creations were two highly effective political weapons - an efficient  propaganda machine which more and m promoted the idea of Stalin as a great,  nearly god-like leader, and a secret p force which kept the country quiet  through the use of terror. At one    
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