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#1 Jul 12 2005 at 1:35 AM Rating: Default
has anyone read this one? ir deminds me of U.S. and Rssia.:|
#2 Jul 12 2005 at 12:14 PM Rating: Good
Drama Nerdvana
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Razmore wrote:
has anyone read this one? ir deminds me of U.S. and Rssia.:|


OTST.

For reasons of keeping my faith in humanity I am going to assume that you are a troll and actually not that dumb.
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#3 Jul 12 2005 at 11:25 PM Rating: Decent
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Lol, i dont like to bash people, but this is to good to pass up, i am 15 yrs old and was 14 when i read this book... Yes its a gigantic satire of the cold war and how the communist ways were flawed, using Napolean as stalin, Snowball as trotsky, the Dogs as the russian secret police, ect... it was kinda obvious man.
#4 Jul 13 2005 at 12:00 AM Rating: Default
Ow. indeed it was but it was the first book i ever read so im dumb and a troll double rate me down.

take care iw never post here gaian its wierd.o.O

Edit what is OTST>?

Edited, Wed Jul 13 01:06:07 2005 by Razmore
#5 Jul 13 2005 at 1:25 AM Rating: Good
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Allegory

1. The representation of abstract ideas or principles by characters, figures, or events in narrative, dramatic, or pictorial form.
2. A story, picture, or play employing such representation. John Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress and Herman Melville's Moby **** are allegories.
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#6 Dec 21 2005 at 12:29 PM Rating: Decent
OP:

You, sir, are a ******* MORON.
#7 Dec 24 2005 at 4:15 PM Rating: Decent
i just had to read this book for ninth grade english, it is a good book but its kinda creepy.
#8 Jul 27 2006 at 12:27 PM Rating: Default
It was definitely a mind-blowing read. I think I read it around 9th-10 grade as well.
#9 Feb 11 2007 at 9:41 PM Rating: Good
Vagina Dentata,
what a wonderful phrase
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To be fair guys, a lot of kids who are younger do not remember the cold war. It was apparent when I was in ninth grade b/c the USSR and the US were still hostile and we grew up with a fear of nuclear war. Someone who is 15 or 16 years old today isn't going to be affected as powerfully as I was, for example, b/c I didn't have to pull from recent history but rather it was reflected in the way the world was. The story doesn't have the same emotional resonance for people in their adolescence now.

This type of story was definitely a political message from Orwell, who was a fairly interesting guy. I think that it gets lost on people who only read this and 1984. I suggest reading Homage to Catalonia, one of the relatively few first hand accounts of the fierce factionalist Spanish Civil War and the Road to Wigan Pier, which is an account of industrialized England and a plea for economic reform.

I don't know if kids are generally interested in reading about recent history. The lessons of the cold war shouldn't be lost on people who see this current era of fear as something brand new--a threat we haven't seen before. In fact, it's really the new Cold War Era and most of the administration are Cold Warrior who transport the same old imagery on a new Enemy.

Edited, Feb 12th 2007 12:43am by annabellaonalexander
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Seriously, what the f*ck nature?
#10 Feb 14 2007 at 3:57 AM Rating: Good
I was the only person in my English class that liked that book...Bunch of ******* morons the lot of them...
#11 Feb 14 2007 at 10:52 PM Rating: Excellent
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I just saw this in my son's stack of school books... I, for one, have never read it.
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#12 Mar 30 2007 at 11:28 AM Rating: Decent
remorajunbao wrote:
I was the only person in my English class that liked that book...Bunch of @#%^ing morons the lot of them...


same here
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