Orwell did see the world as it is now & did a stellar job hitting the nail on the head in his own way.
Granted, throughout history, Humans are time & again guilty of repeating past mistakes & have always & will always repeat them.
That's why alot of the things he wrote hit so close to home then, now, & will still hit home with people 500 years after every one of us here are dust in the dirt.
Now, assuming that Animal Farm & 1984 are similar just because they are written by the same guy & have politics as the driving force of both stories is like assuming that the flicks 'A Clockwork Orange' & 'Full Metal Jacket' are similar because they were both violent & both made by Stanly Kubrick...or assuming that 'Schindler's List' & 'Minority Report' are similar because they're both Spielberg flicks that deal with murder.
Animal Farm is a fairy tale about how absolute power corrupts absolutely regardless of the best intentions one may have in the beginning.
1984 is nothing like that.
::Edit- Incedently, another modern fairy tale that is highly worth checking into is 'Watership Down' by Richard Adams::
Another good read is 'Lord of the Flies' from William Golding.
Its about a group of children being marooned on an island, and the kind of society that they build without the experience of elders. Discovery reminded of this book a few times;)
Marburg Wrote:Orwell did see the world as it is now & did a stellar job hitting the nail on the head in his own way.
The way it is now?
He was a social democrat describing the kind of society Stalin, Mussolini, and Hitler were building, if I remember correctly. During his time, democracies appeared to be losing against Fascism and Communism.
What do you mean with 'the world as it is now? His now or our now?
1984 and Animal Farm both are about roughly the same issue - Socialism/Communism combined with Authoritarianism - though quite different to read, aye. Without any doubt, both are very recommendable reads, and excellently suited for class presentations, too - just remember to analyze them thoroughly and to draw the parallels between characters in the books and historical personalities (Snowball - Trotsky, Frederick - Hitler, the Raven - the Church etc); there's a lot to be found in these books.
Bubbles Wrote:The way it is now?
Well, quite a few nations are slowly walking down the path to authoritarianism (again), usually for seemingly noble reasons. Australia wants to fight CP on the Internet - but do they take sites down? No, they create a Great Firewall of Australia, also blocking dissident's blogs. Europe wants to combat racism - what do they do? They introduce hate speech laws, which are even worse. The USA - look at laws like the PATRIOT Act, which, while a good idea and definitely helpful in fighting terrorism (something I wish to remark that I fully support), are *very* open to abuse.