Marxism
mailing list archive
[ Other Periods
| Other mailing lists
| Search
]
Date:
[ Previous
| Next
]
Thread:
[ Previous
| Next
]
Index:
[ Author
| Date
| Thread
]
[Marxism] Turning the tables on Animal Farm
NY Times, Nov. 25, 2002
A Pig Returns to the Farm, Thumbing His Snout at Orwell
By DINITIA SMITH
What if Snowball had his chance? An American novelist has written a parody
of "Animal Farm," George Orwell's 1945 allegory about the evils of
communism, in which the exiled pig, Snowball, returns to the farm and sets
up a capitalist state, leading to misery for all the animals. The book,
"Snowball's Chance" by John Reed, is being published this month by Roof
Books, a small independent press in New York. And the estate of George
Orwell is not happy about it.
William Hamilton, the British literary executor of the Orwell estate,
objected to the parody in an e-mail message to the James T. Sherry, the
publisher of Roof Books, saying, "The contemporary setting can only
trivialize the tragedy of Orwell's mid-20th-century vision of totalitarianism."
"The clear references to 9/11 in the apocalyptic ending can only bring
Orwell's name into disrepute in the U.S.," Mr. Hamilton wrote. Reached by
phone, he said he had nothing more to add to the message.
"Snowball's Chance" is being published at a time when Orwell's reputation
has been under attack because of revelations that in the late 1940's he
gave the British Foreign Office a list of people he suspected of being
"crypto-Communists and fellow travelers," labeling some of them as Jews and
homosexuals as well. One of those condemning Orwell has been the writer
Alexander Cockburn, whose father, Claud, a British journalist and member of
the Communist Party, was a bitter foe of Orwell's.
"How quickly one learns to loathe the affectations of plain bluntishness,"
Mr. Cockburn writes in an introduction to Mr. Reed's novella. "The man of
conscience turns out to be a whiner, and of course a snitch."
Coming to Orwell's defense in a book published in September, "Why Orwell
Matters" (Basic Books), Christopher Hitchens calls Orwell "a great
humanist" whose opinions still hold water. "It has lately proved possible
to reprint every single letter, book review and essay composed by Orwell,"
he writes, "without exposing him to any embarrassment."
The debate is set to continue this evening, when Mr. Hitchens is scheduled
to appear at Cooper Union with Simon Schama, James Miller and the New
Yorker writer Bill Buford for "Orwell Now," a symposium presented by the
PEN American Center.
Mr. Reed said he was watching the aftermath of the terrorist attacks on
television in his East Village apartment on Sept. 11 when the idea came to
him to rewrite the Orwell classic. "I thought, `Why would they do this to
us?' " he remembered. "The twin towers attack showed us that something is
wrong with our system, too."
He decided, he said, that the world had a new form of evil to deal with,
and it was not communism. It was the evil, he said, within American
corporate capitalism itself, and American arrogance in protecting its
interests in the Middle East oil fields. To Mr. Reed, "Animal Farm" was the
ultimate expression of pro-capitalist ideology. "It has inoculated
generations of schoolchildren against the evils of communism," Mr. Reed said.
Mr. Reed says he is definitely one of those in the anti-Orwell camp. "I
really wanted to explode that book," he said of "Animal Farm." "I wanted to
completely undermine it."
In Orwell's allegory, the animals go hungry and are worked to death for the
benefit of their communist pig masters. In the final scene the animals gaze
into the window of the farmhouse watching the pigs cavorting with their
human oppressors and can no longer tell the two apart.
Mr. Reed decided to turn Orwell's classic back on itself. In his parody
Napoleon, the Stalinist pig dictator of "Animal Farm," dies, and his old
rival, Snowball, returns transformed into a corporate capitalist dressed in
cuff links and a blazer. "Tonight, I present an animalage of such erudition
that all the wisdom of the village is now ours," Snowball says, announcing
a new, decidedly free-market credo for the farm: "All animals are born
equal what they become is their own affair."
The farm initially expands under capitalism. The animals get hot water and
air-conditioning, start wearing clothes and begin walking on their hind
legs. The farm encroaches on the territory of the neighboring woodland
animals. The pigs bomb the beaver dams and disrupt the free flow of water
make that oil in the forest. Eventually the farm's ecology is destroyed
by overdevelopment, and it is turned into one giant Disney theme park,
complete with confessional sideshows.
The woodland creatures, led by the beavers read Islamic fundamentalists
incensed at the destruction of their environment, attack the twin
windmills, which power the farm and are a stand-in for the towers of the
World Trade Center. The book ends with the farm animals crying out for
revenge against the fundamentalists: "`Kill the beavers! Kill the beavers!
Kill! Kill!"'
Mr. Sherry said he believed that he had the right to publish the book under
a 1994 Supreme Court ruling that in some cases protects parody as a form of
free speech. Last year a federal appeals court in Atlanta overturned a
publication ban on "The Wind Done Gone" by Alice Randall, a retelling of
Margaret Mitchell's "Gone With the Wind" from the point of view of a slave,
on the ground that it was a political parody.
"Snowball's Chance" is the 33-year-old Mr. Reed's second novel. His first
was "A Still Small Voice" (Delacorte, 2000), an allegory about the Civil
War. He is a native New Yorker who grew up in TriBeCa, the son of artists.
As a child, Mr. Reed said, he used to play in the spaces under the twin
towers, and their destruction had a particular resonance for him.
Despite the brutal ending of "Snowball's Chance," Mr. Reed said, he still
thinks "capitalism has a better chance of working than communism," but "it
would be a true capitalist system rather than a conglomerate system."
"We would have an America of true democracy, with equal protection under
the law for all," he said.
________________________________________________
YOU MUST clip all extraneous text before replying to a message.
Send list submissions to: Marxism@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Set your options at: http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/marxism
- Thread context:
- [Marxism] Rosa Parks NYC Council Resolution,
Charles Brown Sat 29 Oct 2005, 16:04 GMT
- [Marxism] Lawsuit and courtroom news updates,
Charles Brown Sat 29 Oct 2005, 15:52 GMT
- [Marxism] Reconstructing the Bush administration and the Republican ascendancy?,
Fred Feldman Sat 29 Oct 2005, 14:39 GMT
- [Marxism] Turning the tables on Animal Farm,
Louis Proyect Sat 29 Oct 2005, 14:22 GMT
- [Marxism] Follow-up on Diana Spenser's NACLA article,
Louis Proyect Sat 29 Oct 2005, 14:14 GMT
- [Marxism] Racism: A Question of Power,
Calvin Broadbent Sat 29 Oct 2005, 12:22 GMT
- [Marxism] RE: GLW on Orwell,
Tom O'Lincoln Sat 29 Oct 2005, 05:18 GMT
[ Other Periods
| Other mailing lists
| Search
]