… commentators widely view Animal Farm as an allegory for the rise and decline of socialism in the Soviet Union and the emergence of the totalitarian regime of Joseph Stalin…After its translation into Russian, it was banned by Stalin’s government in all Soviet-ruled areas.
Stalin was fearful that after reading Animal Farm, people would no longer be ignorant to what was going on, and that they would renounce his dominion over them. He anticipated the book educating people; they would cease to be his unaware puppets, so in order to prevent this from happening, he banned the book altogether. During my research I also found a very enlightening online graph, written up by George J. Lamont. The graph compares characters in the book Animal Farm to the Russian Revolution. From reading the graph I can see that Mr. Jones represents Czar
References: Lamont, George J. "Animal Farm - Comparison of Characters to the Russian Revolution." Gonzaga Student Web Server. Web. 28 Feb. 2011. . Orwell, George. "Orwell 's Letters to His Agent concerning Animal Farm - George Orwell Links." Letter to Victor Gollancz (Orwell 's Publisher). 19 Mar. 1944. Charles ' George Orwell Links - Biographies, Essays, Novels, Reviews, Images. Web. 03 Mar. 2011. . Orwell, George. George Orwell - Why I Write. Diss. 1946. London: Gangrel, 1946. George Orwell - Complete Works, Biography, Quotes, Essays. O. Dag, 24 July 2004. Web. 02 Mar. 2011. . "Animal Farm, George Orwell - Introduction." Short Story Criticism. Ed. Joseph Palmisano Project Editor. Vol. 68. Gale Cengage, 2004. eNotes.com. 2006. 26 February, 2011 "Animal Farm." Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia "Yugoslavia Becomes Socialist." Www.xtimeline.com.14 Feb. 2008. Web. 02 Mar. 2011. .