In George Orwell’s, Animal Farm, we find an example of a vital character being explicitly slandered. This plays out when a leader, Napoleon, falsely accuses Snowball of exaggerating his role in the farm and not being as loyal as he claims to be. The result of this act is a taunted image of Snowball and his complete exile. Surprisingly enough, slanderment happens quite often in all forms of culture. In fact, a great example is the playwright, Gone Girl, by Gillian Flynn.
The main plot of the is meant to portray Amy, played by Rosamund Pike, as a wife who is unhappy with her marriage and subsequently fakes her suicide. Although, the movie takes a strange turn of events when the observer later finds that the suicide is being blamed