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During the reign of the autocratic regime of the Baath Party in Iraq, George Orwell's Animal Farm and 1984 were a form of political taboo in Iraqi schools and Universities. That is due to the ideas that Orwell exposes in these two works about the totalitarian regimes, of which Iraq is a very strong example. This study started in the last year of the Baath rule and finished in the first year following the invasion of Iraq in 2003. It cleverly tackles the ideological issues from a grammatical perspective. Language can cover a lot but also through language one can discover a lot and that is what…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
During the reign of the autocratic regime of the Baath Party in Iraq, George Orwell's Animal Farm and 1984 were a form of political taboo in Iraqi schools and Universities. That is due to the ideas that Orwell exposes in these two works about the totalitarian regimes, of which Iraq is a very strong example. This study started in the last year of the Baath rule and finished in the first year following the invasion of Iraq in 2003. It cleverly tackles the ideological issues from a grammatical perspective. Language can cover a lot but also through language one can discover a lot and that is what this study tried to do through the stylistic investigation of passive constructions in Animal Farm. It starts with the observation that Orwell warns in his Politics and the English Language against the use of the passive voice when the active is available, but in Animal Farm the passive is actively used in utter violation of the rule Orwell set for himself and his readers. To know why Orwellused the passive voice so heavily in Animal Farm, join us on this investigative journey into the politics of language use.
Autorenporträt
Rafed Khashan holds an MA degree in Applied Linguistics from the University of Basrah, Iraq. He did his BA in English and MA in Linguistics with a concentration on Stylistics. His interests also include sociolinguistics and critical discourse analysis.Shihab AlNasser is a professor of Literary Theory at the University of Basrah since the 1980s.