STYLISTIC ANALYSIS OF METAPHORS AND SIMILES IN GEORGE ORWELL’S ANIMAL FARM

##article.authors##

  • Azimova Mohinur Murodjon qizi ##default.groups.name.author##

##semicolon##

Animal Farm, metaphor, simile, stylistics, figurative language, George Orwell, cognitive linguistics

##article.abstract##

This paper investigates the stylistic significance of metaphor and simile in 
George Orwell’s Animal Farm, a satirical allegory of Soviet totalitarianism. Grounded 
in theories of cognitive linguistics, particularly those advanced by Lakoff and Johnson 
(1980), the study highlights how figurative language functions beyond ornamentation 
to structure thought and intensify political meaning. Through detailed textual analysis, 
key metaphors and similes are identified and interpreted for their rhetorical, 
conceptual, and emotional effects. Ultimately, the findings demonstrate that Orwell’s 
use of figurative language contributes critically to the novel’s aesthetic richness and its 
ideological critique of oppressive political systems.

##submission.citations##

1. Alhasnawi, A. I. A cognitive linguistic study of war metaphors in English and

Arabic. PhD thesis, University of Leeds.2007.

2. Black, M. Models and Metaphors: Studies in Language and Philosophy. Cornell

University Press.1962.

##submissions.published##

2025-07-16