The document discusses dramatic irony, which is when the audience knows something that the character does not. In the story, the human beings falsely claimed that the windmill fell down due to thin walls, though the animals knew this was not actually the case, demonstrating dramatic irony since the audience knows the truth of the situation unlike the characters.
The document discusses dramatic irony, which is when the audience knows something that the character does not. In the story, the human beings falsely claimed that the windmill fell down due to thin walls, though the animals knew this was not actually the case, demonstrating dramatic irony since the audience knows the truth of the situation unlike the characters.
The document discusses dramatic irony, which is when the audience knows something that the character does not. In the story, the human beings falsely claimed that the windmill fell down due to thin walls, though the animals knew this was not actually the case, demonstrating dramatic irony since the audience knows the truth of the situation unlike the characters.
The document discusses dramatic irony, which is when the audience knows something that the character does not. In the story, the human beings falsely claimed that the windmill fell down due to thin walls, though the animals knew this was not actually the case, demonstrating dramatic irony since the audience knows the truth of the situation unlike the characters.
knows something the Out of spite, the human beings character does not. pretended not to believe that it was Snowball who had destroyed the windmill: they said that it had fallen down because the walls were too thin. The animals knew that this was not the case. Orwell, George. Animal Farm.