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Huxley references a wide range of literary works and philosophical ideas, a touch that gives the work literary weight and sets it in a broader intellectual context. Themes. The story of “Brave New World” deals with certain themes such as consumerism, technological control of society, immediate gratification, and loss of personal identity.
- The Use of Technology to Control Society
- The Consumer Society
- The Incompatibility of Happiness and Truth
- The Dangers of An All-Powerful State
- Individuality
- Happiness and Agency
Brave New World warns of the dangers of giving the state control over new and powerful technologies. One illustration of this theme is the rigid control of reproduction through technological and medical intervention, including the surgical removal of ovaries, the Bokanovsky Process, and hypnopaedic conditioning. Another is the creation of complicat...
It is important to understand that Brave New World is not simply a warning about what couldhappen to society if things go wrong, it is also a satire of the society in which Huxley existed, and which still exists today. While the attitudes and behaviors of World State citizens at first appear bizarre, cruel, or scandalous, many clues point to the co...
Brave New World is full of characters who do everything they can to avoid facing the truth about their own situations. The almost universal use of the drug soma is probably the most pervasive example of such willful self-delusion. Soma clouds the realities of the present and replaces them with happy hallucinations, and is thus a tool for promoting ...
Like George Orwell’s 1984, this novel depicts a dystopia in which an all-powerful state controls the behaviors and actions of its people in order to preserve its own stability and power. But a major difference between the two is that, whereas in 1984 control is maintained by constant government surveillance, secret police, and torture, power in Bra...
By imagining a world in which individuality is forbidden, Brave New Worldasks us to consider what individual identity is and why it is valuable. The World State sees individuality as incompatible with happiness and social stability because it interferes with the smooth functioning of the community. The Controllers do everything they can to prevent ...
Initially, the characters in Brave New World share the same ideas about what happiness is: freedom from emotional suffering, sickness, age, and political upheaval, together with easy access to everything they desire. However, the characters differ in their understanding of the role personal agency plays in happiness. Bernard believes he wants perso...
Irony and Satire. Brave New World is often categorized as a novel of ideas, also known as an apologue. In this type of work, the concepts and themes take precedence over characterization and plot ...
Theme #2. Dystopian Society. The dystopian society and its aftereffects are one of the major themes of Brave New World. The World State has presented a community where new ideas and new social experiments have been put to the test to make fun of them. The D.H.C. is an example of the assembly-line production of Henry Ford test see how it ...
Science. (Click the themes infographic to download.) Huxley wrote that the focus of Brave New World isn't science itself, but science as it affects people. Just like how Twilight isn't a book about vampire...
The main themes in Brave New World are science, social freedom, history, and innovation. Science: The World Controllers have ended conflict by means of cloning, which homogenizes the population ...
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Overview. Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World, published in 1932, presents a dystopian vision of a future society in which every aspect of human life is controlled by technology, conditioning, and a strict caste system. In a society set in the future, where natural reproduction is replaced by artificial methods and individuals are conditioned for ...