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Brave New World

Essay by   •  December 4, 2010  •  Essay  •  720 Words (3 Pages)  •  1,258 Views

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I wrote this paper in my english class after reading 'A Brave New World':

On the very last page of Aldous Huxley's book, A Brave New World, he describes John as swinging slowly in circles after hanging himself (Huxley 259). It's believed that Huxley's main point of this ending to his story was to tell his readers that after all John's effort of trying to change the brave new world, it was profoundly hopeless and the only thing left to do was to give up. This image creates a belief that Huxley was trying to warn his readers that the future was going to hold a extreme amount of advance technology in science, that would eventually turn into a dystopian world. When Huxley stresses the high amount of sex/drug usage and conditioning in his book, it was to show that these are highly used to help people live in a better society. The scary part is that most of Aldous Huxley's predictions on the future were closely factual.

Although Huxley wrote many forms of literature, they all held the common theme of "meaning and possibilities of human life and perception" (Huxley 260). After the disease Huxley received when he was 16 years old that ended his dream of becoming a doctor, he also remained essentially scientific in his literature. Julian Huxley, Aldous Huxley's brother, believed that "science and mysticism were overlapping and complementary realms in Aldous Huxley's mind" (Huxley 262). This explains where Huxley came up with the idea of Hatcheries and Conditioning. Which was an excellent way he began his book in a utopian world.

The first chapter in A Brave New World starts out with the director and his assistant

giving a tour to a group of boys of the Hatching and Conditioning Centre (Huxley 3). At the

centre is where the boys learn all about the Bokanovsky process and how they're conditioned into five different caste. The director then explains that this conditioning helps each person love what caste they are conditioned into, whether they become leaders or factory workers. Later, when Mustapha Mond and John Savage discuss the outcomes of conditioning, John expresses that he disagrees with it all. John explains how conditioning only manipulates peoples minds and how it takes away their right to make their own decisions ( Pradas par 11). In a way, Huxley speaks out a lot through John's character in this chapter. Huxley almost knew the world was turning into a highly conditioned society and he wanted to warn his readers not to be manipulated by it.

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