Aldous Huxley presents these issues through his 1932 novel Brave New World. He uses in many occasions repetition to illustrate the unethical procedures that are used on children of that era, diction to represent the attitudes of the people worldwide, and imagery to deliver the idea of what exactly is going on back in the 1930s.
Huxley use of repetition is vital in displaying the immoral social problems of the 1930s.
Towards the beginning of the novel the author gives the readers insight of the social system in the Brave New World. This is presented by the director when he flips a switch in the
Neo-Pavlovian Conditioning Rooms that plays a recording that repeats …show more content…
Jusino 3
Huxley introduces his third social issues with his palette of imagery. The authors paints the image of savagery in the reader’s head as the reader makes it to the savage reservation. While
Lenina was visiting the reservation, Huxley’s describes the savage to be “His face was profoundly wrinkled and black, like a mask of obsidian.” The relationship that the savages that live on the reservation is completely different than that of those who live in the world city. Even though those who live at world city does not exactly get treat with the standard moral codes that would have existed prior to the 1920s, the ways the savages were treated was animal level. The people on the reservation were looked at as exhibits that only certain people with clearance can get into. This shows that even though the moto had the word community, this world did not have a community. By illustrating this Huxley gave rise to the piece of art that said that in the 1920s and 1930s that the relationship between people became something else. Many people