New World Order

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    Brave New World by Aldous Huxley conveys a civilization that is stripped of all humanity by restricting people of their free will. The methods of doing this is not a set of rules but a way of life that is instilled in the minds of all citizens since their birth. In the dystopian civilization of the World State social control is intertwined in every aspect of life which corrupts society and endangers the individual thinker. The citizens of the World State are ordained to believe that they each…

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    In the novel “Brave New World” written by Aldous Huxley, there are many political and social issues that are addressed. The reason that these issues occur in the novel is because Huxley wants to demonstrate how society in the 1930’s is flawed and corrupt. He uses satire to illustrate what society is doing wrong and relates the novel to the real world. In the novel, there are many topics that Huxley covers through the use of irony, motif, and allusion. These topics include moral and cultural…

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    Delusions and Misconceptions Even as perfect a utopia world may be, it is misconceived to be a dystopia. A utopia is “a place of ideal perfection especially government and social conditions” (“Utopia”). The other, dystopia, is “an imaginary place where people lead dehumanized and often fearful lives” (“Dystopia”). At the end, there can only be a dystopian world. Considering the fact that nothing can be perfect and there will always be people to defy the rules and laws. In 1984, it may seem…

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    personalities and views on the world. In Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World, and by telling the stories of John Savage, Bernard Marx, Helmholtz Watson, Lenina Crowe, and Mustapha Mond, it is proved that the characters’ personalities, values, dreams, expectations, and way to react to situations are shaped by the place where they live, the time in which the novel takes place, and how the society of the New World is represented.…

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    The Brave New World by Aldous Huxley is a classic example of dystopian literature. This paper aims to demonstrate how the novel illustrates the evolution of the concept of dystopia and discuss how the text provides a critique of the modern world. The quote “brave new world” is referenced three times throughout the novel to express, joy, confusion and finally pain and sorrow. Sentiments that are strikingly relevant in today’s world. The birth of dystopian fiction could not have been possible…

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    The depiction of events, personalities and situations within an individual’s envisaged society or political regime can be proved throughout a vast amount of texts within the period of war, controversial leadership and society. Brave New World is a dystopian science fiction novel that not only explores the impact of a unique type totalitarianism on the individual but also reflects the ambivalence towards our paradoxical twofold heritage of technology and primitivism through politically…

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    Perfiction Humanity is imperfect. In Brave New World, Aldous Huxley creates a perfect utopia. The society he fabricates remains plausible only if the imperfection of humanity becomes completely obsolete. Huxley did exactly that. Throughout the novel signs of inhumanity plague the Brave New World and the people within it. The society Huxley creates in his novel simulates the disastrous, purposeless life that curses American Society in the Modern Day. Huxley removes both freedom and purpose along…

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    that make you think hard and long about today’s society and how it is more advanced and how far it will go, but nobody what the future has in store for us. After reading “Brave New World” by Aldous Huxley it made me think about our society and how society has advanced so much in just a short amount…

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    Being human is given, but preserving humanity is a choice. In Brave New World, Aldous Huxley reveals his fears of the imminent time where humans may fail to exhibit humanity when confronted with a world composed of irrelevance, triviality, and ignorance, forcing all to accept a life where the meaningful truth is justified and valued as if it were meaningless and false. Throughout the plot, Huxley makes it obvious that John shares more commonalities with the reader than the other characters in…

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    Bellamy's Ideal Society

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    Capitalism is a thing of the past in Bellamy’s view of 20th century Boston. The consciousness of the society, as well as the world seems to have evolved to include greater health, balanced wealth and more time for love. Occupants of this society are motivated by honor rather than survival or financial gain. Citizens are depicted as contented, with affection and trust for their social order. Bellamy’s crafting of his ideal society took gusto for being a man of the 19th century. Despite great…

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