New World

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    Brave New World

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    to spread. Supposably that’s when all the world leaders the world use to have came together. They tried to work as a team to help each other and to find a way to stop the resistance. To help the people. The third wave that when everyone turned on each other. Borders were closed shut; doctors would no longer help the sick or the poor. Loved ones, families, children… everyone started dropping like flies. I wasn’t there to witness the end of the world; I was born when…

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    Aldous Huxley's dystopian novel, "Brave New World," is a satire discussing many different topics such as war, the advancement of technology, and the power of one government. "Brave New World" is set in the distant future where society has given up their freedom after a gruesome war, called the Nine Years War, in order to live happily without constant fear or hardship. To be able to uphold this happiness, the new world's government, also called the World State, creates many rules and standards so…

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    A Character Analysis of the “Domino Effect” of Social Conformity in Brave New World by Aldous Huxley This literary analysis will define a character analysis of the self-deprecating aspects of the “domino effect” of social conformity in Brave New World By Aldous Huxley. The main character, Bernard, is a alienated individual that resents being judged by his height as part of social hierarchy of The World State. However, Bernard’s desire to befriend, Helmholtz Watson, defines the underlying…

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    in their own head. In Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World, the story was based on the opinion of how Huxley predicted the future was going to turn out. Everyone is living under the World State which is a government who controls the society through their commands as the society seems stable and peaceful where everyone seems happy, but it is a total mess. Sexual reproduction is uncommon as children are created and raised in breeding grounds because the World State wants to limit the population…

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    Values of a Society In the book “Brave New World” Aldous Huxley depicts a world where the humans are breed in a lab and are placed into different groups depending on what chemicals were washed over the still developing, fertilized egg in the lab. No matter what group these people are put into they all are given basic guidelines to live by, those values include community, identity, and stability. In the story the reader can visualize the sense of community that the people live by, for example,…

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    “ Brave New World- Possible Outcome of Our Future?” Introduction We all have a different vision of what our future would look like. In this Novel, the two protagonist of the book is considered to be polar opposites of each other. One of them has a problem with fitting in a society that is perfectly imperfect due to its lack of emotion and individuality. But the other protagonist, would fit under the definition of the world they are living at. In a world where everything is perfect, Bernard Marx…

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    information that adds to the overall understanding and meaning of the story. Key text also helps in the revelation of themes, as it provides insight on the theme, and is the primary method by which themes are developed. In Aldous Huxley’s “Brave New World,” the passage “Nay, but to live in the rank sweat of an enseamed bed, Stew’d in corruption, honeying and making love, Over the nasty sty…” a section of key text that incorporates allusion to other literary works to illustrate and delineate a…

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    Brave New World: The Symbol of Soma Being judged, exposed, laughed at, and made fun of is something no one would ever wish upon themselves. In this novel, Brave New World, written by Aldous Huxley there is a solution for it all. Characters in this story do not experience the pains and the hard truths that most humans have to endure with the use of one small, powerful drug called soma. Aldous Huxley uses soma as a symbol of uniformity and complete control over all users in the World State.…

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    Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World and George Orwell’s 1984 contain protagonists that are vital to conveying the author’s message about the possibility of losing personal liberties to totalitarian regimes. These protagonists are John the Savage, from Brave New World, and Winston Smith, from 1984. In both novels, John and Winston realize that there is a force that takes away people’s liberties. Additionally, they see that their government has also hidden the truth from society in order to maintain…

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    basic human pains of free will, love, and religion. Brave New World contains the basic debate on whether or not it is right to be blinded from basic human emotion to maintain happiness, or to know and experience pain in all of it’s forms. The debate of whether free will is a positive or negative thing is a very common motif in literature. In eliminating a humans free will you gain control of their emotions. The society in Brave New World functions on this ignorance, in order to be happy,…

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