Orgy

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    Brave New World In the World State everyone is conditioned from time they are born to be the same without ever knowing. The World States conditions people through using the pavlovian theory at a young age and introduce drugs from the time they are born. In the book Brave New World By Aldous Huxley Individuality is presented throughout the book but is primarily shown with John The Savage.John is shown as the number one individual that what nothing to with ways of the world state, we also see…

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    societal moral standards and appropriation were still highly upheld by the majority of the public. Therefore, the content of the book came as a shock to most readers, especially with content such as “Orgy porgy, Ford and fun/ Kiss the girls and make them One/ Boys at one with girls at peace/ Orgy-porgy gives release. (84 Huxley)” A scene like that in cohorts with many others, some as much, or even more graphic. Even though this story was released during such a modest time, it paved the way and…

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    The Ideal Society That Was Not Sexual orgies, frequent drug use, and a repugnance towards babies are the key qualities of an upstanding citizen. Well, they are in fictional dystopias anyway. Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World and George Orwell’s 1984 are novels that provide examples of a perfect nation that is more horrifying than innovative, but Huxley’s story appeals to more readers by showing how even a satisfying existence in dystopia is problematic. This essay will discuss both novels…

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    In the Brave New World Huxley presents us with a Utopia and Dystopia also known as the World State and the Savage Reservation. We learn that these two societies are very different with how they view love, religion, nature, and more. The Savage Reservation does everything it can to contradict the World State. Unlike the World State the Reservation is seen as uncivilized and when Lenina and Bernard visit there Lenina is overwhelmed by the smell and grime. In that dystopia birth and death are…

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    leaves the reservation, he doesn’t fit in with the World State society. He is seen as a savage, which makes John angry. He tries to change the society he even starts a riot by throwing out Soma, but it doesn’t work. And after participating in an orgy, he kills himself. Both characters permanently remove themselves from the corrupt…

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    with a sense of civilized charm exuded by Victor Ziegler’s party, which is quickly revealed to be a façade concealing the ugly depravities and fetishes harbored by the elite : foreshadowing the Somertonville Mansion orgy later in the film. The presence of an unusual eight-point star as a Christmas decoration in Ziegler’s party has been interpreted by some as the star of Ishtar, the Mesopotamian goddess of fertility, love,…

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    The Tradition of Pain The “The Lottery” (1948) by Shirley Jackson and “The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas” (1973) by Ursula Le Guin share a setting that is both similar and different from one another. In both stories, the writers use social constructs and deep ritualistic traditions to pave a setting for both stories. Though both traditions pertain to one individual, the basis of each tradition is different from the other through life and death. The first element of comparative analysis…

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    Faith is the core of any human heart and without strong faith people will ultimately become corrupt and fail. The corruptibility of the people is shown throughout the entire story with the loss of innocence. With the first two characters introduced both seem innocent as can be. In “Young Goodman Brown,” Hawthorne creates a fictional character who decides to meet the devil in the forest. Hawthorne uses Brown’s weakness in faith, loss of innocence, fear of the wilderness, and witchcraft to…

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    In the early Republic of the Roman Empire, the religio, or religion, was a polytheist one, or more than one god. Christianity cam along and was completely different because it believed in one God. Religion in Rome underwent an overwhelming change from the time of the Early Republic to the end of the Western Empire. These changes from a polytheist religion to Christianity not only changed how people practiced religion, but how women were viewed. These things lead to people becoming confused and…

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    In Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World, The World State uses a number of very effective methods to control its citizens such as: soma, hypnopedia, the caste system, promiscuous sex, etc. On this essay it would be specified how they uses those methods and what are the effect of the use. The World State uses soma to Control its citizens. First, they uses soma to make the people happy and focused. In World State they are always happy because they are conditioned to be, but if you are not, they teach…

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