Social Stability in Brave New World Essay

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    Brave New World Essay

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    Civilization ShoShana Skates Professor: James Robertson Tuesday, September 20, 2016 Essay#2: Brave New World. Throughout the novel, “The Brave New World”, author Aldous Huxley featured an unconventional world facilitated by dehumanizing the moral and spiritual compass of mankind. Several concepts during his story established the foundation that governed the jurisdiction of this world without a God and unattended consequences. The traditional lifestyle of mankind was now obsolete and…

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    John The Savage Analysis

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    introduced to The Brave New World, he sees this civilized society’s philosophy and practices are too different from the savaged world where he comes from. This new world praises Ford rather than God, values machinery and rationality over humanism and emotion. He quickly realizes this civilization’s motto: community, identity and stability are the causes of difference compare to his original world, making him see the World State is even more savaged than his own world. In the World State, the…

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    How Bernard’s Pride Sets Him Apart in Brave New World Pride, the belief that one matters more than another, is not tolerated at the best of times. It leaves other members of society with anger at their supposed inferiority, among other negative emotions. When society is totally dedicated to destroying both emotions and individuality, pride is loathed; seen as morally wrong and subversive. That is exactly why in Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World, Bernard Marx’s pride ostracizes him from everyone…

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    Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World features a future in which the individual has no power over his fate, and from conception is subject to the will of the World State. Over the past two hundred years, society has grown to resemble Huxley’s disturbing prediction, and the will of the individual has indeed become decreasingly significant with regard to his own life. The vast majority of the world’s population is subject to governments, corporations, and media over which it has no influence, and will…

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    O-90's Character Analysis

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    However, she is one of the greatest threats to the political stability. Women in dystopian literature are shown as mysterious, independent, and are the ones who will most likely rebel in contrast to men. Women are usually guided through emotions and the need to protect those who they love, while men are more logical thinkers and try to detach themselves from getting into messy situations. Hence why women are the biggest threat to the stability of a country because they don’t give until the…

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    In life it is said that happiness is the key, but is there such thing as too much happiness? In the Brave New World, author Aldous Huxley writes of a world designed with stability and functionality as the main objective. This new world referred to as the World States, people are born from test tubes and programmed into groups, known as, Alphas, Betas, the higher caste members , and Delta, Gammas, and Epsilons, the lower caste members. The society is run by the good looking, intelligent, and…

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    Although Brave New World by Aldous Huxley and Equilibrium share common themes, comparable methods to suppress others, and similar characters, the two are entirely different. In fact, one distinction between the novel and movie is the severity of discipline. The Director reprimands Bernard for his rebellious attitude when he tells him, “‘If ever I hear again of any lapse from a proper standard of infantile decorum, I shall ask for your transference to a Sub-Centre — preferably to Iceland’”…

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    create a prosperous rebellion. Rebels who attempt to overthrow the World State in Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World will never be successful. The World State is successful in constructing a rebellion proof state through the ways in which they control, suppress, and deport potential rebels. Firstly, the direct ways in which the World State controls their citizens assures that a rebellion will be avoided. Lenina Crowne is a rebel in the World State, as she begins to act in ways a female Beta…

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    for a more perfect world has led various writers to imagine their own ideas of utopia. Aldous Huxley, with both a scientific and literary background, wrote Brave New World in 1932 (Congdon). This book takes the reader to London six hundred years into the future. This stable world is filled with comfort, safety, and control. Everything is industrialized. Perhaps at first glance, this description may appeal to the reader, but a closer look reveals an undesirable and frightening world. Huxley uses…

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    Generally, this habit is beneficial as it leads to better organization. In Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World, the meticulous labeling of every man, woman, and child gets attributed as “one of the major instruments for social stability” (Huxley 2006: 7). The society not only benefits, but relies on the groups constructed through Bokanovsky’s Process. The entire world’s production is only possible through “standard…

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