Hassan Tariq
Professor Rebecca Thorndike-Breeze
11/21/12
Unit3 Final draft
Huxley’s Brave New World is pretty much related to Percy’s essay the loss of the creature, when it comes to the complex structure of the essays. As a writer, Huxley refused to be kept to simple, chronological structure in his fiction. He characteristically experiments with structure, surprising his reader by juxtaposing two different conversations or point of view. In this, Huxley uses the reader 's expectations about structure to produce a particular effect. Thus, reader’s imagination is put in to work while reading Huxley’s novel. It’s not very different with
Walker Percy’s the loss of creature as he also plays around with the structure of the …show more content…
Hence, there is no or little possibility of achieving sovereignty in dystopia.
Huxley’s dystopia has challenged me about the underlying assumptions of my own society and culture, where we are nothing more than a product of our society as we act according to the social norms. We have no impact on stopping issues such as violence, hatred, child abuse,
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war, hunger, racism, genocide that we see in our world every day. The world we live in and its controller or The Top Dogs have planned everything out, but to the society they make it seem like a coincident. In one way or another we are conditioned to believe in what the Government or the media portrays. The media portrays a message in such a persuasive way that we don’t even bother to dig deep in to the situation or think critically about it. From political, social and religious world to the media and sporting industry everything is a part of the plan. For instance, media never broadcasts any news regarding the massacre of millions of people in Burma and
Syria. Moreover, media also kept the nation in dark by not revealing the attacks at Gaza strip