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    Discuss the ways in which control is exhibited over the society of Brave New World‚ - conditioning ->behavior - caste structure/social hierarchy - genetic manipulation/embryonic manipulation ->chemical To create a utopia‚ where everyone is happy‚ no war‚ no conflict‚ and even no jealousy and sadness‚ the Brave New World society uses different ways to control humans in the community‚ by conditioning‚ caste structure and genetic manipulation. Firstly‚ for conditioning. Even before the birth of

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     In the story A Brave New World‚ John is the one character who would be completely sane in our modern world. He lived in the “Savage Reservation” which is basically a modified version of our world. He also read from Shakespeare‚ which gave him manners and knowledge from our time. He gives us the point of view of someone not unlike ourselves. If the story was from the point of view of a working self­pleasing human robot like everyone in the dystopia‚ nothing much would have happened. John believes

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    "Brave New World” utopia or dystopia? The society displayed in the book shows that it is quite hard to label as one or another. Many would say that in the novel Huxley portrays a systematic utopian society. Whereas others such as author Leon Kass states "Huxley shows the reader a dystopia that goes with rather than against‚ the human grain". (p.311) Advances in scientific research allow the World State to create a world where people are conditioned to be happy the way they are. In the novel science

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    feminist lens deals with the role of gender within literature‚ and the marxist lens focuses on the context of culture and society within literature. Each perspective plays off the other to create a cohesive approach to analyzing Brave New World. Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World highlights the issues associated with a society with a disproportional basis in manufactured social and gender structures. These dysfunctional social and gender structures are created through a fundamental irony: knowledge both

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    Aliya � PAGE �1� Aliya � PAGE �7� Morality‚ Meet Brave New World "The books that the world calls immoral are books that show the world its own shame."1 Concerning Aldous Huxley ’s dystopian novel‚ Brave New World‚ readers find themselves thinking the theme of the novel is not of proper conduct and it would not take place in their current world. Brave New World follows a futuristic society‚ the World State‚ where citizens are mass-produced and conditioned to suit the ways of the government and

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    Critical Analysis of Brave New World In Aldous Huxley’s satirical novel‚ Brave New World‚ the government of a futuristic‚ utopian civilization censors the citizens from anything they do not agree with. Meanwhile “savages” whom are banned from “civilization”‚ are free to keep their personal morals and values. Huxley is critical of governments deceiving their citizens‚ consumerism and mankind’s lust affair with selfishness. Governments exist to manipulate and control the people they rule over

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    Brave New World As man has progressed over time there has been one thing strived for more than anything else. That has been to arrive at a utopian society‚ where everyone is happy‚ disease is nonexistent‚ and conflict‚ anger‚ or sadness are unheard of. In a utopian society only happiness exists. While reading Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World‚ I came to realize that this is not what humans really want. In fact‚ utopian societies are much worse of than the societies of today

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    Scientific progress and technological innovations have been‚ along with new ideas of social organization‚ the principal scope of interest for the vast majority of utopian writers. Whether based on some rational predictions of the future development of science‚ or belonging to the sphere of pure fantasy‚ technology in utopian writing has been generally described as a means of achieving the state of universal order and happiness‚ a way to establish collective prosperity and social equality. However

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    this technological abuse are evident in society today. In his novel Brave New World‚ Aldous Huxley illustrates the damage a corrupt authority can exact on a subject through technological perversion. In the novel‚ genetic engineering replaces the natural human system of reproduction as life is created in laboratories in an attempt to control all aspects of society. As human beings move closer to this actualization in the present world‚ the theme that any attempt to control reproduction and “play God”

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    The Role of SOMA in ‘A BRAVE NEW WORLD’ Joao Eduardo Throughout history drugs have been used to provoke special feelings on people. Some use them as a means of getting closer to a certain God‚ others for fun‚ and others to satisfy an addiction‚ among‚ of course‚ many other reasons. And in Aldous Huxley’s A BRAVE NEW WORLD‚ the ever existent role of such substances in society isn’t’ forgotten‚ as the author provides his characters with what he calls ‘SOMA’. The name isn’t as crazy as it may

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