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    1984 vs. Brave New World

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    There are lots of ways to compare 1984 by George Orwell to Brave New World by Aldous Huxley. They both have to do with very futuristic ideas. I noticed that they both had basically the same character structure. In 1984‚ there is the leading lady Julia‚ and in Brave New World‚ there is Lenina Crowne. The main male character in 1984 is of course Winston Smith‚ and the leading man in Brave New World is a cross between Bernard Marx and John the so-called savage. There are also two god-like

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    The Giver by Lois Lowry and Brave New World by Aldous Huxley have many similarities. They both take place in futuristic utopias where happiness is the overall goal. Jonas and Bernard‚ the major characters in the novels‚ are both restless individuals who want change. Despite the close similarities‚ there are many contrasts in the two novels. The childhood‚ family‚ and professions arrangements are differently portrayed in the similar novels The Giver and Brave New World. <br> <br>The similarities in

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    Brave New World

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    Although the citizens of Brave New World by Aldous Huxley are convinced they are in this perfect world of the future‚ always happy‚ free to do whatever they want‚ ‘have’ whoever they want‚ little do they know‚ they are being trapped inside the world of the director of Brave New World. He makes the decisions about everything that happens. In Brave New World lacks freedom due to many different things‚ including the lack of individuality‚ the lack of emotions‚ and the lack of control or choice of action

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    Brave New World

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    Brave New World vs. Reality Have you ever wondered that there was a whole other world completely different from the one we live in today? In Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World‚ there actually is metaphorically. In this world people are controlled by higher power. The way Huxley describe life in (BNW) and life in the U.S are different based on drug use‚ religion‚ and consumptions of goods and services. In Brave New World their community is greatly dependent upon soma‚ as in our world where prescribed

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    brave new world

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    SETTING Setting plays a particularly important role in Brave New World. Huxley’s novel is a novel of Utopia‚ and a science-fiction novel. In both kinds of books the portrayal of individual characters tends to take a back seat to the portrayal of the society they live in. In some ways‚ the brave new world itself becomes the book’s main character. The story opens in London some 600 years in the future- 632 A. F. (After Ford) in the calendar of the era. Centuries before‚ civilization as we know

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    Brave New World

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    Brave New World In our world‚ we wish for new advances in technology‚ a more stable society and freedom to do as we please but what happens when our wishes come true and technology advances to the stage that it begins to control us? What happens when we establish the type of freedom we desire and become chemically dependent? What happens when everything is so controlled that our suffering ends because we cannot experience love? Brave New World by Aldos Huxley advances to the future to demonstrate

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    Brave new world

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    Dystopia in Aldous Huxley ’s Brave New Worl It ’s hard to imagine yet somehow so extremely close to us is the possibility of a world of ideal perfection where there is no room or acceptance of individuality. Yet‚ as we strive towards the growth of technology and improvement of our daily living we come closer to closing the gap between the freedom of emotions‚ self understanding‚ and of speech and the devastation of a dystopia. A utopia‚ or perfect world‚ gone awry is displayed in Aldous Huxley

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    Brave New World

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    Brave New World Reflection Essay 1. Types of conditioning were used as principles of phycology. This was used in the beginning explaining the reproductive system in brave new world. The name used was hatchery conditioning. This made the delta babies have a fear of alarm bells and electric shock. By using this it makes them not wear khaki‚ or to play with delta children. It also won’t waste time. The Director becomes present when he confesses to Bernard Marx that as a young man he went to a Savage

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    Brave New World

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    Be Pure of Suffer? In the 1932 novel Brave New World by Aldous Huxley many characters go through internal and external conflict. Many of the conflicts occur because of sacrifices‚ suffering and other hardships. These hardships include suffering and harming yourself and others in order to purify yourself and others. Huxley’s theme about suffering is that it is necessary to purify oneself of base desires. Huxley uses internal conflict to show that one needs to free oneself of lust desires in order

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    Brave New World

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    The Loss of Individuality The peak of a writer’s career should exhibit their most profound works of literature. In the case of Aldous Huxley‚ Brave New World is by far his most renowned novel. Aldous Huxley is a European-born writer who‚ in the midst of his career‚ moved to the United States and settled in California. While in California‚ he began to have visions aided by his usage of hallucinatory drugs. His visions were of a utopian society surviving here on earth. In his literature‚ Huxley wanted

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