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    Brave New World: The Advancement of Science Christy Campbell Mrs. Doig Eng OAC 2 16 May‚ 1996 When thinking of progress‚ most people think of advances in the scientific fields‚ believing that most discoveries and technologies are beneficial to society. Are these advances as beneficial as most people think? In the novel Brave New World‚ the author Aldous Huxley‚ warns readers that scientific advances can be a threat to society. This is particularly evident in the fields of biology‚ technology

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    analyze Hauxley’s fear of Americanization in his novel Brave New World. It is well known that Hauxley was afraid of Americanization and for that reason he gave a American symbols bad meaning in his book. It is pretty clear on example of Ford or chewing­gum but also on many other. Brave New world is dystopia science fiction. Although Huxley wrote many pieces of literature‚ among his essays‚ poetries and novels Brave New World1 published in 1932 is the most famous one. Also

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    Brave New World Analysis on Characters “The world’s stable now. People are happy; they get what they want‚ and they never want what they can’t get...they are so conditioned that they practically can’t help behaving as they ought to behave” (Huxley 198). Many people speak and dream about a perfect world‚ for the problems which we face in the present world to simply just go away. Brave New World is a novel which shows an example of what life would be like in a utopian society. It shows the differences

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    MacKenzie Morrissett AP Literature 3B Mrs. Scruggs 2 September 2016 Brave New World In the novel Brave New World by Aldous Huxley‚ society is divided into distinct classes. Those who do not fit into a class are separated from society completely. Bernard Marx‚ an Alpha male from London‚ leaves his home to venture onto the Reservation. The Reservation is a Native American community that is surrounded by gates that kill anyone who tries to escape. Much to his and his companion’s‚ Lenina‚ surprise‚

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    Dworkin‚ criticizes meditation for artificial happiness in his book. A patient escapes her own consciousness through meditation and keeps her unhappiness at bay‚ but this also postpones any serious analysis of her situation. In Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World‚ the state’s goal is to avoid emotional instability; however there are cracks in the perceived happiness of this seemingly perfect society where there cannot be true happiness. The characters have no concept of love or any other passion and actually

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    dystopia‚ a big ball of confusion and false happiness. Brave New World is a dystopian fiction novel that follows several noticeable characteristics of a dystopia. Such characteristics are demonstrated in other popular novels such as "The Hunger games" and "The Giver" These characteristics are an illusion that the world is a utopia‚ limited knowledge; because knowledge is power‚ constant surveillance‚ uniformed expectations‚ fear of the outside world‚ and figurehead to be worshiped. If the people ever

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    In Huxley novel‚ Brave New World‚ the themes in the novel relate to the political developments of the 1930s. Huxley wrote his novel between the world wars. British society was at peace‚ but the social effects of World Ward 1 were still in effect. Huxley wrote about the changes in national feelings‚ questioning of long-held social and moral assumptions‚ and the move toward more equality among the classes and between the sexes. During this time there was an expansion of transportation and communication

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    look more like Brave New World than 1984. In the West‚ pleasure and distraction‚ used by those in power‚ control people’s spending‚ political loyalties‚ and even their thoughts. Control through reward poses a greater threat to human freedom because‚ unlike punishment‚ it can be introduced unconsciously and continued indefinitely‚ with the approval and support of the people being controlled. In place of the Nine Years’ War — the calamity that brought the society of Brave New World into being — Huxley

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    corrupts absolutely." In the novels Anthem and Brave New World‚ Ayn Rand and Aldous Huxley explain what life in a dystopian society is like through the eyes of two outcasts; Equality 7-2521 and Bernard Marx. Neither agree with the action of their councils and try to do something about it but cannot because they are the only ones that actually notice the corruption. Which causes them to create a new society. Through the novels Anthem and Brave New World‚ the authors show how societies that claim to

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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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