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    The characters in Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World represent certain political and social ideas. Huxley used what he saw in the world in which he lived to form his book. From what he saw‚ he imagined that life was heading in a direction of a utopian government control. Huxley did not imagine this as a good thing. He uses the characters of Brave New World to express his view of utopia being impossible and detrimental. One such character he uses to represent the ideology behind this is Bernard

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    The Themes of Lenina and Bernard In the dystopian world of Brave New World‚ characters act as more than just three-dimensional people‚ Huxley also uses them to build theme within the novel. He uses all of his characters within the novel to achieve his theme by giving them different attributes to help mold their world and their perception of the world around them. The characters‚ Lenina and Bernard‚ are the most influential towards the central theme of the novel‚ which is the idea of conformity vs

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    October 29‚ 2012 Brave New World: How Technology Affects Society Brave New World‚ a place in which people are created from scientific labs through a process call the Bokanovsky Process‚ and where being born from parents is a shame for society. Where conditioning is use for training babies to act and think the way people in society wants them to do. A place where a popular drug call Soma is used to control and keep the society happy and stable‚ and causes principles and morals to disappear or change

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    in Brave New World "Every one belongs to every one else‚" whispers the voice in the dreams of the young in Huxley’s future world — the hypnopaedic suggestion discouraging exclusivity in friendship and love. In a sense in this world‚ every one is every one else as well. All the fetal conditioning‚ hypnopaedic training‚ and the power of convention molds each individual into an interchangeable part in the society‚ valuable only for the purpose of making the whole run smoothly. In such a world‚ uniqueness

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    in itself is bad. If used wisely‚ genetics can be beneficial‚ but they can be abused‚ too.” Genetic Engineering is a new type of science which allows the editing of genes. The author of Brave New World‚ Aldous Huxley‚ thought of ideas such as this long before the technology became close to how it is in the novel. This will dramatically affect life for the human race.In Brave New World‚ alcohol‚ not genetic engineering‚ led to harming the intellect of the populace as genetic engineering helped society

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    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” through scientific procedures can only

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    Findley and Brave New World by Aldous Huxley. Against the backdrop of pervasive‚ ubiquitous and broad reaching societal topics‚ self-identity aids the audience’s understanding of how the character is thinking‚ feeling and how they react to certain events that take place throughout the novel. Although both novels are The Theme of Self Identity in Headhunter and Brave New World: A Contrasting Essay written with a theme of self-identity‚ they differ in how the theme

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    course. With every one of these stories containing the theme of freedom‚ this could not be possible without some type of restraint or authoritarian regime present in such story. In 1984‚ it is the Party and Big Brother being that restraint; in Brave New World‚ that restraint is The Director of Hatcheries and Conditioning; in The Lion‚ The Witch‚ and The Wardrobe‚ that restraint was the White Witch and her reign over Narnia‚ and the list goes on. All of these stories have some reason as to why freedom

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    McClure Prof. Kies ENGL 1302.412 June 21‚ 2010 John the Savage in the Brave New World Life in the Brave New World is a completely different world than that in the Savage Reservation. John‚ being somewhat Savage and somewhat civilized is unable to find a place where he belongs and agrees with the central societal norms. Being raised on the reservation and not decanted and conditioned in the ways of the Brave New World John experiences life in a completely different way than that he is genetically

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    BRAVE NEW WORLD This novel is about a Utopia‚ an ideal state- a bad ideal state. It is therefore a novel about ideas‚ and its themes are as important as its plot. They will be studied in depth in the chapter-by-chapter discussion of the book. Most are expressed as fundamental principles of the Utopia‚ the brave new world. Some come to light when one character‚ a Savage raised on an Indian reservation‚ confronts that world. As you find the themes‚ try to think not only about what they say about Huxley

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