"Brave new world vs modern society" Essays and Research Papers

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    makes the World State sound like a utopia- the perfect world. However‚ as you continue reading‚ you realize the society they have created is more dystopian- a world where no one is an individual and through technology‚ the government is very powerful. I felt the World States motto- "Community‚ Identity‚ Stability" (Huxley‚ 1)‚ was ironic because the people in this community don’t have an identity since they are conditioned to act‚ feel‚ and think a certain way. None of the people in the World State

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    The loss of freedom and individuality in the modern world could be countered by human warmth and compassion but all too often it’s not. In Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World and the selected poetry of W.H. Auden‚ the protagonists routinely lose individuality and freedom but hardly ever is this loss countered by expressions of human warmth and compassion. ‘John the Savage’ enters the Brave New World but loses the freedom and individuality he has grown up with. In the same way ‘Miss Gee’ and the Jewish

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    by John Wyndham published in 1955 and “Brave New World”‚ a novel by Aldous Huxley published in 1932. The story in “The Chrysalids” takes place thousands of years in the future in a rural society similar to our world before the invention of modern technology such as telephones‚ cars‚ etc. The people in the novel have vague memories of the "Old People"‚ a civilization which existed long ago and seems to be similar to our current technologically advanced world. The people in “The Chrysalids” practice

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    chapter | Who? | Where + When? | What? | Chapter I | Director‚ students‚ Henry Foster‚ Lenina | Central London Hatchery and Conditioning CentreYear A.F. 632 | - World State’s motto: ‘Community‚ Identity Stability’ - The Director of Hatcheries and Conditioning (D.H.C.) shows some new arrived students the Central London Hatchery and Conditioning Centre–> introduces them to the principles of the mass production of humans- There are groups of ‘alpha’‚ ‘beta’‚ ‘gamma’‚ ‘delta’ and ‘epsilon’ - Work

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    1. Title A. A Brave New World The title for Aldous Huxley’s book A Brave New World is a quite contradictory statement to the actuality of the outside world. one in which there is almost absolutely no bravery required the name of the book renders itself ironic. -When John hears the “O brave new world” being sung‚ he feels as if the words themselves “had mocked him through his misery and remorse‚ mocked him with how hideous a note of cynical derision!”(Huxley 143). he makes attempts

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    potential is unbounded. Edison’s accomplishments are a testimony to his own words and thus can be considered the backbone of the novel Island‚ where Aldous Huxley depicts the Pacific island of Pala. Pala is an ideal society sustained by philosophical values and disjunction from the surrounding world. Naturally‚ Pala attracts the envy and acrimony from other civil bodies in pursuit of their rich oil deposits‚ leading to the foreseen demise of the utopia. Shipwrecking on the island‚ William Asquith Farnaby

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    Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World. On an initial read‚ Huxley’s novel sounds incredible prophetic. Readers attempt to draw parallels between every aspect of the novel and the real world - the decline of religion‚ drug use‚ open sexuality‚ government control‚ mass conformity‚

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    totalitarianism‚ and manipulation of language between America and 1984 and Brave New World have an erroneously negative effect on the average American’s perception of the government. Frequently used as political rhetoric‚ correlations between the negative aspects of these dystopian novels allow politicians and political journalists to impose a sense of distrust of the government‚ the fear of an Orwellian or Huxleyan society as a result of their opposition‚ and general pessimism about America as a

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    Community‚ Identity‚ Stability is the manifesto of the World State. In order for the society to achieve a state of stability‚ a loss of individuality is inevitable. The timeline for “A Brave New World” is set in the future wherein‚ ten controllers of the world states determine the plight of the society. Identity is a pre-determined result of genetic engineering and a rigid control over reproduction. Removal of ovaries as a surgical process is referred to as the “Bokanovsky Process” wherein‚ children

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    Brave New World Detailed Outline Topic Sentence; In 1932‚ a write by the name of Aldous Huxley had published the novel Brave New World which was set in London‚ England during the year 2540. In 1999‚ the Modern Library ranked Brave New World fifth on the list of the 100 best selling English-language novels of the 20th century as well as fifty three out of a hundred in the Top 100 Greatest Novels of All Times in 2003. Thesis; The protagonist in Huxley’s Brave New World is Bernard Marx. Bernard

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