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    Brave New World Analysis

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    Brave New World Essay A society not believing in the presence of a higher power or in the existence of suffering is hard for anyone to imagine. In the book Brave New World by Aldous Huxley‚ the society‚ referred to as the “New World‚” does not really have an actual form of god‚ and the World state has eliminated all forms of suffering “for the good of the people.” The society in Brave New World not only has no moral or ethical values‚ it does not allow people to be individuals. The inhabitances

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    Hypnopaedia; it is a process whereby one hears a recording during the period of time when he/she is asleep and is able to repeat it word by word‚ as though memorised‚ the next day‚ without having to actually be conscious or awake while listening to it. In Brave New World‚ it is also described as ‘sleep-teaching’‚ and is focused on drilling moral values into the children’s minds. “You can’t learn a science unless you know what it’s all about‚” thus hypnopaedia is not used on intellectual education in this

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    Brave New World - Dystopia

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    trends‚ societal norms‚ or political systems. The society in Brave New World by Aldous Huxley is divided in a caste system‚ in which humans are not individuals‚ do not have the opportunity to be individuals‚ and never experience true happiness. These characteristics of the reading point towards a well-structured society; a society where the government controls the people to create “perfection”‚ robbing them of their freedoms‚ in other words Brave New World is‚ with no doubt‚ written in a dystopian mindset

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    A PASSAGE TO INDIA

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    A PASSAGE TO INDIA Introduction: Forster is a distinguished novelist both in modern English and world literature history. After the author’s two visits to India‚ the great novel A Passage to India (1924) was produced; it is a novel by E. M. Forster set against the backdrop of the British Raj and the Indian independence movement in the 1920s. In a word‚ it is a novel of cultural‚ social‚ psychological‚ and religious conflict arising mainly from clashes between India’s native population and British

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    Reatil in India

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    Vol. 2 Issue 1 July 2012 at JOURNAL A RESEARCH JOURNAL OF BIMTECH STUDENTS TATTVA is a forum for BIMTECH students to bring to light the outcomes of their journey of discovery into the issues on which they have been cogitating - whether the issues are in marketing‚ finance‚ world business‚ retail management‚ insurance or sustainability or livelihood or microfinance. It is aspirational in intent‚ striving for rigour and has something of importance or an insight to share. In short‚ it is

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    Brave New World Response

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    Brave New World                                                                                               Paola Padilla By: Aldous Huxley                                                                                      Honors English 10 Genre: Science Fiction/ Dystopian August 30‚ 2013 Reading Response Journal “Stability‚” said the Controller‚ “stability. No civilization without social stability. No social stability without individual stability.” (Huxley‚ 42) We are reading the

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    Passage to India

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    Caves: A Look at E.M. Forster’s A Passage to India In E.M. Forster’s A Passage to India‚ the Marabar Caves occupy an important part of the plot. The purpose of this deserves exploration considering Forster entitles the entire second part of his novel to them. Are these caves symbolic of an exploration into one’s own subconscious? Could they be a physical representation of freedom from societal constraint? Perhaps they are meant to embody the enigma that India and the East present to the West? An exploration

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    <center><b>With reference to the text‚ discuss Mustafa Mond’s statement: " The secret to happiness is liking what you have to do."</b></center> <br> <br>Mustafa Mond is presented to us as one of the Ten World Controllers in Brave New World‚ of that Utopian‚ communal and stabilized world‚ set six hundred years into future. This new world that contradicts the world we live in today‚ eliminated the Freedoms that we depend on: the freedom of choice‚ the freedom of thought‚ religion and being. They have

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    Castes In Brave New World

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    Brave new World is a sci-fi dystopian novel that takes place in the year 2540‚ or 632 AF (after Ford). It portrays a world that has advanced in genetic engineering‚ population control‚ the banning of natural reproduction‚ sleep-teaching and numerous other technology. Everyone is sanctioned into castes‚ Alpha‚ which is the highest caste‚ and the most physically superior‚ Beta‚ Gamma‚ Epsilon‚ and Delta. The controlling government‚ known as the world state‚ is managed by ten world controllers‚ spread

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    elections in india

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    India is a constitutional democracy with a parliamentary system of government‚ and at the heart of the system is a commitment to hold regular‚ free and fair elections. These elections determine the composition of the government‚ the membership of the two houses of parliament‚ the state and union territory legislative assemblies‚ and the Presidency and vice-presidencyIndia is a constitutional democracy with a parliamentary system of government‚ and at the heart of the system is a commitment to hold

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