Utopia and Dystopia Literature (keywords): • Utopian literature: • A fictional text dealing with an ideal (future) society. • Dystopian literature: • A fictional text dealing with a future society in which human freedom is severely limited. A dystopia often criticizes our present-day society by exposing trends and tendencies towards totalitarian control. Brave New World- background knowledge • Written in 1931 • Set in distant future Generally known elements: • Total control of society
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NOTES FROM Brave New World Aldous Huxley Chapter 11 Finally—and this was by far the strongest reason for people’s not wanting to see poor Linda—there was her appearance. Fat; having lost her youth; with bad teeth‚ and a blotched complexion‚ and that figure (Ford!)—you simply couldn’t look at her without feeling sick‚ yes‚ positively sick. Chapter 11 Fat; having lost her youth; with bad teeth‚ and a blotched complexion‚ and that figure (Ford!)—you simply couldn’t look at her without
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Brave New World Essay In his novel Brave New World Aldous Huxley tells of a future world where there is no individuality but instead a world of science and uniformity. In this dystopian world there is a character named Bernard Marx. Huxley used Bernard Marx to show the power struggle humans face. He did this by showing Marx in the beginning as a person with little power and an outcast to the others. But through the book gains power but his grows a large ego because of it. This shows that the World
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Ivan Denisovich essay In his 17th century pem‚ "To Althea from Prison"‚ Richard Lovelace tells us that "stone walls do not a prison make‚ nor iron bars a cage." Thus Lovelace introduces and makes the reader familiar with the paradoxical nature of freedom. This paradox is raised again when comparing two legitimate visions of the modern world: Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World and Alexander Solzhenitsyn’s One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich. One day in the life of Ivan Denisovich vividly describes
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listening all the time until the owner of the phone says‚ “Hey Siri”‚ and she turned on to listen. In Brave New World‚ soma is the technology that brings the residents into holiday. When Bernard and Lenina are in the savage reserve Lenina says‚ “I wish I had my soma… A gramme is better than a damn” (pg. 116). Lenina is aghast by the residents of the reserve from their wrinkled bodies‚ to their old age. Whenever “damn” is said in Lenina’s mind she repeats the phrase due to conditioning. As people crave for
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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” utopia or dystopia? The novel Brave New World has often been characterized as dystopia rather than utopia. Nevertheless‚ the superficial overview of the novel implies a utopian society‚ especially if judging by what the Controller said to John‚ the Savage: People are happy; they get what they want‚ and they never want what they can’t get. They’re well off; they’re safe; they’re never ill; they’re not afraid of death; they’re blissfully ignorant of passion and
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men and women don’t respect each other in the area of romance. Men like Henry Foster just use girls like Lenina for sex. But having sex with multiple people is socially accepted in the World State. In Brave New World‚ symbolic vampirism is used because the men and women use each other to get what they want which is sex. They do not care about what the other person wants. An example is Lenina trying to seduce John‚ when he makes it clear he does not just want to have sex with her. John is the opposite
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relationships and a never ending social life‚ one never has the time to reflect. Bernard went against the society’s views when he asked Lenina about weather she ever feels as if she want to be more than “just a cell in the social body”(78). As an answer to the question she started crying. Even though Bernard is able to think about such theories and question the society Lenina‚ who has been properly conditioned wouldn’t even dare to question such things‚ especially since they are about the society she lives
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activist to point out. I have also read two other articles written by female authors‚ one being an anonymous UK student‚ and the other June Deery. For the most part‚ I wholly agreed with the points they made about the gender bias in Huxley’s work. Lenina‚ a vaccination worker and lover of John the Savage‚ is seemingly denied a role of a rebel by Huxley in Brave New World. For example‚ near the beginning of the book‚ Lenina’s behaviour is rather unorthodox. She wears green‚ instead of the grey or maroon
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