"New World" Essays and Research Papers

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    Soma - Brave New World

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    ORAL PRESENTATION ABOUT SOMA IN THE BOOK BRAVE NEW WORLD the topic i will present is the theme of drugs as a requirement maintain social stability‚ as a contribution for people’s happiness and most importantly drugs related to a perfect world. In the real world‚ in our reality‚ drugs are seen as extremely dangerous and the consumers are excluded from the moral society‚ seen as outcasts that go in the wrong path or that will never achive real happiness and a right life. However‚ drugs‚ in the last

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    different at the same time. In Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World‚ Linda and Lenina are two such characters. Each of them have their own characteristics which make them unique‚ but they also have separate characteristics. The three ways in which Lenina and Linda can be compared would be physically‚ intelligently‚ and emotionally. First of all‚ Lenina’s physical characteristics help distinguish her type of character. Lenina is a typical woman in the new world‚ and she has all the characteristics that describe

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    to share their concerns about humanity. Brave New World by Aldous Huxley presents a dystopian‚ emotionless and controlled world where all individuality is masked by their false understanding of “happiness”. Soma‚ is their armament against the effects of conflict and the only way to indulge in their inescapable life. True happiness is only possible through the perception and feeling of emotions‚ soma simply provides a distraction from the truth of a world gone wrong. In fact‚ it appears the plot‚ tone

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    in the Brave New World society take soma whenever they get a bad feeling like its nothing instead of learning to put up with them. When they do this they are not experiencing all aspects in life such as the hardship life brings. They also don’t know the consequences that taking drugs like soma gives you. This is evident when the book says‚ ‘”But aren’t you shortening her life by giving her so much?”… “In one sense‚ yes‚” Dr. Shaw admitted.’ (Huxley 154) The people in the Brave New World society‚ take

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    10/11/12 Journal Entry #5: HTRLLAP Concepts The concept of “vampires” is present in Brave New World because the 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

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    estimated that 64‚000 people die of drug overdoses per year. Huxley’s society “The World State” is a dystopian society‚ yes the men and women that don’t partake in controlling the society seem to be happy in what they consider a utopia‚ but the people who do control “The World State” like the world controller Mustapha Mond and people like John The Savage‚ are victims of the true nature of reality. In the novel “Brave New World” by Aldous Huxley‚ some of the fantasies that are now a reality in our society

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    Bernard Marx is the Brave New World’s favorite outcast. He doesn’t "fit in" because of his "smallness”. He’s isolated by his status as an outcast‚ and his alienation leads him to be a critic of the Brave New World rather than a proponent of it. He wishes he could fit in and be "happy." Bernard’s critique of society stems from his frustrated desire to "fit in" and not from any logical or rational problem he has with it. We learn that he has a "reputation" for being "anti-social" and that he’s an outcast

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    Brave New World Essay In Brave New World‚ John the Savage willfully exiles himself from the reservation‚ where he was born and raised‚ in order to travel to the new world; because of his passion for learning and this twisted idea of becoming happy through his acceptance. Aldous Huxley has written a novel where the main character experiences a type of exile that is tragically unhealable while being beneficial. John’s experiences in the world state were enriching; however‚ they were even more

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    In Brave New World‚ there is an ongoing conflict between John and society‚ specifically with the people who believe in the status quo. John begins to disgust the “civilized” society as Bernard shows him around London and he sees it as an unnatural place and a world of false happiness. He also despises how addicted his mother becomes to soma‚ taking so much soma that it deteriorates her health and‚ eventually‚ she dies in a state of delusion. At the point of his mother’s death John begins to further

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    Freedom and individualism are a significant component of contemporary society‚ however there are many parts of the world where these basic human rights are not granted. The lack of these basic rights are clearly demonstrated in the novel Brave New World by Aldous Huxley and the play Macbeth by William Shakespeare. The leaders of many societies are willing to sacrifice innocent lives in order for society to function according to their visions. Many leaders are willing to sacrifice the freedom of

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