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    When you don’t fit in anywhere‚ and there is nowhere to go‚ what do you do? In Brave New World by Aldous Huxley‚ John is rejected in his society. He was born from civilized parents‚ but he grew up in a savage reservation. This causes John and his mother to not fit in no matter where they go. John’s curiosity‚ ideals‚ and conditioning push him throughout the course of the novel to change for the worse because he becomes paranoid and not wanting of any human contact. John’s curiosity is a major reason

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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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    INTRO In order to become an individual‚ you must embrace challenges and suffering. Those experiences help define who you are. In Brave New World‚ Aldous Huxley delivers a powerful message/warning of what happens to a society that eliminates individuality. In the story‚ individuality cannot come without pain or suffering‚ a element that the World State Society has taken out of their civilization. Soma is used as a drug to keep everyone in society happy and from feeling any types of hardship or pain

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    Loss of Free Will and Personality in Brave New World The novel Brave New World written by Aldous Huxley is like no other in fantasy or satire. It predicts a future overpowered by technology where the people have no religion. With advanced technology and the genetic engineering‚ people live flourishing‚ material lives in their society. This is a society with no love‚ starvation ‚disease‚ coldness‚ wars‚ crimes‚ and artistic creativity .As the World State’s motto declares: “community

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    Aldous Huxley’s book Brave New World strongly‚ the vast majority of the population is unified under the World State‚ an eternally peaceful‚ stable global society in which goods and resources are plentiful and everyone is happy. Happiness is deprived from mass produced goods such as obstacle golf‚ Centrifugal Bumble-puppy‚ recreational sex and the most common one‚ the use of the drug soma; a hallucinogen that takes users on enjoyable‚ hangover-free "holidays". We meet the protagonist Bernard‚ who

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    graveyard down at the bottom. As I grabbed my briefcase someone was waiting for me at the door. It was a young man around the age of 16 and he was a mail delivery agent from the MAIL district. I took the letter and read it to myself. It said Dear Brave scientist‚ While you are reading this something very terrible is happening on your floor right now. You won’t realise it until it is too late. If your curiosity is upsetting you let me inform you‚ yes I was in the storage room. From Unknown This was

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    Aldous Huxley’s "Brave New World" has several striking similarities to today’s society. The World State and today’s world utilize comparable methods of promoting consumption and they also experience some of the same problems in society‚ though different practices are used to prevent or suppress them. There are also other significant differences that inhibit our society into becoming a dystopian society. In the World State‚ the government overpowers everything; it is a totalitarian government. All

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    novel “Brave New World”‚ by Aldous Huxley‚ he makes some predictions in 1931 that we today. In this novel we find that the predictions that are made are often related to modern day ‚ 2013. There is many examples‚ but the four I will talk about today are how advertisements effect the way we view people and things‚ how birth control leads to promiscuity‚ how the use of medication is a substance for pain and how cloning is used. The predictions that Aldous Huxley makes in the novel “Brave New World”

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    Brave New World – A Better World “From each according to his ability‚ to each according to his need.” This quote‚ by Karl Marx‚ addresses the principle that everyone should contribute as much as they can to society‚ and in turn take whatever it is they need from the society. The ideology from this quote is greatly applied in Aldous Huxley’s novel‚ Brave New World. It can be said that the entire foundation of Huxley’s novel is based on this single quote. In the novel‚ the population of the world

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    its civilians with constant mental and physical distraction to avoid innate dissent. Eighteen years later in 1949‚ Eric Arthur Blair‚ under pseudonym George Orwell‚ penned an oppressive totalitarian society where unorthodox thoughts and rebellion were silenced by cyclical violence and torture. Each approach to the divisiveness presented in Huxley’s Brave New World and Orwell’s 1984 could not be further apart. Huxley’s novel features future citizens molded from prebirth inside containers‚ undergoing

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