Rod Wright
Mr. Berkoben
English IV
4 November, 2016
The Life of Aldous Huxley
What if I told you that one of the greatest writers of all time was on drugs? Well what I am saying is true! That artist’s name is Aldous Huxley. He was born on July 26, 1894. He was born near Godalming, United Kingdom. He grew up with a dad named, Andrew Huxley. His mom died early in his life due to cancer. He was born with a very large family of 4 brothers and 1 sister.
Aldous Huxley wrote many famous novels. Like, “Crome Yellow”,”Antic Hay”,”Those Barren Leaves”, and “Point Counter Point”. One of his most famous novels that he wrote was, “Brave New World”. Which was written before Hitler and Stalin came into power. Huxley spent a lot of time writing novels in
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The structure of “Crome Yellow” owes much to Thomas Peacock a number of people are gathered together at a house party. The characters dance, go swimming, attend a garden fete, fall in love: but above all they talk. The book is a conversation in which the characters are employed primarily as vehicles for the prolific and imaginative ideas.
It is a useful device that, Huxley was to adopt again in subsequent books, through seldom quite so successfully as he employs it here. In his novel “Crome Yellow” Huxley presents a gallery of characters.
Many of whom will be resuscitated with slight variations in his later novels. Huxley continued to write novels and short stories and eventually assumed a more responsible role of a teacher. During the 1930’s he developed an increasing interest in politics and more particularly in the contemporary cult of pacifism.
He also began to turn his attention to the Eastern mystics, and the third and final stage in his development can be inferred from the works of his period. Huxley always recognized himself the need for some kind of religious approach to the universe: moreover throughout his career as a writer. He also showed a recurrent interest in the phenomena of mysticism. He refused to abandon his empirical attitude in such matters, and the approach to his later philosophical position was cautious in the
Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World and George Orewell’s 1984 were both composed surrounding times of war in the twentieth century. The authors were alarmed by what they saw in society and began to write novels depicting the severe outcomes and possiblities of civilizaton if it continued down its path. Although the two books are very different, they both address many of the same issues and principles.
Brave New World by Aldous Huxley depicts a future world that has mechanized and removed all sense of life to being human. In this world, people work for the common good of the community and are conditioned to dislike what, today, we would consider common and healthy relationships with people and environments. The story follows a man, John, not born into the culture and his struggle with the unfamiliarity with the “Brave New World”. Published in 1932, Brave New World often leaves roots back to the world Aldous was in when he was writing the novel. I believe the genius of Huxley’s writing was his ability to effectively select the traits of 1930’s society that would later become a staple for Americanism in the coming century and, in time, allowing for a relatable story to the modern day while giving us warning to the future.
In the novel, Brave New World by Aldous Huxley, Huxley includes allusion, ethos, and pathos to mock the wrongdoings of the people which causes physical and mental destruction in the society as a whole. The things that happened in the 1930’s plays a big contribution to the things that go on in the novel. The real world can never be looked at as a perfect place because that isn't possible. In this novel, Huxley informs us on how real life situations look in his eyes in a nonfictional world filled with immoral humans with infantile minds and a sexual based religion.
During the 1930s, the times of World War II and the Great Depression, Aldous Huxley wrote Brave New World. There were several issues going on in Huxley’s time that are still present in today's world . Huxley features some of these problems in his book, Brave New World. These problems include drug or medicine usage, women and gender inequality, and traditional marriage/homosexuality. Since this book was written during the times of the Great Depression and World War II, these factors also contributed to some of these issues. Since World War II and the Great Depression are over, these do not affect the problems today. Although some of these problems are still a problem in today's world and society, they are not as much of a problem as they were during Huxley's time.
Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World, like most satires, addresses several issues within society. Huxley accomplishes this by using satirical tools such as parody, irony, allusion. He does this in order to address issues such as human impulses, drugs, and religion. These issues contribute to the meaning of the work as a whole by pointing out the disadvantages of having too much control within society.
Aldous Huxley was a British writer born in Surrey, England on July 26, 1894. He studied science at Eton, but a problem with his eyes left him partially blind and he had to leave after three years. When it eventually improved he attended Oxford, receiving a degree in English Literature. Over the course of his life he wrote many books of all which ranged from topics of drugs and sex to religion and politics. In 1945, Huxley began experimenting with drugs,
Aldous Huxley has a humanistic, deep and enlightened view of how society should be, and of what constitutes true happiness. In his novel, Brave New World, he shows his ideas in a very obscure manner. Huxley presents his ideas in a satirical fashion. This sarcastic style of writing helped Huxley show his views in a very captivating and insightful manner. The entire novel describes a dystopia in which intimate relationships, the ability to choose one's destiny, and the importance of family are strictly opposed. In Huxley's mind, however, these three principles are highly regarded as necessary for a meaningful and fulfilling existence.
From reproductive rights, morality, and drugs, Huxley develops a futuristic approach to mankind. Brave New World, by Aldous Huxley serves as a cautionary tale about contemporary American culture by illustrating the technological and scientific advancements within a society to establish power and the affects it may have on mankind.
Huxley’s Brave New World centers around a society far from modern day. In this warped
Having been a somewhat of an outsider in his life, physically and mentally, Aldous Huxley used what others thought as his oddities to create complex works. His large stature and creative individuality is expressed in the characters of his novel, Brave New World. In crafting such characters as Lenina, John, Linda, Bernard, and Helmholtz, not to mention the entire world he created in the text itself, Huxley incorporated some of his humanities into those of his characters. Contrastly, he removed the same humanities from the society as a whole to seem perfect. This, the essence and value of being human, is the great meaning of Brave New World. The presence and lack of human nature in the novel exemplifies the words of literary theorist Edward Said: “Exile is strangely compelling to think about but terrible to experience. It is the unhealable rift forced between a human being and a native place, between the self and its true home: its essential sadness can never be surmounted.” Huxley’s characters reflect the “rift” in their jarred reaction to new environments and lifestyles, as well as the remnant of individuality various characters maintain in a brave new world.
In conclusion, Huxley generally uses his collected, connected syntax and structure throughout the book to display a calmer, informative perspective on the events happening as the story progresses as well as implementing certain stylistic elements to make certain parts of the novel stand out.
In Brave New World, author Aldous Huxley employs a variety of rhetorical strategies, including Aristotelian appeals, symbolism and figurative language to express that while extreme technological advancements may be innovative, it can lead to government totalitarianism, stripping free thought and self expression from a society.
Huxley's work, Brave New World, is a book about a society that is in the future. This book contains many strange things that are generally unheard of today. Yet we see that some of the ideas that are presented in this book were already present in the 20th century. The idea of having one superior race of people can easily be seen as something that Hitler was trying to accomplish during the Holocaust. Huxley presents the society in his book as being a greater civilization. A totalitarian type of leadership is also presented in his book. According to him, this would be the best and most effective type of government. Hitler also thought that a totalitarian government was best. We see several similarities between Hitler's Germany and Huxley's
Brave New World, he creates a dystopian world that people are controlled in. Huxley used
As I read Brave New World and 1984, I noticed how some of Aldous Huxley and