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Essay about Analysis of Brave New World by Aldous Huxley

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Analysis of Brave New World by Aldous Huxley Brave New World by Aldous Huxley was published in 1932 after two major global events- World War Two from 1914-1918 and The Great Depression of 1929-1933. These two events changed the way people saw the world and made people see the events were beyond the control of individuals and even governments. Also at this time the world was seeing the rise in technology and the view that science could help solve some of the problems. Much of the technology has been developed because of the war and the mass of people had suffered because of it. All problems with society led to a rise in totalitarian regimes such as those in Russia, Italy and Germany. Huxley uses the novel to question the …show more content…

Everything is done for them and they have no contact with the natural world. An individual’s humanity belongs to the state and not themselves as everything is oppressed for the good of society. Huxley has created a world where science and technology dominate both the natural world and humanity. The ‘wild’ is shut away behind electric fences that kill and keep in anything natural. In this text the natural world has come to dominate creation in BNW and this shows the lack of need for any natural processes. Utopia and Dystopia: In this ironic ‘utopian’ world all problems have been eliminated, pain and disease removed and everyone is happy. All things that could cause a problem for the individual such as families, marriage, religion, all fine arts and love have been taken away by the state. At first it may seem an ideal world but as we enter into it we find that a small number of individuals are unhappy and that stability and happiness has come at a cost. Huxley considers in the text whether humans can live in an alternative environment to one we have today and whether science can provide this environment. The environment that he creates in BNW shows itself to be dystopia. BNW is a dystopian novel for several reasons, the most obvious being that the text presents scientific advancement in the extreme and its effect on humans. Here

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