preview

Essay on Conformity in Brave New World

Good Essays

Conformity in Brave New World

The novel, Brave New World by Aldous Huxley first published in 1932, presents a very bleak out look of what future society will be like. The novel presents a future of where almost total conformity is a carefully guarded aspect of society. Even before one is "decanted" they are conditioned to fill a specific roll and to act a certain way.

Everyone, while still in their jar, is conditioned to fit into a specific caste. The castes range from Alpha Double Plus down to Epsilon Semi-Moron. Once one is "decanted" they are put through various types of conditioning, depending on caste, and are raised solely by World State officials. There is no such thing as a family anymore, that would only …show more content…

Huxley eventually tells the readers that that is just a rumor.

Marx is not the only one to see the down sides of conformity, his friend Helmholtz Watson, a big name emotional engineer and feely (a feely is basically a movie with more than just video and audio, the tactual element is thrown in so one can feel what is going on) writer, also sees something wrong with, conformity. He feels that he can write better things, things outside the norms of society, which would have more meaning.

Society is challenged once Bernard finds John. John was a boy who, Bernard found on a "Savage Reservation" in New Mexico. John's mother (oh yeah mother is another word that has lost its usefulness in society except when describing animal or savages) had gone to the reservation with the Director of Hatcheries in London, Bernard's boss, and had acidently ended up pregnant. She was unable to have the pregnancy aborted, as was normal practice if one ended up pregnant, so she was forced to give birth to John. Society considers this disgusting, so she was quite ashamed of this. Bernard saw an opportunity, the director had threatened to send him to Iceland, because of Marx's unorthodox ideas, so Bernard decided to embarrass the Director. Inadvertantly Marx added a whole new element to the society in London.

John was one of the few people on the planet who had ever had the chance to read Shakespeare. All of Shakespeare's works were banned by the new

Get Access