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Huxley's Savage Reservation: Setting Analysis

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Upon Lenina and Bernard’s arrival to the Savage Reservation, Huxley immediately depicts the setting as one in which that only creatures who are inferior to humans could survive. The first descriptions of the reservation starkly contrast the efficient, hygienic, and affluent world the civilized characters are used to with “unfavorable climatic or geological conditions [and] poverty of natural resources,” (Huxley 162). In addition to adverse environmental issues such as hot weather and location, a straight fence of "the geometrical symbol of triumphant human purpose," encloses the inhabitants (Huxley 105). Huxley discernibly constructs the reservation as a confined space with “no escape” and “perfectly tamed” savages (Huxley 102, 106). The connection

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