Aldous Huxley

– Brave New World Essay, Research Paper


By: Aldous Huxley Brave New World opens in a technically


advanced future


world. In the beginning of this book, we see the Director of


World


Hatcheries lead the new hatchery students on a tour of a


Conditioning


Center in London where babies are produced in bottles and


pre-sorted to


determine which class level they will be born into. These


class level


range from Alpha-plus, the highest level, to Epsilon-minus,


the lowest.


There are no parents, and babies are conditioned from birth


to learn certain


behaviors. All diseases have been eliminated, and when


people are feeling


down, they just take soma, a wonder drug. Also, people are


conditioned from


birth not to love one person, so there is no marriage and


most people have


many lovers. There is no God; instead, Henry Ford is


worshipped as the god


Ford. Another accomplishment of this society is the


elimination of aging.


Bernard Marx has unorthodox viewpoints and is outcast as


an eccentric. He


likes being alone, but in this society being alone is


discouraged. His


isolation from society has made him very different from


everyone else. His


only friend is Helmholtz Watson, an accomplished intellect


who writes


government propaganda. Watson has grown war of life as


it is, and his


supervisors have him under close watch. Two co-workers


are discussing


Lenina Crowne, another worker, in a changing room. They


act as if she were


property, able to be bought and sold. Bernard is disgusted


by this, so he


decides to ask Lenina to go to a Savage Reservation in New


Mexico. Bernard


visits the Director for permission to go. The Director tells a


story of when


he went to a Savage Reservation with Linda, a pretty


colleague. During their


visit,Linda was lost, and the Director had to leave. So


Bernard and Lenina


go to the Savage Reservation, which is inhabited by Indians.


They quickly


find Linda among the Indians. At first they do not realize


who she is, but


she explains what happened. Linda is aged and obese. Also,


Linda has a son


named John who is the Director’s child. John is educated


and mature, having


read


Shakespeare (forbidden in civilization). Bernard takes


the two back


to London for study. Once back, Linda takes too much


soma, so she falls into


a coma. John is displayed by Bernard, who becomes a hero.


But "the Savage"


(as John

is called) is frightened by the new world he sees.


The fear and


oppression he experiences make him long for his old life.


Lenina becomes


infatuated with John, and her candid attempts to make him


love her end with


his becoming angry at her openness. John vows never to


take soma, or to


succumb to civilization. John believes he can save himself if


he avoids this


brave new world. John enjoys conversations with Helmholtz,


and Bernard


becomes jealous. They soon realize that the three of them


are different


from the rest of society. At the bedside of his dying mother,


John becomes


enraged and throws the hospital soma supply out the


window. Helmholtz and


Bernard arrive, and Helmholtz helps John destroy the


narcotic. Bernard


deserts the two and calls a guard. The three are taken to see


Mustapha Mond,


an elder wise man. Mond knows that all three harbor


revolutionary minds, so


he tells them that their only option is to live on an island with


other such


people. Mond then explains how society has developed


without


public knowledge of history or literature. He explains that, in


order to


keep society at a balance where everyone is happy, only


certain people can


read these books. The two men leave for the island, but


John takes up


residence in an abandoned lighthouse. He tries to "purify"


himself from


this awful society. Crowds soon come to see him, among


them Lenina, whom he


mauls terribly. He is given soma. When he awakens, he


realizes what he has


done, and he hangs himself. Huxley did an excellent job of


portraying the


possible future. The most prominent theme is alienation.


Helmholtz, John,


and Bernard were shunned for not having conventional


beliefs. The future


presented by Huxley is almost frightening, because in order


to achieve


happiness, individuality and knowledge had to be sacrificed.


Huxley wrote


this book to warn us. He wanted us to know that society


should not be


controlled, and that there is a price for a peaceful society.


Since society


is still the same in the end, Huxley shows the same


hopelessness that George


Orwell showed in 1984. I liked this book because Huxley


paid attention to


detail and created a thoroughly engrossing literary


masterpiece. Huxle


"predictions" have begun to become reality. For instance,


soma is strikingly


similar to prozac. Huxley’s thinking was truly ahead of its


time.

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