"Aldous Huxley" Essays and Research Papers

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    feminist lens deals with the role of gender within literature‚ and the marxist lens focuses on the context of culture and society within literature. Each perspective plays off the other to create a cohesive approach to analyzing Brave New World. Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World highlights the issues associated with a society with a disproportional basis in manufactured social and gender structures. These dysfunctional social and gender structures are created through a fundamental irony: knowledge

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    In 1932‚ Aldous Huxley wrote a book entitled Brave New World. It was a novel of a dystopian future where persuasion and science were effectively combined to control the population. Huxley warns his readers about the problems associated with the advancements of subconscious persuasion techniques because he saw people becoming susceptible to them during the Age of Television Addiction. He critiques this by setting a character contest between John the Savage and Mustapha Mond‚ which reveals the characters

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    Essay On Brave New World

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    Our society is going to be like in the book called‚ Brave New World by Aldous Huxley. Our society is becoming like Brave New Worlds because our technology is just like theirs. Our technology is starting to make embryos in test tubes just like theirs. We already have the same drugs as them that make us happy‚ for quite a while now. Both of the religions in Brave New World and in our world are completely destroying the world. This was my opinion about Brave New World and our society that’s lacking

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    Alpha Elites Analysis

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    Aldous Huxley and John de Graaf do not agree that solely society’s “alpha elites” are candidates because of philosophical enlightenment. Both writers focal point regarding society’s upper classification and how they craft the world’s financial and associative standards. However‚ some believes that “alpha elites” are the only candidates because of philosophical enlightenment while the other believes that the demand on the “alpha elites” would possibly actually damage society. Majority of the people

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    Brave New World

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    Brave New World by Aldous Huxley ‘‘The overalls of the workers were white‚ their hands gloved with a pale corpse-coloured rubber. The light was frozen‚ dead‚ a ghost. Only from the yellow barrels of the microscopes did it borrow a certain rich and living substance‚ lying along the polished tubes like butter‚ streak after luscious streak in long recession down the work tables’’ (Huxley 8). 1. This is the narrator describing the uniform of the Conditioning Centre. 2. Everything in the centre was

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    The society of a Brave New World‚ by Aldous Huxley‚ is closer to the idealized interpretation of a utopia than current society‚ but modern society is preferable. People being conditioned to be falsely content with their society‚ and the lack individual thought‚ are examples of why the World State is corrupt. Although there are many faults in modern society‚ people have free will‚ and are able to control their own lives. The common belief of the people in A Brave New World is that The stability of

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    Point-of-view‚ allusion‚ and motif are three literary techniques Aldous Huxley uses to achieve the ironic commentary on contemporary values for which his novel‚ Brave New World‚ is known. The point-of-view of the savage reservations mirrors that of the poor people in the 1930s society. The savage reservations were similar to some of the Hooverville communities the less fortunate took residence in during the Great Depression. Huxley describes the reservation as “...a straggle of low buildings‚ a

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    Examining Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World and George Orwell’s 1984‚ there are some accurate depictions of public discourse in 1984‚ but Huxley’s novel includes more relevant examples. Postman bounds the idea of television‚ a cherished part of our life‚ as the means of self-destruction in accordance to Huxley’s views. Postman’s assertion of the more accurate Brave New World is evident in freedom‚ technology and the media. In this age of liberty and freedom of expression‚ it is hard to picture Orwell’s

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    scientific medicine and universal happiness.’" So says Mustapha Mond‚ the World Controller for Western Europe in Aldous Huxley’s novel Brave New World. In doing so‚ he highlights a major theme in this story of a Utopian society. Although the people in this modernized world enjoy no disease‚ effects of old age‚ war‚ poverty‚ social unrest‚ or any other infirmities or discomforts‚ Huxley asks ’is the price they pay really worth the benefits?’ This novel shows that when you must give up religion‚

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    Mind Overpowers Reality

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    In Aldous Huxley’s novel‚ Brave New World‚ as well as John Keat’s “Ode on a Grecian Urn‚” art is looked upon through two different perspectives‚ as Huxley’s world declares reality more important than anything that the mind can conjure up‚ whereas Keat’s outlook declares that imagination reigns superior to the physical world. In Brave New World‚ Linda encounters the Complete Works of Shakespeare which she believes "was lying in one of the chests of the Antelope Kiva. It’s supposed to have been there

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