"Propaganda under a dictatorship brave new world revisited" Essays and Research Papers

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    The common comparisons of surveillance‚ technology use‚ social conditioning‚ totalitarianism‚ and manipulation of language between America and 1984 and Brave New World have an erroneously negative effect on the average American’s perception of the government. Frequently used as political rhetoric‚ correlations between the negative aspects of these dystopian novels allow politicians and political journalists to impose a sense of distrust of the government‚ the fear of an Orwellian or Huxleyan society

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    “must-have” deals of the century? Thanksgiving day is about one month from today. A few hours after the family turkey eating night‚ people would go to department stores and line up to purchase new clothes‚ jewelry‚ and electronics which are heavily discounted. About one month after that day‚ Christmas and New Year’s Day come. People would‚ then again‚ go to departments stores and line up to purchase heavily discounted Christmas sales. Being with the family is no longer the only factor to look forward

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    Dehumanization is Taking Us to the Brave New World The basic warning in Huxley’s Brave New World is that twentieth-century civilization is moving toward the complete dehumanization of mankind. There are three main dehumanizing forces in the twenty-first century world today which might take human beings to a society like that of A.F 632. First of all‚ the easy sex concept is leading humans to the Brave New World. During the time of A.F 632‚ people in the Brave New World think that sex is very common in

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    Literature frequently tries to depict what a perfect world would be like. A world without war‚ without class‚ without major problems. As utopian as this idea seems‚ it more times than not depicts that of a dystopian society. Peace can only be achieved by suppressing the oppressed‚ class can only be disavowed through false ideals‚ and major problems can only be removed by creating new ones. Both George Orwell’s 1984 and Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World express these themes. Both novels deal with a totalitarian

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    The first three chapters of Huxley’s Brave New World already show the alarming‚ but all the same mind-blowing differences between our society and the futuristic society that the novel presents. The reader gains knowledge of the orthodox but profoundly strange ways of the fictitious world through a tour given by the Director of Hatcheries and Conditioning to new students at the building. In these pages‚ I especially noticed the peculiar way babies are made‚ born‚ nurtured‚ and raised. There are no

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    Brave New World     Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World is a satire showing the need for individualism‚ and the problems of a controlling society. Helmholtz Watson lives in a world where individualism is practically absent and forgotten. However‚ this does not stop him from being an individual thinker and rebel. Watson is smarter than everyone else‚ too smart for his peers liking. This‚ plus his refusal to follow the social “norms” make him an outsider. He creates the rift between himself and society

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    suffering as when we love” (Sigmund Freud). Love can demolish and make yourself feel vulnerable to the outside world as well as betrayed from the one who loves you if they hurt or do not even feel the same way towards you. It is self-destruction to be letting yourself feel affection towards another being without taking in consideration of what could happen in the future. In another world‚ love between two people is praised through marriage or having children and the desired feeling to have individuality

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    that put a division of moral right and wongs of society and the rise of dictatorial government. From this it is clear to see that his work is being influence by his past and the affect of society and the Lost Generation that followed after the first world War. His ridicule of the scientific endeavors and overapance of knowledge of the field most likely comes from his early childhood years of aspiring to become a scientist like his brother before him‚ but having that dream dashed by the diseases that

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    Brave New World Essay Brave New World is a novel written in the early 1930’s about a Utopian society where everyone lives in peace and harmony with each other and with themselves. However we may not perceive it as such as the author of the novel‚ Aldous Huxley‚ has used this Utopia to describe a Dystopia he feels will soon be reflective of our own world. He expresses that this New World is nothing but flawed as this peace and harmony is only an illusion‚ being achieved by the blissful state of

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    emotions in order to learn how to handle everything life throws at us. According to Bernard in Brave New World‚ ‘[he would] rather be unhappy than have the sort of false‚ lying happiness that he was having here”‚ (179) this quote means that he would rather be unhappy than live in a happy lie. This book describes a utopian world yet there’s a quote in the book that is in direct conflict with the “utopian” world they are living in. What could happiness and unhappiness mean to people? According to dictionaries

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