"The World State" Essays and Research Papers

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    for Vendetta” and the novel “Brave New World” both comment on the issue of misuse of technology and the control of the people. V for Vendetta is the 2006 film adaptation by the Wachowski’s of the comic book of the same name created by Alan Moore. It is set in a futuristic dystopian world in which Britain is ruled by a totalitarian-fascist party‚ and follows the events triggered by a masked shadowy revolutionary known only as the letter V. Brave New World is Aldous Huxley’s controversial masterpiece

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    spending as a basis for a sound economy”. Consumerism plays an enormous role in Brave New World. It gives us a small view of what a different type of economy we might have. People are solely dependent on the things that the world state provides for them. There is much significance to consumerism in BNW‚ and through an analytical view of it‚ we find many similarities between consumerism in BNW and in our world today. In this novel the use of consumerism is prominent. Every person is provided for

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    Critical Response of “The Provocations of Lenina in Huxley’s Brave New World” Lenina is an important female character in Brave New World; however‚ it is also a controversial figure among readers. In David Leon Higdon’s “The Provocations of Lenina in Huxley’s Brave New World”‚ he claims that Huxley had bias towards women and therefore made Lenina a disputable character. The author first proves that Huxley tends to disgust with the whole human species especially women. One anonymous character

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    Fantasies In Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World the actions of the conditioned characters in the novel serve to prove that the Brave New World itself would never attain it’s goal of happiness. Within the first introduced “Utopian” society‚ there were various forms of conditioning (and lack there of). This caused a disturbance within the society itself‚ albeit it was a minor disturbance initially‚ later it grew into a bigger problem that caused a riff in the mechanical order of the civilization. Outside

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    ourselves to think about our society today and how it has changed during the latest centuries. In my opinion are there definitely things in Brave New World that became true‚ but there are other things that have developed quite different then Huxley has predicted. The government has developed quite different then Huxley predicted. In Brave New World the whole system is based on a powerful and totalitarian government‚ which controlled almost everybody by conditioning‚ the people are only doing things

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    “A significant concern for humanity is its relationship with the natural world and nature’s influence on human behaviour and human interaction.” These are the guidelines in which the topic ‘in the wild’ fits. I have studied two texts that demonstrate the effects of ‘In The Wild’ very well: ‘Brave New World’‚ a confronting novel by Aldous Huxley‚ and ’Blade Runner’‚ a post-modern film by Ridley Scott‚ are two dystopian‚ science-fiction texts which demonstrate the connection between man and nature

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    Ashley Torgerson Dr. Brown International Relations 2nd May‚ 2012 United States as a World Superpower The rising to the status of world super power does not happen overnight. To explore the journey to the top‚ we must recognize the struggles and obstacles that were overcome. As Americans we can proudly say that we live in a country with globally recognized supremacy. As stated earlier‚ it was not an easy title to obtain. Looking back throughout history we can see specific examples of how we

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    12:30-Interdisciplinary 3/7/00 Critical Analysis on Chapter 7‚ State of the World 1999 Feeding Nine Billion While reading chapter 7 of State of the World I was very interested in the changing course because it made me think about the things that our world can do that can drastically benefit the future of our agricultural production and food prospect. We must be able to solve the two major food issues currently facing our world‚ which are malnutrition and price stability. All governments need

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    Aldous Huxley’s book Brave New World strongly‚ the vast majority of the population is unified under the World State‚ an eternally peaceful‚ stable global society in which goods and resources are plentiful and everyone is happy. Happiness is deprived from mass produced goods such as obstacle golf‚ Centrifugal Bumble-puppy‚ recreational sex and the most common one‚ the use of the drug soma; a hallucinogen that takes users on enjoyable‚ hangover-free "holidays". We meet the protagonist Bernard‚ who

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    Uganda The United States is playing a role similar to Higgins in the George Bernard Shaw play Pygmalion in which Higgins portrays a manipulative character with a hidden agenda towards Eliza Doolittle. Higgins uses Eliza Doolittle as a pawn in his bet against Colonel Pickering pertaining to linguistics and phonetics while in the process neglecting her and disregarding her eagerness for knowledge. This correlates with The U.S.’s current activity in Uganda. The U.S.‚ like Higgins‚ has a hidden

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