...Romeo Sherman Ms. Wells British Literature 27 April 2015 Aldous Huxley Aldous Huxley was a British writer and philosopher born in Surrey, England on July 26, 1984 into an upper middle class family known for their scientific and literary achievements. His father, Leonard Hurley was a poet, biologist and editor and his mother, Julia ran a boarding school. Three of Aldous siblings as well as his grandfather were well known scientist. Aldous life experiences made him depart from the class into which he was born. “Even as a young child, Aldous was looked upon as being different, showing intelligence, what his brother called superiority. He was respected and loved not hated for his abilities, but he drew on that feeling of separateness in writing Brave New World”( “Aldous Huxley: The Author and his Times,” n.d. para. 4). At age fourteen, Aldous lost his mother. Shortly after in 1911, while attending Eton school, where he was trained in medicine, the arts and science and became ill with a disease that nearly took his eyesight. Aldous’s loss of eyesight kept him from being able to pursue his career interest as a scientist or as a soldier in World War I and as a result, turned his interests toward literature. Even though his...
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...Henry Ford was the first person to produce mass productions and assembly lines. Therefore, the use of Henry Ford in this book creates the allegory of the humans being mass produced from a single embryo, one to seventy at most, and are in assembly lines to determine whether they are alpha, gamma, beta, epsilon, and delta. Which brings the second topic, Huxley directly implies the caste system that is in today. The rich, the middle class, and the poor. Democracy did not exist in such world. Everyone was manipulated and stationed on someone’s free-will. In the book, Bernard Marx, who is the protagonist and psychologist in the book, is classified in the highest class of the society, Alpha. Alphas are rich in genetics and physical stature. Therefore, alpha’s are considered the tallest, but Bernard Marx is a bit short than the Alpha’s that he’s mistaken for one of the lowest class, Delta. As a result, his assertion of being an Alpha becomes doubtful and becomes a joke. The symbolism is implied in the real world today the norms expected by society. Alpha being the richest, Beta is the upper-middle...
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...a college education important to me? Some people say college isn’t for me, or college is just a waste of time, but in the day and age we live in I believe it is essential for a multiple of reasons. A College education is important to me because of financial success and stability, the opportunities and doors that it opens, and the self improvement that you gain on the journey. Now I firmly believe that money isn’t happiness, but it does get you one step closer to that goal. In order to have financial success in life, you need to work hard and always give 110%. That’s not to say you can’t have that stability in life without college education but, I think you would have a better grasp on how to manage finances with that under your belt. Leonard Boswell once said “The American Dream is one of success, home ownership, college education for one’s children, and have a secure job to provide these and other goals”, and to exceed that “American dream” you go to college, you put in the effort and you come out with that success in your grasp, and that is important to me. Going to college doesn’t just open a door to unlimited learning; it opens a gateway to thousands of incredible opportunities. A college education opens up the door for a lesser chance of you not getting a good job. Having a college degree tells potential work places that you are determined and serious-minded about your future, which can reward you with the triumph of a great job. Also by having a good education, you...
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...In Aldous Huxley’s “Time and the Machine” the author is unenthusiastic with the use of the present generation’s use of time management as opposed to previous generations. In the past, people were more involved with nature, they enjoyed taking walks and kids ran and played outside more. Nowadays more children would prefer to remain in doors and play video games or surf the internet instead of a game of “jump rope.” Nature is relevant in this work due to the author’s frustration with time being spent elsewhere instead of with nature. Place is referred to how time is different between generations of the past and generations of the future. “Eco-Defense” by Edward Abbey was a very interesting periodical. Abbey stated that it is essential for people to care for and defend their wilderness as if it were their child because it is their home. He made reference to the government valuing more for their pockets/own personal gain and big business rather than the value of land and the people. His work was very interesting to me because God created Man from the dusts of the ground, so the wilderness is our “home.” Nature is represented by the wilderness and place is given presence by the difference of what we consider to be home. James, M. & Merickel, A. (2010). Reading Literature and Writing Argument (4th ed.). Prentice Hall. Mallory I really enjoyed reading Eco-Defense. Abbey’s call for people to defend their American wilderness was insightful and interesting, as he claims that...
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...Evolution of the Traditional Family What is a normal family in the 21st century? Over the past 100 years, one of the many things that has been constantly changing is “family life.” This drastic change began in the 1920’s and 30’s and Aldous Huxley was able to successfully foreshadow this in his book Brave New World. During the first half of the 20th century a model family consisted of a working father, stay at home mother, and many children. Since then birth rates have dropped, age of marriage has increased, and divorce rates have increased, leading to a different family standard and in most cases putting increased stress on the children. Although women have a certain amount of freedom in a traditional family they have more freedom in many of today’s families. One of these benefits includes another source of income, which can be essential in the modern economy. One benefit of a traditional family is the ability to gain knowledge and learn skills from both parents. When living with both parents a child is able to obtain a much more due to the different skill sets and strengths of each parent. Often a father will be able to teach things that are hands-on such as woodworking, landscaping, or even sports. The mother can generally teach things that involve work inside the house. Both roles can also be reversed but when a family consists of both parents it is more likely to have a parent able to teach these lessons. If one of the parents is not present then the child...
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...the ability of someone else to act according to their own will. Most people would agree that this is the way that a society should function. But in America, do we have true ‘freedom’? Aldous Huxley, the author of the novel Brave New World, later writes in a commentary of the book that the ideas of human freedom have been manipulated over time. Comedian and commentator George Carlin also suggests that freedom is an “illusion”. However, there have been more optimistic views, such as those of presidents Reagan and Kennedy. President Reagan said, “Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. We didn’t pass it to our children in the bloodstream. It must be fought for, protected, and handed on for them to do the same.” I do not believe that ALL freedom must necessarily be fought for, but I do believe that it is important to protect and for us to teach our children about the freedoms that we have and are lucky to have. Ultimately, freedom is already protected in the Bill of Rights. We will always have the basic freedoms such as speech, religion, to bear arms, etc. It has been ingrained into us as a nation from the time of our independence. I don’t necessarily believe that freedom is an ‘illusion’. I think we Americans have lots of freedom. But I do agree with the ideas of Aldous Huxley, that people have been manipulated over time in ways to limit their freedom. Actual laws have been made, and over time society has made its own set of non-written ‘laws’ which people...
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...Brave New World by Aldous Huxley Brave New world is a dystopian novel written in England in 1931 and published in 1932 during the Modernism literary period. The setting of the novel is in London and New Mexico ruled under an imagined future one-world government called the World State. The World State of Brave New World is a totalitarian dystopia that uses technology to, deceive its citizens into loving their slavery. Dystopia is a society, in this case the World State, that is an imaginary society organized to create ideal conditions for human beings, eliminating hatred, pain, neglect, and all of the other evils of the world. Huxley wrote Brave New World as a dystopian novel due to the rise of technology and science in the 1930s, focusing on the totalitarianism evils (meaning centralized or dictatorial). Huxley imagined a future of a totalitarian state where there is no such thing as freedom of anything and happiness was forced through manipulation, called conditioning in the novel. When Huxley wrote Brave New World, it was just a little over a decade since World War I. During this time, totalitarian states were popping up in the Soviet Union and Fascist parties were gaining power in Europe. Also, there were advancements in science, technology, and the relationship between the two as the world became more industrialized. Aldous Huxley was born in Surrey, England, on July 26, 1894, to a well-known family of scientists, writers, and teachers deeply rooted in England’s literary...
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...of Las Vegas. These pictures represent how our main focus and goal in life has shifted toward entertainment. We must be entertained at all times. This attitude has effected many areas of society such as; religion, politics, news, and education. Postman, however, looks simply at how television has played a vital role in this cultural transformation in these areas. He discusses how, through television, our society has propelled itself into, “the age of show business.” I agree with Postman’s view on how television has turned our culture into one that is centered on entertainment. Postman’s main thesis is based on two very popular books, George Orwell’s 1984 and Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World. These two books vary greatly in their themes of how the future will look; Orwell depicts a dark, totalitarian culture while Huxley shows us a culture in which the people are brainwashed and are made to believe that their lives are happy. Postman states that Huxley’s vision is spot on while Orwell’s is not...
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...INTRODUCTION My research question for this essay is “How can M.A.’s novel ’Oryx and Crake’ be seen as a critique towards modern society?” I have chosen to use this research question, because I find it interesting how literature can be used as a medium to warn society against what could happen, if we do not take action and just let things evolve. The book ‘1984’ written by George Orwell is similar to the book chosen here, since they both, according to how both novels fall into the post-apocalyptic genre, can be interpreted as a warning to our present society about letting technology take over, and letting technological development be more important than developing human qualities. This essay will investigate how the novel can fall into the genre post-apocalyptic fiction based on the characteristics of the genre and the characteristics of the book. It will also look into the narrator of the story, and how the choice of narrator has affected the book, and it will look into the fight between the two major sciences (natural sciences and the humanities) and lastly, whether or not the book can be interpreted as a critique towards modern society based on the findings of the investigations mentioned above. I expect to find that Oryx and Crake can be seen as a warning because the issues the novel approaches are all issues that are present in the world today. THE POST-APOCALYPTIC GENRE AND NARRATIVE STRUCTURE The novel “Oryx and Crake” were written by Margaret Atwood in 2003. The novel...
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...By its very definition, technology refers to the machines and devices that are scientifically developed. From its definition, technology sounds completely harmless, built only to help the human race thrive. But has anybody thought of the effects of using these machines and devices too much? In the novel Fahrenheit 451, the author, Ray Bradbury, addresses the effects of using technology to do everything. Set in a futuristic dystopian society, Fahrenheit 451 describes the monotone lives that people lead when it’s dominated by technology. Through his application of similes and hyperboles, Bradbury conveys that the negative influence of technology can cause people to become oblivious to their environment. Using similes, Bradbury demonstrates the blindness of people caused by the influence of technology. For example, when Mildred’s operation is taking place, the narrator describes “the entire operation [as] not unlike the digging of a trench in one’s yard”, when the operator “could, by wearing a special optical helmet, gaze into the soul of the person he was pumping out,” (12). When digging a trench, people often aren’t thinking about what they’re doing. They’re just doing what has to be done. Bradbury compares the digging of a trench to Mildred’s operation to emphasize that the operators are just fulfilling their obligations and doing nothing more, oblivious to the fact that somebody’s life is in their hands, and that they can save a person’s life with the assistance of technology...
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... In the novel One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, by Ken Kesey, the Combine is an allegory for the dichotomy between establishment and antiestablishment. The narrator, Chief Bromden, describes the Combine several times in the novel and likens it to a machine. Ken Kesey uses the imagery of a machine to explain the negative influence of establishment on society. The ward is an extension of the Combine that works to regulate the sameness of society. Nurse Ratched is the voice of the Combine and she ensures that the ward runs like a well-oiled machine. Within the novel, Chief Bromden describes the ward as, “...a factory for the Combine. It’s for fixing...something that came in all twisted” (Kesey 40). If the ward is a “factory”, then the patients are “twisted” products who need “fixing” because they are not suitable for society. Nurse Ratched is the factory manager responsible for the conforming repair of the patients and their return to society’s norm. Otherwise, “...the Big Nurse gets real put out if anything keeps her outfit from running smooth” (Kesey 41). If the ward is not “running smooth”, the products according to society’s rules are looked upon as defects. In the novel, McMurphy has been characterized as a defect of society, so he is sent to the ward to be fixed, though there is nothing wrong with him mentally, he is just simply a loud character. Ken Kesey views the machine-like Combine as it subjectively determines the sanity of an individual based on their willingness...
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... Living in a world where humans are no longer required to perform any menial task, while they have technology to keep them entertained as they do their work means that humans are too dependent on technology. It also means that they don’t know how much control technology has towards them. One of the most common threads in Harrison Bergeron, August 2026, and The Pediatrician is that technology is taking over and destroying society. Technology is is becoming one of the greatest culprits in all of humankind. Any society shouldn’t let the use of technology control their lives for it can decrease a human’s brain function, it can control the lives of others all of a sudden, and it can rule all of society the more it’s being used. In the movie, Harrison Bergeron, the main theme of this film is that “The power of technology can decrease a human’s brain function.” It’s the year 2053. An American government forces all citizen to wear headsets that decreases their brain function. Apparently Harrison Bergeron shows signs of intelligence. He’s been held back for four years and still keeps receiving A’s when C’s are the desired grade. He is believed to be a different person than everyone else. Although, in his society, everyone is meant to be equal. Before he undergoes a lobotomy, some of the agents of a secret intellectual society free Harrison and give him the opportunity to live in a place where his life can be creative and be around interesting people. In the story, August 2026, the main...
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...In Aldous Huxley’s novel, Brave New World, the use of soma is encouraged in order for civilians to be preoccupied from discovering the government’s secrets & preventing them from ruining their perfect utopian society. They are conditioned to take soma whenever they are feeling sad, angry, or stressed because it makes them apathetic about their issues. Without any motivation, they will carry on with their lives without questioning the government's motives, living happily. Intimate relationships are banned in order for the society’s individuals to advert from developing vulnerable emotions because it could lead to unhappiness. For example, when Bernard tells Lenina that he wishes for a deeper connection with her, instead of only having sexual relations, Lenina expresses, “‘why you don't take soma when you have these dreadful ideas of yours. You'd forget all about them. And instead of feeling miserable, you'd be jolly. So jolly”(92). By making intimate relationships a taboo subject, such as having parents and being with an...
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...“Community. Stability. Identity.” These three words are the foundation of the dystopian world created by author Aldous Huxley in his novel Brave New World. In this novel, Huxley creates a society known as the World State in which individuals are created and designed to play a specific role in society. Much of the way the society is built reflects the philosophy of Karl Marx. Huxley creates this new world to ironically mirror the ideas of Marxism in how it can ensure social stability. Or can it? Brave New World was written in 1932 during a time with no economic stability or security and after the Industrial Revolution where most of the workforce consisted of cheap labor within factories. It was a time where wealth was distributed only to those...
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...Compare to other characters, captain Beatty is knowledgeable yet he uses his knowledge to show that books are harmful. It was shown in the novel that, at some point, Beatty actually enjoyed books but somehow turned against them. "What traitor books can be? You think they're backing you up, and they turn on you. Others can use them too, and there you are, lost in the middle."(107) Beatty thinks that books give you great thoughts but it is also depressing because it creates arguments among people. Along with society’s censorship, Beatty has come to believe that books make people unhappy, and that censoring them would make people equal. Because of that, Beatty experienced inner conflict with himself, leading him to bitterly commit suicide. Beatty...
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