A Superficial Society In Aldous Huxley's Brave New World

2120 Words5 Pages

Tailor Smith
Mrs. Murdock
AP Literature and Composition 12
1 April 2014
In the novel Brave New World, Aldous Huxley portrays a superficial society where people give up their authentic humanity in order to feel artificial happiness. Most people conform to society because they need and want acceptance of others, turning conformity, into society’s new drug. The cookie cutter theory within the novel is as strong and alive in today’s society as it has ever been.
Dystopia it is like a utopia, a place where everything is perfect, except that everything is not perfect. In trying to make everything perfect things have gone horribly wrong, like the society in Brave New World. In any novel where the world is supposed to be super perfect, believe that the world is incredibly messed up, also believe that the main character in the novel is going to be the only person or one of only a few people who recognizes just how messed up things are. That is what happens in Brave New Worlds society, no one has to feel pain, be afraid of death or deal with anything, even the slightest bit of un-comfort, and everything is extremely stable. There is lots of sex and drugs to keep people happy, or totally oblivious. The point Huxley wanted to convey in Brave New World was once you sacrifice liberty from one hundred percent order bad things happen. This novel asks the questions, what would happen if everything could be controlled? Right down to a person’s genetics, what they thought or what they bought? If god, art and motion was gotten rid of? The answer is dystopia.
Huxley’s number one theme is the consequences on absolute power and total control. The world establishes control in the novel with the use of technology, genetic engineering and mind contro...

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...New World portrays a superficial society where people give up their authentic humanity in order to feel artificial happiness. Most people conform to society because they need and want acceptance of others, turning conformity, into society’s new drug. The cookie cutter theory with in the novel is as strong and alive in today’s society as it has ever been. In the world the citizens are so happy and satisfied; they have everything they want from crazy amounts of sex and drugs to unlimited consumer goods but they never even bother to recognize let alone question their lack of freedom but this unrelenting, iron cloud control comes with its own consequences. The society in Brave New World is completely deprived of values, morals, emotions, art, or any kind of individuality. Not only is it a society who has lost its way but its citizens have actually lost their humanity.

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