I Like The Inconvenience In Brave New World

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Aram Chemishkian Mr. Hadley English 2H 3 August 20, 2015 Brave New World “ ‘But I like the inconveniences.’ ‘We don’t, said the Controller. ‘We prefer to do things comfortably.’ ‘But I don’t want comfort. I want God, I want poetry, I want real danger, I want freedom, I want goodness. I want sin.’ “ (Huxley 240). John the Savage argues with a World Controller, Mustapha Mond, about whether the society of the World State is better for humans, than society in the Savage Reservations and the rest of the world before the World State took over. John is alone in resisting the World State’s society, the only people who even partially agree with him being Helmholtz and Bernard, and the rest of the people brainwashed to believe that the World State’s …show more content…

“To think it should be coming true - what I’ve dreamt of all my life” (Huxley 138). When Bernard offers him the opportunity he desires so greatly, John is overwhelmed with happiness. John has never been able to fit in with the rest of the people on the savage reservation, and he thinks that he will be able to fit in with the society he has heard such great things about. When John finally arrives, however, he quickly saddens. Although the new world has advanced technologies, they do not impress him, and John is upset to find out that things he finds important such as God and literature are forbidden in the World State. An inner-conflict develops inside John, as he attempts to like the new world. Although he truly dislikes it, he has gone his whole life unable to fit in with one group of people, the savage reservation, and he does not want it to happan again. However, it gets increasingly difficult for John to pretend to enjoy this new world, as he visits the lighting factory and finds the many disfigured twins, and visits Eton only to see his beloved God being laughed at by children, and to learn that reading isn’t supported because it involves being

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