Satire of the Utopian Future: Brave New World by Aldous Huxley

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While the knowledge of the world around man may open door to him, it leaves his mind filled with endless thoughts that weigh on him. In Aldous Huxley’s novel Brave New World, Huxley describes a satiric version of the utopian future where humans are genetically bred and classically conditioned to live passively and happily in their subservient culture. Throughout the novel, this idea of happiness verses knowledge and intelligence is brought before the characters of Huxley’s society. The only way this perfect society flourishes is due to the fact that everyone is the same; all of them working for one common goal, all of them believing one common idea. Characters in the novel often shy away from having any sort of intellectual conversation, or simply do not have the time in between their daily rations of soma, a euphoric like drug that keeps them busy. Time and time again in Huxley’s writing he suggests one thing about knowledge and happiness: that they cannot possibly exist simultaneously within one being.
The society of Brave New World functions on the basis that everyone in the society is the same, individualism becomes a criticism not a compliment in this world. From birth, each member of the society is told that to be a part of the group is the only way to live. They never question the ideas taught in childhood because as a whole, they are either to stupid to come up with the question itself due to genetic mutations, or too drugged on soma to question the life they lead. In the beginning of the novel, one of the directors Mustapha says “the old men have no time, no leisure from pleasure, not a moment to sit down and think – or if even by some unlucky chance such a crevice of time should yawn in the solid substance of their di...

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...p and gain any knowledge that was around him. However, this knowledge weighed on his mind day in and day out. The first time John reads Shakespeare, he does not use his new knowledge to show satisfaction over what he has just discovered but instead takes the opportunity to truly understand and express the hatred he has for a man in his life. Later, due to the knowledge of God and all the guilt that his religion puts on him, this intellect drives John to kill himself. The one man who is able to freely take in knowledge in this novel without the sensory of the government, is the one man in the novel who cannot continue to live. The expression ignorance is bliss is one that speaks complete truth, with each new piece of information we are given, the more horror we are forced to see.

Works Cited

Huxley, Aldous. Brave New World. New York: HarperPerennial, 1992. Print.

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