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Brave New World by Aldous Huxley

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Title: Brave New World by Aldous Huxley


1
Brave New Worldby Aldous Huxley
  • Utopia vs. Dystopia

2
  • O wonder!
  • How many goodly creatures are there here!
  • How beauteous mankind is! O, brave new world
  • That has such people int!

  • -Miranda, The Tempest

3
  • Although the novel was originally published in
    1932, the themes in Brave New World are quite
    relevant to the world in which we live today.
    Some would even call this novel prophetic,
    considering the present state of things
  • brain-numbing advances in technology and the
    internet
  • our tendency to waste time on meaningless
    diversions such as television and video games
  • consumerism surpassing religion (take Christmas,
    for example)
  • promiscuity surpassing morality
  • issues of eugenics, cloning, stem-cell research
    and genetic engineering
  • and, most strikingly, the overly-prescribed and
    overly-used medications such as anti-depressants
    and sleeping pills, so like the fictional Soma
    of Huxleys novel.

4
Utopian and Dystopian Literature
5
What is Utopia?
  • A Utopia is a place or society that appears
    perfect in every way.
  • The government is perfect, working to improve
    societies standards of living rather then their
    own, social aspects of the community run
    perfectly.
  • There is no war or disease, only peace and
    happiness. Everyone outside this Utopian society
    looks to this place in wonder and awe, believing
    it is completely perfect in every such way.

6
  • A good example of this is the novel Utopia.
    Focusing on a conversation that Sir Thomas More
    is having with a traveling knight, the reader
    learns of many places that have established some
    form of perfection. Focusing on a place called
    Utopia, it shows the flaws in their established
    Monarchy in contrast to the Utopians seemingly
    perfect democracy. Examples of Utopian
    Literature
  • - Utopia by Sir Thomas More
  • - Men Like Gods by H. G. Wells
  • - We by Yevgeny Zamyatin
  • - Erewhon by Samuel Butler
  • - Woman on the Edge of Time by Marge Piercy
  • - Herland by Charlotte Perkins Gilman

7
What is Dystopia?
  • Dystopia came from the term Utopia.
  • It defines a place or society which is in
    complete chaos.
  • The citizens are all suffering and are miserable.
  • Often times in novels what appears to be a
    Utopian society it first by the visiting
    protagonist is actually revealed to be a
    dystopian society.
  • The citizens are often revealed to live in
    terror, under complete control by the government,
    unaware of corrupt world in which they actually
    live in, or suppressed by the society as a whole.

8
  • A good example of this is the novel The Time
    Machine. Traveling into the distant future, the
    Time Traveler finds himself in a perfect future
    world. Decease ceases to exist, all dangerous
    animals have become extinct, all weeds have
    disappeared, and all the people get along
    perfectly. It is later shown that they are hunted
    on a daily basis and are actually raised
    similarly to cattle. Examples of Dystopian
    Literature- Lord of the Flies by William Golding
  • - The Handmaid's Tale by Margeret Atwood
  • - Neuromancer by William Gibson
  • - Iron Heel by Jack London
  • - The Running Man by Richard Bachman
  • - Armageddon's Children by Terry Brooks
  • - The Chrysalids by John Wyndham
  • - The Children of Men by PD James

9
  • Can you think of other examples of utopia or
    dystopia in novels, television or movies?

10
Social and Historical Context
  • When Brave New World was first published in 1932,
    the world was plunged in depression, fascism was
    on the rise in Western Europe, and Marxism
    appealed to increasing numbers of intellectuals
    in Europe and America.
  • a governmental system led by a dictator having
    complete power, forcibly suppressing opposition
    and criticism, regimenting all industry,
    commerce, etc., and emphasizing aggressive
    nationalism.
  • the system of political thought that that the
    state has been a device for the exploitation of
    the masses by a dominant class, that class
    struggle has been the main agency of historical
    change, and that the capitalist system will
    inevitably be superseded by a socialist order and
    a classless society.

11
Essential Questions that you should be able to
answer after reading this novel
  • 1. How are the themes of Brave New World
    applicable to todays society?
  • 2. What makes the science fiction genre such an
    effective device for bringing about social
    change?
  • 3. How does reading fiction shape our social and
    political ideologies?

12
Journal Personal Opinion
  • Defend or refute the following quote.
  • ½ 1 page, critical thinking and explanation are
    necessary!
  • You may first want to define the key words!

Manmade utopia is an oxymoron. - Mike Duran
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