Consumerism In A Brave New World

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In the novel, A Brave New World, Aldous Huxley tells a story of a shallow culture that is extremely advanced but this corrupt humanity is makes readers feel uneasy because in the society culture, people have been taught that it’s good to give up their humanity in order to feel artificial and orchestrated happiness.

Through reading and analyzing the novel's theme and purpose, there was a highly sophisticated idea that I discovered in a foreword in his novel where Aldous Huxley states, “The theme of A Brave New World is not the advancement of science as such; it is the advancement of science as it affects individuals.”, The foreword explains how the novel proves Huxley theory that is played out in his theme.
Throughout A Brave New World, the concepts of consumerism and utopia are very different from each other because one is so good and the other is negatively effects our humanity and is much different in nature from the utopia side of the society. Huxley compares the two constantly almost as if he is trying to find out if they have compatible nature's. …show more content…

Because of the almost infantile degree of dependence the state has created in “Brave New World“ the culture of consumption is able to thrive. Only with John who we connect to the most out of all of the characters, is the reader able to break apart the concepts of utopia and consumption and then determine that the concepts are incompatible. Through John’s narrative, it becomes clear to see how instead of creating a utopia in A Brave New World, an artificial combination of the two juxtaposed forces creates a dependence and in the process it destroys the

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