John The Savage Analysis

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John the Savage is a peculiar case within Aldous Huxley 's "Brave New World." His thoughts ran deep, deeper than any primitive native within his reservation. Three distinctly different views aided these thoughts, Linda 's highly spoken words of the brave new world, the Pueblo men and their traditional beliefs, and Shakespeare 's romanticized notions. The collision of these three worlds thus compose the mind of John the Savage, a mind with a belief in a god, a naive view of a world only spoken of, and a dependence on Shakespeare for emotional expression. Undoubtedly, John is a product of tragedy and disorder, conditions necessary for great art, beauty humanity can no longer risk.

Science greatly dominated the utopian brave new world, a control …show more content…

His civilized parents and uncivilized upbringing created a complex view unlike any other. He brought on the role of the catalyst, challenging the brave new world with the freedom of wanting, stating, "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" (Huxely 240). He was outspoken in his thoughts, unrelenting in his actions, committing behavior that the utopian soma-washed individuals had never thought to think of. He claims the right to unhappiness, derailing any possibility of residing within this brave new world as a conditioned citizen of this society. He claims "the right to grow old and ugly and impotent;the right to have syphilis and cancer; the right to have too little to eat; the right to be lousy; the right to live in constant apprehension of what may happen to-morrow; the right to catch typhoid; the right to be tortured by unspeakable pains of every kind" (Huxley 240). Freedom for pain, pain to further progress one 's soul, a concept alluring to John and his state within the standards of this utopia. He needed such freedom, freedom utopia did not provide. His adventures within the brave new world of London come to a close with his seclusion amongst an old lighthouse, where he 's driven over the edge into …show more content…

Beauty in John 's wanting of pain, an aspect which makes us human. Ugliness in his suicide, an ultimate form of solitude.

The product that is John the Savage was too pure for the modernity of utopia. His brief contact with technology had him fleeing the scene in a confused rut, quoting Shakespeare along the way. The corruption embarked slowly through his mind, and he thrashed and shouted against it with an iron will. Yet, he was consumed by it, his last action of stubborn freedom ending his own

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