A Brave New World: A Dystopian Society

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In the classic dystopian novel Brave New World, many common ideas such as democracy, theology, and family are done away with and replaced with recreation and a caste based society. As a class my senior year, we read this book and I was very skeptical considering I was not the biggest fan of dystopian novels, but I came to really enjoy it. Brave New World talks about a world completely involved within technology and the use of it. This society focuses most of their energy through drugs and sex without all the emotional attachment to either. The people in this book live in a more scientific society full of test tubes and chemicals rather than one filled with families and love towards one another. This society sees each other as who had the most alcohol in their test tubes as a baby, not as normal humans beings. Simply, because the are not true human beings who were born from their parents and raised by humans. In Brave New World people are classified and Alphas, Deltas, Gammas, and Epsilons. Everyone believes they are in a utopian society mainly due to the constant induced happiness they are prescribed, called soma. Considering this book was written decades ago before any major technology was even introduced, the accuracy this book has to our world today is …show more content…

Huxley, in this book, is trying to give a subtle message that no matter how successful we think we may be with the amount of technology we have, success will not grow from technology, but rather with human interaction and emotion towards one another. Throughout Brave New World many controversial topics are brought up. This book is based on the unrealistic want of a utopian society. As we all know a utopian society is simply impossible no matter how hard one may work at it. Brave New World is a perfect example of how society can take the use of technology to a deep and far place from moral

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