Monday, August 22, 2011

Brave New World

The novel Brave New World shows many exciting aspects about the future and how it regulates society to be stabilized using the all-reliable technology. It begins to introduce the reader how the society produces babies through factories without the process of sexual activities of male and female. I began to link the mass production idea of Henry Ford and the novel's idea about baby production and it's necessities for the future. I particularly feel that the assembly line and the novel's use of dividing the baby productions into segments that would specify their future roles for the society in which they live in.
Dystopia also plays a significant role in the novel by showing the reader how the society in the book adapts and abuses technology to make the society what they call "happier". This type of utopia concentrates on the ideal society that is believed to be unnatural of the regular society that we live in. Laws are not changed in this society, but rather alter what nature has created for the world. The author of Brave New World, Aldous Huxley, have experienced through his life about what the people of modern society want as a perfect society. Thus, he creates a world of which he and only himself can create inside this novel, Brave New World.

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