Revision as of 01:16, 23 September 2009 editShark96z (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers5,369 editsm Reverted edits by 75.66.172.32 to last revision by Cybercobra (HG)← Previous edit | Latest revision as of 04:07, 2 January 2025 edit undoCC Bleechers (talk | contribs)346 editsm article date format | ||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Short description|1932 dystopian novel by Aldous Huxley}} | |||
{{about|the novel}} | |||
{{ |
{{About|the novel}} | ||
{{redirect-distinguish|John the Savage|John Savage}} | |||
{{Infobox Book | <!-- See ] or ] --> | |||
{{Use British English|date=September 2013}} | |||
| name = Brave New World | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2020}} | |||
| image = ] | |||
| image_caption = First edition cover | |||
{{Infobox book | |||
| author = ] | |||
| name = Brave New World | |||
| cover_artist = Leslie Holland | |||
| author = ] | |||
| illustrator = | |||
| country = |
| country = United Kingdom | ||
| genre = ], ] | |||
| language = ] | |||
| publisher = ] | |||
| series = | |||
| pub_date = 4 February 1932<ref>{{cite news | url=https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1932/02/04/100686029.html?pageNumber=19 | title=CABELL PUTS STYLE ABOVEIDEA IN a BOOK; Author Confesses He Cannot Define Style, but Calls It 'Very Nearly Most Important.' NEVER AWAITS INSPIRATION in Interview He Recalls Newspaper Days at $25 a Week and Says Recognition Came Slowly | work=The New York Times }}</ref> | |||
| genre = ], ] | |||
| image = BraveNewWorld FirstEdition.jpg | |||
| publisher = ] (London) | |||
| caption = First edition | |||
| release_date = ] | |||
| cover_artist = Leslie Holland | |||
| english_release_date = | |||
| oclc = 20156268 | |||
| media_type = Print (] & ]) | |||
| pages = 311 (1932 ed.)<br />63,766 words<ref>{{cite web|title=Brave New World Book Details|url=http://www.arbookfind.com/bookdetail.aspx?q=8653&l=EN&slid=50667020|website=fAR BookFinder|access-date=28 November 2016}}</ref> | |||
| pages = 288 pp (Paperback edition) | |||
| awards = Le Monde's 100 Books of the Century | |||
| isbn = ISBN 0-06-080983-3 (Paperback edition) | |||
| external_url = https://www.fadedpage.com/showbook.php?pid=20160545 | |||
| preceded_by = | |||
| followed_by = | |||
}} | }} | ||
'''''Brave New World''''' is a ] by ], written in ] and published in ]. Set in the ] of AD 2540 (632 A.F. in the book), the novel anticipates developments in ] and ] that combine to change society. The future society is an embodiment of the ideals that form the basis of ]. Huxley answered this book with a reassessment in an essay, '']'' (1958), and with his final work, a novel titled '']'' (1962), both summarized below. | |||
'''''Brave New World''''' is a ] by English author ], written in 1931 and published in 1932.<ref>{{cite web |title=Brave New World by Aldous Huxley |url=https://www.bl.uk/collection-items/brave-new-world-by-aldous-huxley |website=British Library |access-date=16 October 2022}}</ref> Largely set in a futuristic ], whose citizens are environmentally engineered into an intelligence-based ], the novel anticipates huge scientific advancements in ], ], ] and ] that are combined to make a ] which is challenged by the story's protagonist. Huxley followed this book with a reassessment in ] form, '']'' (1958), and with his final novel, '']'' (1962), the ]n counterpart. This novel is often compared as an inversion counterpart to ]'s '']'' (1949). | |||
In 1999, the ] ranked ''Brave New World'' fifth on its list of the ].<ref>{{cite web | title = 100 Best Novels | publisher = Random House | year= 1999 | url = http://www.randomhouse.com/modernlibrary/100bestnovels.html | format = | accessdate = 2007-06-23 }} This ranking was by the of authors.</ref> | |||
In 1998 and 1999, the ] ranked ''Brave New World'' at number 5 on its list of the ].<ref name=":5">{{Cite web |title=Modern Library Top 100 - Penguin Random House |url=https://sites.prh.com/modern-library-top-100 |access-date=2024-11-22 |website=sites.prh.com |language=en}}</ref> In 2003, ], writing for '']'', included ''Brave New World'' chronologically at number 53 in "the top 100 greatest novels of all time",<ref name="McCrum">{{cite news |title=100 greatest novels of all time |newspaper=Guardian |url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2003/oct/12/features.fiction |access-date=10 October 2012 |location=London |first=Robert |last=McCrum |date=12 October 2003}}</ref> and the novel was listed at number 87 on ] survey by the ].<ref name="BBC – The Big Read">{{Cite web |date=April 2003 |title=BBC - The Big Read - Top 100 |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/arts/bigread/top100_2.shtml |access-date=29 December 2022 |website=]}}</ref> ''Brave New World'' has frequently been banned and challenged since its original publication. It has landed on the American Library Association list of top 100 banned and challenged books of the decade since the association began the list in 1990.<ref name=":2" /><ref name=":3" /><ref name=":4" /> | |||
==Title== | ==Title== | ||
The title ''Brave New World'' derives from ]'s '']'', Act V, Scene I, ]'s speech:<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/history/inourtime/inourtime.shtml |title=Brave New World |last=Anon |work=In Our Time |publisher=British Broadcasting Corporation |access-date=9 April 2009}}</ref> | |||
{{Refimprove|section|date=December 2008}} | |||
{{poem quote| | |||
''Brave New World'''s ironic title derives from ] speech in ]'s '']'', Act V, Scene I:<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/history/inourtime/inourtime.shtml|title=Brave New World|last=Anon|work=In Our Time|publisher=British Broadcasting Corporation|accessdate=2009-04-09}}</ref> | |||
O wonder! | |||
How many goodly creatures are there here! | How many goodly creatures are there here! | ||
How beauteous mankind is! | How beauteous mankind is! O '''brave new world''', | ||
That has such people in 't.|William Shakespeare|''The Tempest'', Act V, Scene I, ll. 203–206<ref>{{cite book |title=William Shakespeare: Complete Works |year=2007 |last1=Bate |first1=Jonathan |author-link1=Jonathan Bate |last2=Rasmussen |first2=Eric |others=]. Chief Associate Editor: Héloïse Sénéchal |isbn=978-0-230-00350-7 |publisher=] |page=47}}</ref>}} Shakespeare's use of the phrase is intended ironically, as the speaker is failing to recognise the evil nature of the island's visitors because of her innocence.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Ira Grushow|title=Brave New World and The Tempest|journal=College English|date=October 1962|volume=24|number=1|pages=42–45|jstor = 373846|doi = 10.2307/373846 |issn = 0010-0994}}</ref> Indeed, the next speaker—Miranda's father Prospero—replies to her innocent observation with the statement {{"'}}Tis new to thee." | |||
O brave new world! | |||
That has such people in't!}} | |||
This line is word-by-word quoted in the novel by John the Savage, when he first sees Lenina. | |||
Translations of the title often allude to similar expressions used in domestic works of literature: the French edition of the work is entitled ''Le Meilleur des mondes'' (''The Best of All Worlds''), an allusion to an expression used by the philosopher ]<ref>{{cite book|author=Martine de Gaudemar|title=La Notion de nature chez Leibniz: colloque|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-1z1FQeK_kIC&pg=PA77|year=1995|publisher=Franz Steiner Verlag|isbn=978-3-515-06631-0|pages=77}}</ref> and satirised in '']'' by ] (1759). The first ] translation, done by novelist Lily Hsueh and Aaron Jen-wang Hsueh in 1974, is entitled "美麗新世界" (]: ''Měilì Xīn Shìjiè'', literally "''Beautiful New World''"). | |||
The expression "brave new world" also appears in ]'s '']'' (1885): | |||
{{cquote|He laughed at his earlier idealism, his schoolboy vision of a brave new world in which justice would reign and men would be brothers.<ref>Translated from the French by ], p.241</ref>}} | |||
==History== | |||
and in ]'s 1919 poem ''The Gods of the Copybook Headings'': | |||
Huxley wrote ''Brave New World'' while living in ], France, in the four months from May to August 1931.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Meckier|first=Jerome|date=1979|title=A Neglected Huxley "Preface": His Earliest Synopsis of Brave New World|journal=Twentieth Century Literature|volume=25|issue=1|pages=1–20|doi=10.2307/441397|jstor=441397|issn=0041-462X}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|last=Murray|first=Nicholas|url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2003/dec/13/featuresreviews.guardianreview27|title=Nicholas Murray on his life of Huxley|date=2003-12-13|work=The Guardian|access-date=2020-04-13|language=en-GB|issn=0261-3077}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.sanary.com/a-huxley-in-sanary-1-introduction.html |title=A. Huxley in Sanary 1 - Introduction |website=www.sanary.com |access-date=27 September 2019 |archive-date=11 January 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170111125115/http://www.sanary.com/a-huxley-in-sanary-1-introduction.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> By this time, Huxley had established himself as a writer and social satirist. He was a contributor to '']'' and '']'' magazines and had published a collection of his poetry (''The Burning Wheel'', 1916) and four satirical novels, '']'' (1921), '']'' (1923), '']'' (1925) and '']'' (1928). ''Brave New World'' was Huxley's fifth novel and first ]n work. | |||
{{cquote|And that after this is accomplished, and the brave new world begins | |||
When all men are paid for existing and no man must pay for his sins...}} | |||
A short passage in ''Crome Yellow'' foreshadows ''Brave New World'', showing that Huxley had such a future in mind already in 1921. Mr. Scogan, one of the earlier book's characters, describes an "impersonal generation" of the future that will "take the place of Nature's hideous system. In vast state incubators, rows upon rows of gravid bottles will supply the world with the population it requires. The family system will disappear; society, sapped at its very base, will have to find new foundations; and Eros, beautifully and irresponsibly free, will flit like a gay butterfly from flower to flower through a sunlit world". | |||
Translations of the novel into other languages often allude to similar expressions used in domestic works of literature in an attempt to capture the same irony: the French edition of the work is entitled ''Le Meilleur des mondes'' (The Best of All Worlds), an allusion to an expression used by the philosopher ]{{Fact|date=April 2009}} and satirized in "]" by ] (1759). | |||
Huxley said that ''Brave New World'' was inspired by the ]n novels of ], including '']'' (1905), and as a parody of '']'' (1923).<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Wickes |first1=George |last2=Fraser |first2=Raymond |title=Aldous Huxley, The Art of Fiction No. 24 |journal=] |date=1960 |volume=Spring 1960 |issue=23 |url=https://www.theparisreview.org/interviews/4698/the-art-of-fiction-no-24-aldous-huxley |access-date=24 August 2022 |language=en |issn=0031-2037 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100922002704/http://www.theparisreview.org/interviews/4698/the-art-of-fiction-no-24-aldous-huxley |archive-date=22 September 2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |author-link=Aldous Huxley |first=Aldous |last=Huxley |title=Letters of Aldous Huxley |chapter=letter to Mrs. Kethevan Roberts, 18 May 1931 |editor-first=Grover |editor-last=Smith |place=New York and Evanston |publisher=Harper & Row |year=1969 |page=348 |quote=I am writing a novel about the future – on the horror of the Wellsian Utopia and a revolt against it. Very difficult. I have hardly enough imagination to deal with such a subject. But it is none the less interesting work.}}</ref> Wells' hopeful vision of the future gave Huxley the idea to begin writing a parody of the novels, which became ''Brave New World''. He wrote in a letter to Mrs. Arthur Goldsmith, an American acquaintance, that he had "been having a little fun pulling the leg of H. G. Wells" but then he "got caught up in the excitement of own ideas".<ref>{{cite book |last=Heje |first=Johan |chapter=Aldous Huxley |editor-last=Harris-Fain |editor-first=Darren |title=British Fantasy and Science-Fiction Writers, 1918–1960 |location=Detroit |publisher=Gale Group |year=2002 |page=100 |isbn=0-7876-5249-0}}</ref> Unlike the most popular optimistic utopian novels of the time, Huxley sought to provide a frightening vision of the future. Huxley referred to ''Brave New World'' as a "negative utopia", somewhat influenced by Wells's own '']'' (dealing with subjects like corporate tyranny and behavioural conditioning) and the works of ].<ref>Lawrence biographer ] writes that "the entire novel is saturated in Lawrence" and cites "Lawrence's New Mexico" in particular. Wilson, Frances (2021). ''Burning Man: The Trials of D.H. Lawrence'', New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, pp. 404–405.</ref> | |||
==Background== | |||
Huxley wrote ''Brave New World'' in 1931 while he was living in ] and ] (a ] writer, he moved to ] in 1937). By this time, Huxley had already established himself as a writer and social satirist. He was a contributor to '']'' and '']'' magazines, had published a collection of his poetry (''The Burning Wheel'', 1916) and four successful satirical novels: '']'' (1921), '']'' (1923), '']'' (1925) and '']'' (1928). ''Brave New World'' was Huxley's fifth novel and first attempt at a dystopian work. | |||
For his part Wells published, two years after ''Brave New World'', his Utopian '']''. Seeking to rebut the argument of Huxley's Mustapha Mond—that moronic underclasses were a necessary "social gyroscope" and that a society composed solely of intelligent, assertive "Alphas" would inevitably disintegrate in internecine struggle—Wells depicted a stable egalitarian society emerging after several generations of a reforming elite having complete control of education throughout the world. In the future depicted in Wells' book, posterity remembers Huxley as "a reactionary writer".<ref>Nathaniel Ward "The visions of Wells, Huxley and Orwell—why was the Twentieth Century impressed by Distopias rather than Utopias?" in Ophelia Ruddle (ed.) Proceedings of the 2003 Annual Multidisciplinary Round Table on Twentieth Century Culture"</ref> The scientific futurism in ''Brave New World'' is believed to be appropriated from '']''<ref>{{cite book |author-link=J. B. S. Haldane |first=J.B.S. |last=Haldane |title=Daedalus; or, Science and the Future |title-link=Daedalus; or, Science and the Future |year=1924}}</ref> by ].<ref>{{cite book |title=Disturbing the Universe |at=Chapter 15 |first=Freeman |last=Dyson |publisher=Basic Books |year=1976}}</ref> | |||
''Brave New World'' was inspired by the ]' utopian novel '']''. Wells' optimistic vision of the future gave Huxley the idea to begin writing a parody of the novel, which became ''Brave New World''. Contrary to the most popular optimist utopian novels of the time, Huxley sought to provide a frightening vision of the future. Huxley referred to ''Brave New World'' as a "negative utopia" (see ]), somewhat influenced by Wells' own '']'' and the works of ]. ]'s novel '']'', completed ten years before in 1921, has been suggested as an influence, but Huxley stated that he had not known of the book at the time.<ref name="chronicle"></ref> | |||
The events of the ] in Britain in 1931, with its mass unemployment and the abandonment of the gold standard, persuaded Huxley to assert that stability was the "primal and ultimate need" if civilisation was to survive the present crisis.<ref name="Bradshaw">{{cite book |author=Bradshaw, David |chapter=Introduction |title=Brave New World |editor=Huxley, Aldous |editor-link=Aldous Huxley |place=London, UK |publisher=Vintage |year=2004 |edition=Print}}</ref> The ''Brave New World'' character Mustapha Mond, Resident World Controller of Western Europe, is named after Sir ]. Shortly before writing the novel, Huxley visited the ], Mond's technologically advanced factory near ], north-east England, and it made a great impression on him.<ref name="Bradshaw"/>{{rp|xxii}} | |||
Huxley visited the newly-opened and technologically-advanced Brunner and Mond plant, part of ], or ICI, ] and gives a fine and detailed account of the processes he saw. The introduction to the most recent print of ''Brave New World'' states that Huxley was inspired to write the classic novel by this Billingham visit. | |||
Huxley used the setting and characters in his science fiction novel to express widely felt anxieties, particularly the fear of losing individual identity in the fast-paced world of the future. An early trip to the United States gave ''Brave New World'' much of its character. Huxley was outraged by the culture of youth, commercial cheeriness, sexual promiscuity and the inward-looking nature of many Americans; he had also found the book ''My Life and Work'' by ] on the boat to America and he saw the book's principles applied in everything he encountered after leaving San Francisco.<ref name="Bradshaw"/>{{rp|viii}} | |||
Although the novel is set in the future, it contains contemporary issues of the early 20th century. The ] had transformed the world. ] had made cars, telephones and radios relatively cheap and widely available throughout the developed world. The ] and ] (1914–1918) were resonating throughout the world. Many characters in the story are named after influential people of the time, for example, Polly Trotsky, Benito Hoover, and Bernard Marx. | |||
==Plot== | |||
Huxley was able to use the setting and characters from his science fiction novel to express widely held opinions, particularly the fear of losing individual identity in the fast-paced world of the future. An early trip to the ] gave ''Brave New World'' much of its character. Not only was Huxley outraged by the culture of youth, commercial cheeriness, sexual promiscuity and the inward-looking nature of many Americans;<ref>The Vintage Classics edition of ''Brave New World''.{{Pn}}</ref> he had also found a book by ] on the boat to America. There was a fear of ] in Europe, so to see America firsthand, as well as read the ideas and plans of one of its foremost citizens, spurred Huxley to write ''Brave New World'' with America in mind. The "feelies" are his response to the "talkie" motion pictures, and the sex-hormone chewing gum is parody of the ubiquitous ], which was something of a symbol of America at that time. In an article in the 4 May 1935 issue of the '']'', ] explained that Huxley was revolting against the 'Age of Utopias'—a time, mostly before the First World War, inspired by what ] and ] were writing about socialism and a World State. | |||
The novel opens in the ] city of ] in AF (After Ford) 632 (AD 2540 in the ]), where citizens are engineered through ] and childhood indoctrination programmes into predetermined ] (or ]s) based on intelligence and labour. Lenina Crowne, a hatchery worker, is popular and sexually desirable, but Bernard Marx, a psychologist, is not. He is shorter in stature than the average member of his high caste, which gives him an ]. His work with ] allows him to understand, and disapprove of, his society's methods of keeping its citizens peaceful, which includes their constant consumption of a soothing, happiness-producing drug called "soma". Courting disaster, Bernard is vocal and arrogant about his criticisms, and his boss contemplates exiling him to ] because of his nonconformity. His only friend is Helmholtz Watson, a gifted writer who finds it difficult to use his talents creatively in their pain-free society. | |||
<blockquote> | |||
After the Age of Utopias came what we may call the American Age, lasting as long as the Boom. Men like Ford or Mond seemed to many to have solved the social riddle and made capitalism the common good. But it was not native to us; it went with a buoyant, not to say blatant optimism, which is not our negligent or negative optimism. Much more than Victorian righteousness, or even Victorian self-righteousness, that optimism has driven people into pessimism. For the Slump brought even more disillusionment than the War. A new bitterness, and a new bewilderment, ran through all social life, and was reflected in all literature and art. It was contemptuous, not only of the old Capitalism, but of the old Socialism. ''Brave New World'' is more of a revolt against Utopia than against Victoria.<ref>G.K. Chesterton, review in ''The Illustrated London News'', 4 May 1935</ref> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
Bernard takes a holiday with Lenina outside the World State to a Savage Reservation in ], in which the two observe ] people, disease, the ageing process, other languages, and religious lifestyles for the first time. The culture of the village folk resembles the contemporary Native American groups of the region, descendants of the ], including the ] of ] and ].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Meckier |first1=Jerome |date=2002 |title=Aldous Huxley's Americanization of the "Brave New World" |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/pdf/3176042.pdf |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221009/https://www.jstor.org/stable/pdf/3176042.pdf |archive-date=2022-10-09 |url-status=live |journal=Twentieth Century American Literature |volume=48 |issue=4 |pages=439 |jstor=3176042 |access-date=December 30, 2021}}</ref> Bernard and Lenina witness a violent public ritual and then encounter Linda, a woman originally from the World State who is living on the reservation with her son John, now a young man. She, too, visited the reservation on a holiday many years ago, but became separated from her group and was left behind. She had meanwhile become pregnant by a fellow holidaymaker (who is revealed to be Bernard's boss, the Director of Hatcheries and Conditioning). She did not try to return to the World State, because of her shame at her pregnancy. Despite spending his whole life in the reservation, John has never been accepted by the villagers, and his and Linda's lives have been hard and unpleasant. Linda has taught John to read, although from the only book in her possession—a scientific manual—and another book found nearby by Popé: the complete works of Shakespeare. Ostracised by the villagers, John is able to articulate his feelings only in terms of Shakespearean drama, quoting often from '']'', '']'', '']'', '']'' and '']''. Linda now wants to return to London, and John, too, wants to see this "brave new world" that his mother so often praised. Bernard sees an opportunity to thwart plans to exile him, and gets permission to take Linda and John back. On their return to London, John meets the Director and calls him his "father", a vulgarity which causes a roar of laughter. The humiliated Director resigns in shame before he can follow through with exiling Bernard. | |||
For ''Brave New World'', Huxley received nearly universal criticism from contemporary critics, although his work was later embraced. Even the few sympathetic critics tended to temper their praises with disparaging remarks.<ref>Huxley, Aldous. ''Brave New World''. Harper Perennial Modern Classics; Reprint edition (17 October 2006), P.S. "About the Book."{{Pn}}</ref> | |||
Bernard, as "custodian" of the "savage" John who is now treated as a celebrity, is fawned on by the highest members of society and revels in attention he once scorned. Bernard's popularity is fleeting, though, and he becomes envious that John only really bonds with the literary-minded Helmholtz. Considered hideous and friendless, Linda spends all her time using soma, which she craved for so long, while John refuses to attend social events organised by Bernard, appalled by what he perceives to be an empty society. Lenina and John are physically attracted to each other, but John's view of courtship and romance, based on Shakespeare's writings, is utterly incompatible with Lenina's freewheeling attitude to sex. She tries to seduce him, but he attacks her, before suddenly being informed that his mother is on her deathbed. He rushes to Linda's bedside, causing a scandal, as this is not the "correct" attitude to death. Some children who enter the ward for "death-conditioning" come across as disrespectful to John, and he attacks one physically. He then tries to break up a distribution of soma to a lower-caste group, telling them that he is freeing them. Helmholtz and Bernard rush in to stop the ensuing riot, which the police quell by spraying soma vapor into the crowd. | |||
==Synopsis== | |||
===The Introduction (Chapters 1–6)=== | |||
The novel opens in ] in the ''"year of our Ford 632"'' (AD 2540 in the ]). In this world, the vast majority of the population is unified under ], an eternally peaceful, stable global society, in which goods and resources are plentiful (because the population is ] to no more than two billion people) and everyone is happy. In this society, natural reproduction has been done away with and children are decanted and raised in Hatcheries and Conditioning Centres. Huxley has described an ideal world where women no longer are forced to give birth. Society is divided into five ]s, created in these centres. The highest caste is allowed to develop naturally while it matures in its "decanting bottle". The lower castes are treated to chemical interference to cause ] in intelligence or physical growth. The castes are Alphas, Betas, Gammas, Deltas, and Epsilons, with each caste further split into Plus and Minus members. Each Alpha or Beta is the product of one fertilized egg developing into one ]. Members of other castes are not unique but are instead created using the ] which enables a single egg to spawn (at the point of the story being told) up to 96 children and one ovary to produce thousands of children. This rapid production of specialized children bolsters the efficiency of society, and creates a very relaxing environment for the citizens of the Brave New World. | |||
Bernard, Helmholtz, and John are all brought before Mustapha Mond, the "Resident World Controller for Western Europe", who tells Bernard and Helmholtz that they are to be exiled to islands for antisocial activity. Bernard pleads for a second chance, but Helmholtz welcomes the opportunity to be a true individual, and chooses the ] as his destination, believing that ] will inspire his writing. Mond tells Helmholtz that exile is actually a reward. The islands are full of the most interesting people in the world, individuals who did not fit into the social model of the World State. Mond outlines for John the events that led to the present society and his arguments for a caste system and social control. John rejects Mond's arguments, and Mond sums up John's views by claiming that John demands "the right to be unhappy". John asks if he may go to the islands as well, but Mond refuses, saying he wishes to see what happens to John next. | |||
All members of society are conditioned in childhood to hold the values that the World State idealizes, which improves stability and their quality of life. Constant consumption is the bedrock of stability for the World State, providing every and any opportunity for women to indulge their perpetual need for shopping. Everyone is encouraged to consume the ubiquitous drug, '']'', which is probably a historical allusion to a mythical drink of the ancient Indo-] (ancestors of the present day peoples of India). ''Soma'' is a ] that takes users on enjoyable, hangover-free "vacations", and was developed expressly for this purpose. It is also stated that it provides a replication of religious experiences, obviating the need for religion. | |||
Jaded with his new life, John moves to an abandoned hilltop lighthouse, near the village of ], where he intends to adopt a solitary ] lifestyle in order to purify himself of civilization, practising ]. This draws reporters and eventually hundreds of amazed sightseers, ] his bizarre behaviour. | |||
Recreational heterosexual and homosexual sex is an integral part of society. In this egalitarian society, everyone is treated equally. According to The World State, sex is a social activity rather than a means of reproduction and is encouraged from early childhood; the few women who can reproduce are conditioned to take birth control. The maxim "everyone belongs to everyone else" is repeated often, and the idea of a "family" is considered taboo; sexual competition and emotional, romantic relationships are rendered obsolete because they are no longer needed. Marriage, natural birth, parenthood, and pregnancy are considered too obscene to be mentioned in casual conversation. Thus, society has advanced to a new level of reproductive comprehension. | |||
For a while it seems that John might be left alone, after the public's attention is drawn to other diversions, but a documentary maker has secretly filmed John's self-flagellation from a distance, and when released the documentary causes an international sensation. Helicopters arrive with more journalists. Crowds of people descend on John's retreat, demanding that he perform his whipping ritual for them. From one helicopter a young woman emerges who is implied to be Lenina. John, at the sight of a woman he both adores and loathes, whips at her in a fury and then turns the whip on himself, exciting the crowd, whose wild behaviour transforms into a soma-fuelled orgy. The next morning John awakes on the ground and is consumed by remorse over his participation in the night's events. | |||
Spending time alone is considered an outrageous waste of time and money. Admitting to wanting to be an individual in the social group is shocking, horrifying, and embarrassing. This is why John is later afforded celebrity-like status. Conditioning trains people to consume and never to enjoy being alone, so by spending an afternoon not playing "Obstacle Golf," or not in bed with a friend, one is forfeiting acceptance. | |||
That evening, a swarm of helicopters appears on the horizon, the story of last night's orgy having been in all the papers. The first onlookers and reporters to arrive find that John is dead, having hanged himself. | |||
In The World State, people typically die at age 60<ref>Huxley, ''Brave New World,'' 1932. (London: HarperCollins, first Perennial Modern Classics edition) p. 113. "Youth almost unimpaired till sixty, and then, crack! The end". — Bernard Marx</ref> having maintained good health and youthfulness their whole life. Death isn't feared; anyone reflecting upon it is reassured by the knowledge that everyone is happy, and that society goes on. Since no one has family, they have no ties to mourn. | |||
==Characters== | |||
The conditioning system eliminates the need for professional competitiveness; people are literally bred to do their jobs and cannot desire another. There is no competition within castes; each caste member receives the same food, housing, and soma rationing as every other member of that caste. There is no desire to change one's caste. | |||
'''Bernard Marx''', a sleep-learning specialist at the Central London Hatchery and Conditioning Centre. Although Bernard is an Alpha-Plus (the upper class of the society), he is a misfit. He is unusually short for an Alpha; an alleged accident with alcohol in Bernard's blood-surrogate before his decanting has left him slightly stunted. Unlike his fellow utopians, Bernard is often angry, resentful, and jealous. At times, he is also cowardly and hypocritical. His conditioning is clearly incomplete. He does not enjoy communal sports, solidarity services, or promiscuous sex. He does not particularly enjoy soma. Bernard is in love with Lenina and does not like her sleeping with other men, even though "everyone belongs to everyone else". Bernard's triumphant return to utopian civilisation with John the Savage from the Reservation precipitates the downfall of the Director, who had been planning to exile him. Bernard's triumph is short-lived; he is ultimately banished to an island<!--NOTE: Although John asks if he could 'go to the islands' with Bernard and Watson, it is not necessarily true that Bernard and Watson are both going to the Falkland Islands. Only Watson is definitely going to the Falklands. Bernard's island is never explicitly stated.--> for his non-conformist behaviour. | |||
'''John''', the illicit son of the Director and Linda, born and reared on the Savage Reservation ("Malpais") after Linda was unwittingly left behind by her errant lover. John ("the Savage" or "Mr. Savage", as he is often called) is an outsider both on the Reservation—where the natives still practise marriage, natural birth, family life and religion—and the ostensibly civilised World State, based on principles of stability and happiness. He has read nothing but the complete works of ], which he quotes extensively, and, for the most part, aptly, though his allusion to the "Brave New World" (Miranda's words in '']'') takes on a darker and bitterly ironic resonance as the novel unfolds. John is intensely moral according to a code that he has been taught by Shakespeare and life in Malpais but is also naïve: his views are as imported into his own consciousness as are the ] messages of World State citizens. The admonishments of the men of Malpais taught him to regard his mother as a whore; but he cannot grasp that these were the same men who continually sought her out despite their supposedly sacred pledges of monogamy. Because he is unwanted in Malpais, he accepts the invitation to travel back to London and is initially astonished by the comforts of the World State. He remains committed to values that exist only in his poetry. He first spurns Lenina for failing to live up to his Shakespearean ideal and then the entire utopian society: he asserts that its technological wonders and consumerism are poor substitutes for individual freedom, human dignity and personal integrity. After his mother's death, he becomes deeply distressed with grief, surprising onlookers in the hospital. He then withdraws himself from society and attempts to purify himself of "sin" (desire), but is unable to do so. His unusual behavior eventually attracts the attention of reporters and, later, huge amounts of people, who arrive in helicopters and make John furious with their behavior. Excited by his fury, people start an orgy, which he cannot resist joining. After waking up the next morning, John is horrified by his actions and hangs himself. | |||
To grow closer with members of the same class, citizens participate in mock religious services called Solidarity Services. Twelve people consume large quantities of soma and sing hymns. The ritual progresses through group hypnosis and climaxes in an orgy. | |||
In geographic areas non-conducive to easy living and consumption, The World State allows well controlled, securely contained groups of "savages" to live. | |||
'''Helmholtz Watson''', a handsome and successful Alpha-Plus lecturer at the College of Emotional Engineering and a friend of Bernard. He feels unfulfilled writing endless propaganda doggerel, and the stifling conformism and ] of the World State make him restive. Helmholtz is ultimately exiled to the ]—a cold asylum for disaffected Alpha-Plus non-conformists—after reading a heretical poem to his students on the virtues of solitude and helping John destroy some Deltas' rations of soma following Linda's death. Unlike Bernard, he takes his exile in his stride and comes to view it as an opportunity for inspiration in his writing. His first name derives from the German physicist ]. | |||
In its first chapters, the novel describes life in the World State as wonderful and introduces Lenina and Bernard. Lenina, a beta plus, is a socially accepted woman, normal for her society, while Bernard, a psychologist, is an outcast. Although an Alpha Plus, Bernard is shorter in stature than the average of his caste—a quality shared by the lower castes, which gives him an inferiority complex. His work with sleep-teaching has led him to realize that what others believe to be their own deeply held beliefs are merely phrases repeated to children while they sleep. Still, he recognizes the necessity of such programming as the reason why his society meets the emotional needs of its citizens. Courting disaster, he is vocal about being different, once stating he dislikes soma because he'd "rather be himself". Bernard's differences fuel rumors that he was accidentally administered alcohol while incubated, a method used to keep Epsilons short. | |||
'''Lenina Crowne''', a young, beautiful foetus technician at the Central London Hatchery and Conditioning Centre. Lenina Crowne is a Beta who enjoys being a Beta. She is a vaccination worker with beliefs and values that are in line with a citizen of the World State. She is part of the 30% of the female population that are not freemartins (sterile women). Lenina is promiscuous and popular but somewhat quirky in her society: she had a four-month relation with Henry Foster, choosing not to have sex with anyone but him for a period of time. She is basically happy and well-conditioned, using soma to suppress unwelcome emotions, as is expected. Lenina has a date with Bernard, to whom she feels ambivalently attracted, and she goes to the Reservation with him. On returning to civilisation, she tries and fails to seduce John the Savage. John loves and desires Lenina but he is repelled by her forwardness and the prospect of pre-marital sex, rejecting her as an "]". Lenina visits John at the lighthouse but he attacks her with a whip, unwittingly inciting onlookers to do the same. Her exact fate is left unspecified. | |||
Lenina, a woman who seldom questions her own motivations, is reprimanded by her friends because she is not promiscuous enough. However, she is still highly content in her role as a woman. Both fascinated and disturbed by Bernard, she responds to Bernard's advances to dispel her reputation for being too selective and monogamous. | |||
'''Mustapha Mond''', Resident World Controller of Western Europe, "His Fordship" Mustapha Mond presides over one of the ten zones of the World State, the global government set up after the cataclysmic Nine Years' War and great Economic Collapse. Sophisticated and good-natured, Mond is an urbane and hyperintelligent advocate of the World State and its ethos of "Community, Identity, Stability". Among the novel's characters, he is uniquely aware of the precise nature of the society he oversees and what it has given up to accomplish its gains. Mond argues that art, literature, and scientific freedom must be sacrificed to secure the ultimate ] goal of maximising societal happiness. He defends the caste system, behavioural conditioning, and the lack of personal freedom in the World State: these, he says, are a price worth paying for achieving social stability, the highest social virtue because it leads to lasting happiness. | |||
Bernard's only friend is Helmholtz Watson, an Alpha-Plus lecturer at the College of Emotional Engineering (Department of Writing). The friendship is based on their similar experiences as misfits, but unlike Bernard, Watson's sense of loneliness stems from being too gifted, too handsome, and too physically strong. Helmholtz is drawn to Bernard as a confidant: he can talk to Bernard about his desire to write poetry. | |||
'''Fanny Crowne''', Lenina Crowne's friend (they have the same last name because only ten thousand last names are in use in a World State comprising two billion people). Fanny voices the conventional values of her caste and society, particularly the importance of promiscuity: she advises Lenina that she should have more than one man in her life because it is unseemly to concentrate on just one. Fanny then warns Lenina away from a new lover whom she considers undeserving, yet she is ultimately supportive of the young woman's attraction to the savage John. | |||
===The Reservation and the Savage (Chapters 7–9)=== | |||
Bernard, desperately wanting Lenina's attention, tries to impress her by taking her on holiday to a Savage Reservation. The reservation, located in New Mexico, consists of a community named Malpais (which in Spanish means "bad country", one of many Spanish puns throughout the novel). From afar, Lenina thinks it will be exciting. In person, she finds the aged, toothless natives who mend their clothes rather than throw them away repugnant, and the situation is made worse when she discovers that she has left her soma tablets at the resort hotel. Bernard is fascinated, although he realizes his seduction plans have failed. | |||
'''Henry Foster''', one of Lenina's many lovers, is a perfectly conventional Alpha male, casually discussing Lenina's body with his coworkers. His success with Lenina, and his casual attitude about it, infuriate the jealous Bernard. Henry ultimately proves himself every bit the ideal World State citizen, finding no courage to defend Lenina from John's assaults despite having maintained an uncommonly longstanding sexual relationship with her. | |||
In typical tourist fashion, Bernard and Lenina watch what at first appears to be a quaint native ceremony. The village folk, whose culture resembles that of the ] peoples such as the ] and ], begin by singing, but the ritual quickly becomes a passion play where a village boy is whipped to unconsciousness. | |||
'''Benito Hoover''', another of Lenina's lovers. She remembers that he is particularly hairy when he takes his clothes off.<!--is this really useful? --> | |||
Soon after, the couple encounters Linda, a woman formerly of The World State who has been living in Malpais since she came on a trip and became separated from her group and her date, whom she refers to as "Tomakin" but who is revealed to be Bernard's boss, Thomas. She became pregnant because she mistimed her "Malthusian Drill" and there were no facilities for an abortion. Linda gave birth to a son, John (later referred to as John the Savage) who is now eighteen. | |||
The '''Director of Hatcheries and Conditioning (DHC)''', also known as '''Thomas "Tomakin"''', is the administrator of the Central London Hatchery and Conditioning Centre, where he is a threatening figure who intends to exile Bernard to Iceland. His plans take an unexpected turn when Bernard returns from the Reservation with Linda (see below) and John, a child they both realise is actually his. This fact, scandalous and obscene in the World State, not because it was extramarital (which all sexual acts are), but because it was procreative, leads the Director to resign his post in shame. | |||
Through conversations with Linda and John, we learn that their life has been hard. For eighteen years, they have been treated as outsiders; the natives hate Linda for sleeping with all the men of the village, as she was conditioned to do, and John was mistreated and excluded for his mother's actions, not to mention the role of racism. John's one joy was that his mother had taught him to read, although he only had two books: a scientific manual from his mother's job and a collection of the works of Shakespeare (a work banned in The World State). John has been denied the religious rituals of the village, although he has watched them and even has had some of his own religious experiences in the desert. | |||
'''{{visible anchor|Linda}}''', John's mother, decanted as a Beta-Minus in the World State, originally worked in the DHC's Fertilizing Room, and subsequently lost during a storm while visiting the New Mexico Savage Reservation with the Director many years before the events of the novel. Despite following her usual precautions, Linda became pregnant with the Director's son during their time together and was therefore unable to return to the World State by the time that she found her way to Malpais. Having been conditioned to the promiscuous social norms of the World State, Linda finds herself at once popular with every man in the pueblo (because she is open to all sexual advances) and also reviled for the same reason, seen as a whore by the wives of the men who visit her and by the men themselves (who come to her nonetheless). Her only comforts there are ''mescal'' brought by Popé as well as '']''. Linda is desperate to return to the World State and to soma, wanting nothing more from her remaining life than comfort until death. | |||
Old, weathered and tired, Linda wants to return to her familiar world in London; she is tired of a life without soma. John wants to see the "brave new world" his mother has told him so much about. Bernard wants to take them back as revenge against Thomas, who threatened to reassign Bernard to Iceland as punishment for Bernard's antisocial beliefs. Bernard arranges permission for Linda and John to leave the reservation. | |||
The '''Arch-Community-Songster''', the secular equivalent of the ] in the World State society. He takes personal offense when John refuses to attend Bernard's party. | |||
===The Savage visits the World State (Chapters 10–18)=== | |||
Upon his return to London, Bernard is confronted by Thomas Tomakin, the Director of the Hatchery and Conditioning Centre who, in front of an audience of higher-caste Centre workers, denounces Bernard for his antisocial behaviour and again threatens to send him away from the happiness of England to Iceland. Bernard, thinking that for the first time in his life he has the upper hand, defends himself by presenting the Director with his long lost lover and unknown son, Linda and John. The humiliated Director resigns in shame and is himself sent to Iceland. | |||
The '''Director of Crematoria and Phosphorus Reclamation''', one of the many disappointed, important figures to attend Bernard's party. | |||
Bernard makes John the toast of London. Pursued by the highest members of society, able to bed any woman he fancies, Bernard revels in attention he once scorned. Everyone who is anyone will endure Bernard to dine with the interesting, different, beautiful John. Even Lenina grows fond of the savage, while the savage falls in love with her. Bernard, intoxicated with attention, falls in love with himself. In short, John brings tremendous happiness upon the citizens of London. | |||
The '''Warden''', an Alpha-Minus, the talkative chief administrator for the New Mexico Savage Reservation. He is blond, short, broad-shouldered, and has a booming voice.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Huxley|first1=Aldous|title=Brave New World|date=1932|publisher=Harper & Brothers|isbn=978-0-06-085052-4|location=New York|page=101}}<!--|access-date=2015-04-16--></ref> | |||
The victory, however, is short lived. Linda, decrepit, toothless, friendless, goes on a permanent soma holiday while John, appalled by what he perceives to be an empty society, refuses to attend Bernard's parties. Society drops Bernard as swiftly as it had taken him. Bernard turns to the person he'd believed to be his one true friend, only to see Helmholtz fall into a quick, easy camaraderie with John. Bernard is left an outcast yet again as he watches the only two men he ever connected with find more of interest in each other than they ever did in him. | |||
'''Darwin Bonaparte''', a "big game photographer" (i.e., filmmaker) who films John flogging himself. Darwin Bonaparte became known for two works: "feely of the gorillas' wedding",<ref name="Brave New World">{{cite book|last1=Huxley|first1=Aldous|title=Brave New World|date=1932|publisher=Harper & Brothers|isbn=978-0-06-085052-4|location=New York|page=253}}<!--|access-date=2015-04-16--></ref> and "Sperm Whale's Love-life".<ref name="Brave New World"/> He had already made a name for himself<ref>{{cite book|last1=Huxley|first1=Aldous|title=Brave New World|date=1932|publisher=Harper & Brothers|isbn=978-0-06-085052-4|location=New York|page=252}}<!--|access-date=2015-04-16--></ref> but still seeks more. He renews his fame by filming the savage, John, in his newest release "The Savage of Surrey".<ref>{{cite book|last1=Huxley|first1=Aldous|title=Brave New World|date=1932|publisher=Harper & Brothers|isbn=978-0-06-085052-4|location=New York|page=254}}<!--|access-date=2015-04-16--></ref> His name alludes to ] and ]. | |||
John and Helmholtz's island of peace is brief. John grows frustrated by a society he finds wicked and debased. He is moved by Lenina, but also loathes her sexual advances, which revolt and shame him. He is heartbroken when his mother succumbs to soma and dies in a hospital. John's grief bewilders and revolts the hospital workers, and their lack of reaction to Linda's death prompts John to try to force humanity from the workers by throwing their soma rations out a window. The ensuing riot brings the police who soma-gas the crowd. Bernard and Helmholtz arrive to help John, but only Helmholtz helps him, while Bernard stands to the side, torn between risking involvement by helping or escaping the scene. | |||
'''Dr. Shaw''', Bernard Marx's physician who consequently becomes the physician of both Linda and John. He prescribes a lethal dose of soma to Linda, which will stop her respiratory system from functioning in a span of one to two months, at her own behest but not without protest from John. Ultimately, they all agree that it is for the best, since denying her this request would cause more trouble for Society and Linda herself. | |||
When they wake, Bernard, Helmholtz and John are brought before Mustapha Mond, the Resident World Controller for Western Europe. Bernard and Helmholtz are told they will be sent to ] and the ], two of several island ] reserved for exiled citizens. Helmholtz looks forward to living on the remote Falkland Islands, where he can become a serious writer but Bernard is devastated, throws a fit and has to be dragged away. Mond explains that exile to the islands is not so much a threat to force freethinkers to reform and rejoin society but a place where they may act as they please, because they will not be an influence on the population. After Bernard and Helmholtz leave the room, Mustapha and John engage in a philosophical argument on the morals behind the godless society, which leads to the decision that John will not be sent to an island. Mustapha says that he too once risked banishment to an island because of some experiments that were deemed controversial by the state, alluding to an understanding of Bernard's, Helmholtz's and John's position as outsiders and even ceding to John's perception of the flawed society. | |||
'''Dr. Gaffney''', ] of Eton, an Upper School for high-caste individuals. He shows Bernard and John around the classrooms, and the Hypnopaedic Control Room (used for behavioural conditioning through sleep learning). John asks if the students read Shakespeare but the Provost says the library contains only reference books because solitary activities, such as reading, are discouraged. | |||
In the final chapters, John isolates himself from society in a lighthouse outside London where he finds his hermit life interrupted from mourning his mother by the more bitter memories of civilization. To atone, John brutally whips himself in the open, a ritual the Indians in his own village had said he was not capable of. His self-flagellation, caught on film and shown publicly, destroys his hermit life. Hundreds of gawking sightseers, intrigued by John's violent behavior, fly out to watch the savage in person. Even Lenina comes to watch, crying a tear John does not see. The sight of the woman whom he both adores and blames is too much for him; John attacks and whips her. This sight of genuine, unbridled emotion drives the crowd wild with excitement, and—handling it as they are conditioned to—they turn on each other, in a frenzy of beating and chanting that devolves into a mass ] of ''soma'' and sex. In the morning, John, hopeless, alone and horrified by his drug use, debasement and attack on Lenina, makes one last attempt to escape civilization and atone. When thousands of gawking sightseers arrive that morning, frenzied at the prospect of seeing the savage perform again, they find John dead, hanging by the neck. | |||
'''Miss Keate''', ] of ] Upper School. Bernard fancies her, and arranges an assignation with her.<ref>Her name is a in-joke reference to ], the notorious 19th century flogging headmaster of Eton.</ref> | |||
==Characters== | |||
===In order of appearance=== | |||
*'''Thomas "Tomakin"''', Alpha, Director of Hatcheries and Conditioning (D.H.C.) for London; later revealed to be the father of John the Savage. | |||
*'''Henry Foster''', Alpha, Administrator at the Hatchery and Lenina's current partner. | |||
*'''Lenina Crowne''', Beta-Plus, very fond of wearing the color green, Vaccination-worker at the Hatchery; loved by John the Savage. | |||
*'''Mustapha Mond''', Alpha-Double Plus, World Controller for Western Europe (nine other controllers exist, presumably for different sections of the world). | |||
*'''Assistant Director of Predestination'''. | |||
*'''Bernard Marx''', Alpha-Plus, psychologist (specializing in ]). He dates Lenina for a short period of time. | |||
*'''Fanny Crowne''', Beta, embryo worker; a friend of Lenina. | |||
*'''Benito Hoover''', Alpha, friend of Lenina; disliked by Bernard. | |||
*'''Helmholtz Watson''', Alpha-Plus, lecturer at the College of Emotional Engineering (Department of Writing), friend and confidant of Bernard Marx and John the Savage. | |||
===Others=== | |||
====At the Solidarity Service==== | |||
* ], women who have been deliberately made sterile by exposure to male hormones during foetal development but are still physically normal except for "the slightest tendency to grow beards". In the book, government policy requires freemartins to form 70% of the female population. | |||
*'''Morgana Rothschild''', '''Herbert Bakunin''', '''Fifi Bradlaugh''', '''Jim Bokanovsky''', '''Clara Deterding''', '''Joanna Diesel''', '''Sarojini Engels''', and "that great lout" '''Tom Kawaguchi'''. | |||
*'''Miss Keate''', headmistress of the high-tech glass and concrete ]. | |||
*'''Arch-Community Songster''', a quasi-religious figure based in ]. | |||
*'''Primo Mellon''', a reporter for the upper-caste news-sheet ''Hourly Radio'', who attempts to interview John the Savage and gets assaulted for his troubles. | |||
*'''Darwin Bonaparte''', a ] who brings worldwide attention to John's hermitage. | |||
===Of Malpais=== | ===Of Malpais=== | ||
* '''Popé''', a native of Malpais. Although he reinforces the behaviour that causes hatred for Linda in Malpais by sleeping with her and bringing her '']'', he still holds the traditional beliefs of his tribe. In his early years John attempted to kill him, but Popé brushed off his attempt and sent him fleeing. He gave Linda a copy of the Complete Works of Shakespeare. (Historically, ] or Po'pay was a ] religious leader who led the ] in 1680 against ] colonial rule.) | |||
*'''John the Savage ("Mr. Savage")''', son of Linda and Thomas (Tomakin/The Director), an outcast in both primitive and modern society. He is one of the main protagonists in the story. He commits ] in the end. | |||
* '''Mitsima''', an elder tribal ] who also teaches John survival skills such as rudimentary ceramics (specifically ]s, which were traditional to Native American tribes) and bow-making. | |||
*'''Linda''', a Beta-Minus. John the Savage's mother, and Thomas's (Tomakin/The Director) long lost lover. She is from England and was pregnant with John when she got lost from Thomas in a trip to New Mexico. She is disliked by both savage people because of her "civilized" behaviour, and by civilized people because she is fat and looks old. | |||
* '''Kiakimé''', a native girl whom John fell for, but is instead eventually wed to another boy from Malpais. | |||
*'''Popé''', a native of Malpais. Although he reinforces the behaviour that causes hatred for Linda in Malpais by sleeping with her and bringing her ], he still holds the traditional beliefs of his tribe. John also attempts to kill him, in his early years. | |||
* '''Kothlu''', a native boy with whom Kiakimé is wed. | |||
===Background figures=== | ===Background figures=== | ||
These are fictional and factual characters who |
These are non-fictional and factual characters who lived before the events in this book, but are of note in the novel: | ||
* |
* ], who has become a ] figure to the ]. "Our Ford" is used in place of "Our Lord", as a credit to popularising the use of the ]. | ||
* |
* ], "Our Freud" is sometimes said in place of "Our Ford" because Freud's psychoanalytic method depends implicitly upon the rules of classical conditioning,{{citation needed|date=November 2020}} and because Freud popularised the idea that sexual activity is essential to human happiness. (It is also strongly implied that citizens of the World State believe Freud and Ford to be the same person.)<ref>chapter 3, "Our Ford-or Our Freud, as, for some inscrutable reason, he chose to call himself whenever he spoke of psychological matters–Our Freud had been the first to reveal the appalling dangers of family life"</ref> | ||
* |
* ], "Dr. Wells", British writer and ], whose book '']'' was a motivation for ''Brave New World''. "All's well that ends Wells", wrote Huxley in his letters, criticising Wells for anthropological assumptions Huxley found unrealistic. | ||
* |
* ], whose conditioning techniques are used to train infants. | ||
* |
* ], whose banned works are quoted throughout the novel by John, "the Savage". The plays quoted include '']'', '']'', '']'', '']'', '']'', '']'', '']'' and '']''. Mustapha Mond also knows them because as a World Controller he has access to a selection of books from throughout history, including the ]. | ||
* |
* ], 19th century British economist, believed the people of the Earth would eventually be threatened by their inability to raise enough food to feed the population. In the novel, the eponymous character devises the contraceptive techniques (Malthusian belt) that are practiced by women of the World State. | ||
* |
* Reuben Rabinovitch, the Polish-Jew character on whom the effects of sleep-learning, ], are first observed. | ||
* ], 19th century Catholic theologian and educator, believed university education the critical element in advancing post-industrial Western civilization. Mustapha Mond and The Savage discuss a passage from one of Newman's books. | |||
* ], British industrialist, financier and politician. He is the namesake of Mustapha Mond.<ref name="Naughton">{{Cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/nov/22/aldous-huxley-prophet-dystopia-cs-lewis|title=Aldous Huxley: the prophet of our brave new digital dystopia {{!}} John Naughton|last=Naughton|first=John|date=2013-11-22|website=The Guardian|language=en|access-date=2018-10-07}}</ref> | |||
* ], the founder and first President of ]. Naming Mond after Atatürk links up with their characteristics; he reigned during the time ''Brave New World'' was written and revolutionised the 'old' Ottoman state into a new nation.<ref name="Naughton"/> | |||
===Sources of names and references=== | ===Sources of names and references=== | ||
The limited number of names that the World State assigned to its bottle-grown citizens can be traced to political and cultural figures who contributed to the bureaucratic, economic, and technological systems of Huxley's age, and presumably those systems in ''Brave New World'' |
The limited number of names that the World State assigned to its bottle-grown citizens can be traced to political and cultural figures who contributed to the bureaucratic, economic, and technological systems of Huxley's age, and presumably those systems in ''Brave New World''.<ref>{{cite book |first=Jerome |last=Meckier |editor1-last=Firchow |editor1-first=Peter Edgerly |editor2-last=Nugel |editor2-first=Bernfried |chapter=Onomastic Satire: Names and Naming in ''Brave New World'' |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=D159Z5kJa_YC&pg=PR5 |title=Aldous Huxley: modern satirical novelist of ideas |publisher=Lit Verlag |year=2006 |pages=187ff |isbn=3-8258-9668-4 |oclc=71165436 |access-date=28 January 2009}}</ref> | ||
* Soma: Huxley took the name for the drug used by the state to control the population after the Vedic ritual drink ], inspired by his interest in Indian ]. | |||
* Malthusian belt: A contraceptive device worn by women. When Huxley was writing ''Brave New World'', organizations such as the ] had spread throughout Europe, advocating contraception. Although the controversial economic theory of ] was derived from ] by ] about the economic effects of population growth, Malthus himself was an advocate of abstinence rather than contraception. | |||
*]: A scientific process used in the World State to mass-produce human beings. Specifically, the "Bokanovsky Process" is a method of producing multiple embryos from a single fertilized egg, creating up to 96 identical individuals. This technique is central to the society's efforts to maintain social stability and control, as it allows for the creation of a standardized, docile workforce. It's part of the larger theme in the novel of dehumanization and the reduction of individuality in the pursuit of a controlled, stable society. It is thought that the process's name is a reference to ], a French Bureaucrat who believed strongly in the idea of governmental and social efficiency. Complementing this, Podsnap's Technique accelerates the maturation of human eggs, enabling the rapid production of thousands of nearly identical individuals. Together, these methods facilitate the creation of a large, standardized population, eliminating natural reproduction and traditional family structures, thereby reinforcing the World State's control over its citizens. | |||
==Reception== | |||
* '''Bernard Marx''', from ] (or possibly ] or possibly Bernard Shaw) and ]. | |||
Upon its publication, ] praised ''Brave New World'' as "The most accomplished novel Huxley has yet written",<ref>'']'', 5 February 1932. Reprinted in Donald Watt, "Aldous Huxley: The Critical Heritage. London; Routledge, 2013 {{ISBN|1136209697}} (pp. 197–201).</ref> ] lauded it as "Mr. Huxley's remarkable book",<ref>'']'', May 1932 . Reprinted in Watt, (pp. 202–205).</ref> and ] also praised it, stating, "Mr. Aldous Huxley has shown his usual masterly skill in ''Brave New World.''"<ref>"We Don't Want to be Happy", in: '']'' (11 March 1932), reprinted in: Donald Watt, ''Aldous Huxley: The Critical Heritage'' (1975), pp. 210–13.</ref> ''Brave New World'' also received negative responses from other contemporary critics, although his work was later embraced.<ref>Huxley, Aldous. ''Brave New World''. Harper Perennial Modern Classics; Reprint edition (17 October 2006), P.S. Edition, {{ISBN|978-0-06-085052-4}} — "About the Book." — "Too Far Ahead of Its Time? The Contemporary Response to ''Brave New World'' (1932)" p. 8-11</ref> | |||
* '''Lenina Crowne''', from ], the Bolshevik leader during the Russian Revolution. | |||
* '''Fanny Crowne''', from ], famous for an unsuccessful attempt to assassinate Lenin. Ironically, in the novel, Lenina and Fanny are friends. | |||
* '''Polly Trotsky''', from ], the Russian revolutionary leader. | |||
* '''Benito Hoover''', from ], dictator of Italy; and ], then ]. | |||
* '''Helmholtz Watson''', from the German physician and physicist ] and the American behaviorist ]. | |||
* '''Darwin Bonaparte''', from ], the leader of the ], and ], author of '']''. | |||
* '''Herbert Bakunin''', from ], the English philosopher and ], and ], a Russian philosopher and anarchist. | |||
* '''Mustapha Mond''', from ], founder of ] after ], who pulled his country into ] and official ]; and Mond, an apparent reference to Brunner Mond, a division of Imperial Chemical Industries. | |||
* '''Primo Mellon''', from ], prime minister and dictator of Spain (1923–1930), and ], banker. | |||
* '''Sarojini Engels''', from ], co-author of '']'' along with ]: and ], an Indian politician. | |||
* '''Morgana Rothschild''', from the ], famous for its European banking operations. | |||
* '''Fifi Bradlaugh''', from the British political activist and atheist ]. | |||
* '''Joanna Diesel''', from ], the German engineer who invented the diesel engine. | |||
* '''Clara Deterding''', from ], one of the founders of the Royal Dutch Petroleum Company. | |||
* '''Tom Kawaguchi''', from the Japanese Buddhist monk ], the first recorded Japanese traveler to Tibet and Nepal. | |||
* '''Jean-Jacques Habibullah''', from the French political philosopher ] and ], who served as Emir of Afghanistan in the early 20th century. | |||
* '''Miss Keate''', the Eton headmistress, from nineteenth-century headmaster ]. | |||
* '''Arch-Community Songster''', a parody of the ] and the Anglican Church's decision in August 1930 to approve limited use of contraception. | |||
* '''Popé''', from ], the Native American rebel who was blamed for the conflict now known as the ].<ref>{{cite book |first=Andrew L. |last=Knaut |title=The Pueblo Revolt of 1680: conquest and resistance in seventeenth-century New Mexico |publisher=University of Oklahoma Press |location=Norman |year=1995 |page= |isbn=0-8061-2992-1 |oclc=231644472 |accessdate=2009-01-28}}</ref> | |||
In an article in the 4 May 1935 issue of the '']'', ] explained that Huxley was revolting against the "Age of Utopias". Much of the discourse on man's future before 1914 was based on the thesis that humanity would solve all economic and social issues. In the decade following the war the discourse shifted to an examination of the causes of the catastrophe. The works of ] and ] on the promises of socialism and a World State were then viewed as the ideas of naive optimists. Chesterton wrote: | |||
==Fordism and society== | |||
{{Main|The World State}} | |||
The World State is built upon the principles of Henry Ford's ]—mass production, homogeneity, predictability, and consumption of disposable consumer goods. At the same time as the World State lacks any supernatural-based religions, Ford himself is revered as a deity, and characters celebrate Ford Day and swear oaths by his name (e.g., "By Ford!"). In this sense, some fragments of traditional religion are present, such as Christian crosses, which had their tops cut off in order to be changed to a "T." The World State calendar numbers years in the "AF" era—"After Ford"—with year 1 AF being equivalent to 1908 AD, the year in which Ford's first ] rolled off his assembly line. The novel's actual year is AD 2540, but it is referred to in the book as AF 632. | |||
{{blockquote|After the Age of Utopias came what we may call the American Age, lasting as long as the Boom. Men like Ford or Mond seemed to many to have solved the social riddle and made capitalism the common good. But it was not native to us; it went with a buoyant, not to say blatant optimism, which is not our negligent or negative optimism. Much more than Victorian righteousness, or even Victorian self-righteousness, that optimism has driven people into pessimism. For the Slump brought even more disillusionment than the War. A new bitterness, and a new bewilderment, ran through all social life, and was reflected in all literature and art. It was contemptuous, not only of the old Capitalism, but of the old Socialism. ''Brave New World'' is more of a revolution against Utopia than against Victoria.<ref>G. K. Chesterton, review in ''The Illustrated London News'', 4 May 1935</ref>}} | |||
From birth, members of every class are ] by recorded voices repeating slogans while they sleep (called "hypnopædia" in the book) to believe that their own class is best for them. Any residual unhappiness is resolved by an ] and a ] called ''soma'' (from Sanskrit ''sunoti'', he presses out: an intoxicating drink in ancient India) distributed by the ], a secularised version of the ] of ] ("The Body of Christ"). | |||
Similarly, in 1944 economist ] described ''Brave New World'' as a ] of utopian predictions of ]: "Aldous Huxley was even courageous enough to make socialism's dreamed paradise the target of his sardonic irony."<ref>Ludwig von Mises (1944). , New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, p 110</ref> | |||
Contrary to what modern readers would expect, the biological techniques used to control the populace in ''Brave New World'' do not include ]. Huxley wrote the book in the 1920s, thirty years before ] and ] discovered the structure of ]. However, ]'s work with inheritance patterns in peas had been re-discovered in 1900 and the ] movement, based on ], was well established. ] included a number of prominent biologists including ], half-brother and ] ], and brother ] who was a biologist and involved in the eugenics movement. In light of this, the fact that Huxley emphasizes conditioning over breeding is notable (see ]). As the science writer ] put it, ''Brave New World'' describes an "environmental not a genetic hell." Human embryos and foetuses are conditioned via a carefully designed regimen of chemical (such as exposure to hormones and toxins), thermal (exposure to intense heat or cold, as one's future career would dictate) and other environmental stimuli, although there is an element of ] as well. | |||
===Common misunderstandings=== | |||
==Controversy== | |||
{{Human enhancement sidebar}} | |||
*The book was banned in ] in 1932.<ref>http://classiclit.about.com/od/bannedliteratur1/tp/aa_bannedbooks.htm</ref> | |||
{{see also|Fetal alcohol spectrum disorder|Eugenics#In science fiction|Island (Huxley novel)}} | |||
*In 1980, ''Brave New World'' was removed from classrooms in ] among other challenges.<ref name="Radix">{{cite web |url=http://www.radix.net/~bobg/books/banned.1.html |title=Notes on Book Banning |first=Robert |last=Grumbine |date=1996-06-03 |accessdate=2009-01-28}}{{Verify credibility|date=January 2009}}</ref> In 1993, an attempt was made to remove this novel from a ] school's required reading list because it "centered around negative activity".<ref name="Alibris">, Alibris.</ref> | |||
Various authors assume that the book was first and foremost a ] regarding ],<ref>McGee G. (2000). ''The Perfect Baby: Parenthood in the New World of Cloning and Genetics.'' Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield</ref><ref>Elliott C. (2003). ''Better Than Well: American Medicine Meets the American Dream.'' New York: W.W. Norton</ref><ref>Spar D. (2006). ''The Baby Business: How Money, Science and Politics Drive the Commerce of Conception''. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press</ref> indeed about – as an infamous report of ] associate ] states –: "producing improved perfect or post-human" people.<ref>2003. President's Council on Bioethics. Beyond Therapy. Washington, DC: President's Council on Bioethics</ref> In fact, the title itself has become a mere stand-in used to "evoke the general idea of a futuristic dystopia".<ref name="So">So, Derek (2019). "The Use and Misuse of Brave New World in the CRISPR Debate." ''CRISPR J.'' 2(5):316-323. doi:10.1089/crispr.2019.0046. PMID 31599683.</ref> | |||
*The ] ranks ''Brave New World'' as #52 on their list of most challenged books.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.ala.org/ala/aboutala/offices/oif/bannedbooksweek/bbwlinks/100mostfrequently.cfm |title=The 100 Most Frequently Challenged Books of 1990–2000 |publisher=] |accessdate=2009-01-28}}</ref> | |||
Geneticist Derek So suggests that this is a misunderstanding, however.{{r|So|p=318}} According to him, a 'more careful reading of the text' shows that: | |||
*A number of Polish critics believe Huxley ] two science fiction novels - ''Miasto światłości'' (''The City of the Sun'') and ''Podróż poślubna pana Hamiltona'', written by Polish author Mieczysław Smolarski in 1924.<ref>{{cite book |first=Antoni |last=Smuszkiewicz |title=Zaczarowana gra |year=1982 |language=Polish |location=] |publisher=Wydawn. Poznanskie |oclc=251929765}}{{Pn}}</ref> | |||
<blockquote>there does not seem to be any genetic testing in ''Brave New World'', and most of the methods described involve hormones and chemicals rather than heritable interventions. Although Huxley wrote that "<noinclude>]</noinclude> and ] were practiced systematically", this seems to refer only to selective breeding and not to any kind of direct manipulation on the genetic level. (The Bokanovsky process does represent a form of cloning, but this is not ethically equivalent to germline genome editing, and references to ''Brave New World'' may lead some readers to confuse the two technologies.) While it's true that the upper castes in ''Brave New World'' are smarter than the others, this is more because of the deliberate impairment of the lower castes than because the upper castes are "perfect". Rather than reducing the number of individuals born with genetic disorders or handicaps, Huxley's dystopia involves dramatically increasing their number. Quite the opposite: Huxley thought that ''Brave New World'' might come about if we ''didn't'' start selecting better children.{{r|So|p=318-9}}</blockquote> | |||
Overall, Derek So notes that "Huxley was much more worried about totalitarianism than about the new biotechnologies per se that he alluded to in Brave New World."<ref name = "So"/><ref>Fletcher J. (1988). ''The Ethics of Genetic Control: Ending Genetic Roulette.'' Buffalo, NY: Prometheus Books.</ref> | |||
Despite claims to the contrary then, Huxley remained a committed eugenicist all throughout his life,<ref>Kevles DJ. (1985). ''In the Name of Eugenics: Genetics and the Uses of Human Heredity.'' New York: Knopf</ref> much like his comparably famous brother ], and one just as keen on stressing its ].<ref>Woiak, Joanne (2007). "Designing a Brave New World: Eugenics, Politics, and Fiction." ''The Public Historian'', 29(3), 105–129. https://doi.org/10.1525/tph.2007.29.3.105</ref> | |||
==The World State and Fordism== | |||
==Comparisons with George Orwell's '' Nineteen Eighty-Four ''== | |||
The World State is built upon the principles of Henry Ford's ]: mass production, homogeneity, predictability, and consumption of disposable consumer goods. While the World State lacks any supernatural-based religions, Ford himself is revered as the creator of their society but not as a deity, and characters celebrate Ford Day and swear oaths by his name (e.g., "By Ford!"). In this sense, some fragments of traditional religion are present, such as Christian crosses, which had their tops cut off to be changed to a "T", representing the ]. In England, there is an Arch-Community-Songster of Canterbury, obviously continuing the ], and in America '']'' continues publication as ''The Fordian Science Monitor''. The World State calendar numbers years in the "AF" era—"After Ford"—with the calendar beginning in AD 1908, the year in which Ford's first Model T rolled off his assembly line. The novel's Gregorian calendar year is AD 2540, but it is referred to in the book as AF 632.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Brave New World {{!}} Summary, Context, & Reception {{!}} Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Brave-New-World |access-date=2023-05-29 |website=www.britannica.com |language=en}}</ref> | |||
Social critic ] contrasts the worlds of '']'' and ''Brave New World'' in the foreword of his 1985 book '']''. He writes: | |||
{{Quote|What Orwell feared were those who would ban books. What Huxley feared was that there would be no reason to ban a book, for there would be no one who wanted to read one. Orwell feared those who would deprive us of information. Huxley feared those who would give us so much that we would be reduced to passivity and egoism. Orwell feared that the truth would be concealed from us. Huxley feared the truth would be drowned in a sea of irrelevance. Orwell feared we would become a captive culture. Huxley feared we would become a trivial culture, preoccupied with some equivalent of the feelies, the orgy porgy, and the centrifugal bumblepuppy. As Huxley remarked in ''Brave New World Revisited,'' the civil libertarians and rationalists who are ever on the alert to oppose tyranny "failed to take into account man's almost infinite appetite for distractions." In ''1984'', Orwell added, people are controlled by inflicting pain. In ''Brave New World,'' they are controlled by inflicting pleasure. In short, Orwell feared that what we fear will ruin us. Huxley feared that what we desire will ruin us.}} | |||
From birth, members of every class are ] by recorded voices repeating slogans while they sleep (called "hypnopædia" in the book) to believe their own class is superior, but that the other classes perform needed functions. Any residual unhappiness is resolved by an ] and ] called soma. | |||
Journalist ], who has himself published several articles on Huxley and a book on Orwell, notes the difference between the two texts in the introduction to his 1999 article "Why Americans Are Not Taught History": | |||
The biological techniques used to control the populace in ''Brave New World'' do not include ]; Huxley wrote the book before the structure of ] was known. However, ]'s work with inheritance patterns in peas had been rediscovered in 1900 and the ] movement, based on ], was well established. ] included a number of prominent biologists including ], half-brother and ] ], and his brother ] who was a biologist and involved in the eugenics movement. Nonetheless, Huxley emphasises conditioning over breeding (]); human embryos and fetuses are conditioned through a carefully designed regimen of chemical (such as exposure to hormones and toxins), thermal (exposure to intense heat or cold, as one's future career would dictate), and other environmental stimuli, although there is an element of ] as well. | |||
{{Quote|We dwell in a present-tense culture that somehow, significantly, decided to employ the telling expression "You're history" as a choice reprobation or insult, and thus elected to speak forgotten volumes about itself. By that standard, the forbidding dystopia of George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four already belongs, both as a text and as a date, with ] and ], while the ] ] of Huxley still beckons toward a painless, amusement-sodden, and stress-free consensus. Orwell's was a house of horrors. He seemed to strain credulity because he posited a regime that would go to any lengths to own and possess history, to rewrite and construct it, and to inculcate it by means of coercion. Whereas Huxley ... rightly foresaw that any such regime could break but could not bend. In 1988, four years after 1984, the ] scrapped its official history curriculum and announced that a newly authorized version was somewhere in the works. This was the precise moment when the regime conceded its own extinction. For true blissed-out and vacant servitude, though, you need an otherwise sophisticated society where no serious history is taught.<ref name="Hitches">], "Goodbye to All That: Why Americans Are Not Taught History." '']''. November 1998, pp. 37-47.</ref>}} | |||
==Comparisons with George Orwell's ''Nineteen Eighty-Four''== | |||
==''Brave New World Revisited''==<!-- This section is linked from ] --> | |||
{{further|Nineteen Eighty-Four#Brave New World comparisons|l1=Brave New World comparisons}} | |||
] | |||
'''''Brave New World Revisited''''' (] (US) 1958, ] (UK) 1959<ref>http://www.betweenthecovers.com/btc/item/60450</ref>), written by Huxley almost thirty years after ''Brave New World'', was a non-fiction work in which Huxley considered whether the world had moved toward or away from his vision of the future from the 1930s. He believed when he wrote the original novel that it was a reasonable guess as to where the world might go in the future. In ''Brave New World Revisited'', he concluded that the world was becoming like ''Brave New World'' much faster than he originally thought. | |||
In a letter to ] about '']'', Huxley wrote "Whether in actual fact the policy of the boot-on-the-face can go on indefinitely seems doubtful. My own belief is that the ruling oligarchy will find less arduous and wasteful ways of governing and of satisfying its lust for power, and these ways will resemble those which I described in Brave New World."<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|url=http://www.lettersofnote.com/2012/03/1984-v-brave-new-world.html|title=Letters of Note: 1984 v. Brave New World|date=2020-02-08|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200208011627/http://www.lettersofnote.com/2012/03/1984-v-brave-new-world.html|access-date=2020-02-08|archive-date=8 February 2020}}</ref> He went on to write "Within the next generation I believe that the world's rulers will discover that infant conditioning and narco-hypnosis are more efficient, as instruments of government, than clubs and prisons, and that the lust for power can be just as completely satisfied by suggesting people into loving their servitude as by flogging and kicking them into obedience."<ref name=":0" /> | |||
Huxley analysed the causes of this, such as ] as well as all the means by which populations can be controlled. He was particularly interested in the effects of ] and ]. ''Brave New World Revisited'' is different in tone due to Huxley's evolving thought, as well as his conversion to Hindu ] in the interim between the two books. | |||
Social critic ] contrasted the worlds of ''Nineteen Eighty-Four'' and ''Brave New World'' in the foreword of his 1985 book '']''. He writes: | |||
The last chapter of the book aims to propose actions which could be taken in order to prevent a democracy from turning into the ] world described in ''Brave New World''. In Huxley's last novel, '']'', he again exposes similar ideas to describe an utopic nation, which is generally known as a counterpart to his most famous work. | |||
{{Blockquote|What Orwell feared were those who would ban books. What Huxley feared was that there would be no reason to ban a book, for there would be no one who wanted to read one. Orwell feared those who would deprive us of information. Huxley feared those who would give us so much that we would be reduced to passivity and egoism. Orwell feared that the truth would be concealed from us. Huxley feared the truth would be drowned in a sea of irrelevance. Orwell feared we would become a captive culture. Huxley feared we would become a trivial culture, preoccupied with some equivalent of the ], the orgy porgy, and the centrifugal bumblepuppy. As Huxley remarked in ''Brave New World Revisited'', the civil ] and rationalists who are ever on the alert to oppose tyranny "failed to take into account man's almost infinite appetite for distractions." In ''1984'', Huxley added, people are controlled by inflicting pain. In ''Brave New World'', they are controlled by inflicting pleasure. In short, Orwell feared that what we hate will ruin us. Huxley feared that what we love will ruin us.}} | |||
==Related works== | |||
*''The Scientific Outlook'' by philosopher ]. When ''Brave New World'' was released, Russell thought that Huxley's book was based on his book ''The Scientific Outlook'' that had been released the previous year. Russell contacted his own publisher and asked whether or not he should do something about this apparent plagiarism. His publisher advised him not to, and Russell followed this advice.<ref>Russell, Bertrand; John G. Slater With The Assistance Of Peter Köllner (1996). In ''''. Routledge. p. xxii. ISBN 978-0415094085. Google Book Search. Retrieved on 17 September 2008.</ref> | |||
*The 1921 novel '']'' by ]. A utopian novel that was a source of inspiration for ''Brave New World''. | |||
*In Peter F. Hamiltons commonwealth series, an isolated planet practicing genetic eugenics to form a perfect society is called 'Huxleys Haven' | |||
*The 1985 book '']'' by ] alludes to how television is goading modern Western culture to be like what we see in ''Brave New World'', where people are not so much denied human rights like free speech, but are rather conditioned not to care. | |||
*] said that in writing '']'' (1952) he "cheerfully ripped off the plot of ''Brave New World'', whose plot had been cheerfully ripped off from ]'s '']''."<ref>'']'' with Kurt Vonnegut, Jr., July 1973.</ref> | |||
*The ] song by the same name on their album '']'' whose cover art depicts a futuristic London described by Huxley. | |||
*"]," a song by Brazilian band ] from their album ] | |||
*Brazilian rock singer ]'s debut album, released in 2003, is called ''Admirável Chip Novo'' (Brave New Chip). | |||
*] has a song named "Brave New World". | |||
* ] ], ] and ] star in this film set in a not-too-distant future utopian society based on a ''Brave New World''. ]'s character is even named Lenina Huxley, referencing the author and character from the book. (1997) | |||
* ] had a song named "Brave New World". | |||
* Scottish techno record label ] was named after the drug Soma featured in a ''Brave New World'' | |||
* On their album ], ] have a track titled "Hug Me", a song written by Dia inspired by "Brave New World." | |||
* The song "Soma Holiday" by ] is based on the novel and includes several quotes from the novel in its lyrics. | |||
*the lyrics from Marilyn Manson's song Ka Boom Ka Boom from golden age of grotesque plays on the title and idea of this book, he rather states society as "depraved new world"- ''inhale, exhale, lets all hail" | |||
The writer ], who published several articles on Huxley and a book on Orwell, noted the difference between the two texts in the introduction to his 1999 article "Why Americans Are Not Taught History", | |||
{{Blockquote|We dwell in a present-tense culture that somehow, significantly, decided to employ the telling expression "You're history" as a choice reprobation or insult, and thus elected to speak forgotten volumes about itself. By that standard, the forbidding dystopia of George Orwell's ''Nineteen Eighty-Four'' already belongs, both as a text and as a date, with ] and ], while the ] ] of Huxley still beckons toward a painless, amusement-sodden, and stress-free consensus. Orwell's was a house of horrors. He seemed to strain credulity because he posited a regime that would go to any lengths to own and possess history, to rewrite and construct it, and to inculcate it by means of coercion. Whereas Huxley ... rightly foresaw that any such regime could break because it could not bend. In 1988, four years after 1984, the ] scrapped its official history curriculum and announced that a newly authorized version was somewhere in the works. This was the precise moment when the regime conceded its own extinction. For true blissed-out and vacant servitude, though, you need an otherwise sophisticated society where no serious history is taught.<ref name="Hitches">], "Goodbye to All That: Why Americans Are Not Taught History." '']''. November 1998, pp. 37–47.</ref>}} | |||
===Adaptations=== | |||
* ''Brave New World'' (radio broadcast) ''] Workshop'' (27 January and 3 February 1956) | |||
* ''Brave New World (film)'' (1980) | |||
* ] (1998) | |||
* ''Brave New World'' (film) (scheduled 2011) ], ] collaborating<ref>http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/8187942.stm</ref> | |||
* ''Brave New World'' (stage adaptation) Brendon Burns, Solent Peoples Theatre 2003 | |||
* ''Schöne Neue Welt'' (rock musical) Roland Meier/Stefan Wurz, Kulturhaus Osterfeld Pforzheim, Germany, 1994 | |||
* ''Schöne Neue Welt'' (musical) GRIPS Theater Berlin, Germany, 2006 | |||
* ''Brave New World'' a song and album of ]<ref>http://www.latimes.com/features/books/la-bk-reynolds16mar16,0,354337.story</ref> | |||
* ''Huxley:The Dystopia'' (video game) (release TBA 2009)<ref>http://www.gamespot.com/pc/action/huxley/index.html</ref> | |||
==''Brave New World Revisited''== | |||
==Publications== | |||
In 1946, Huxley wrote in the foreword of the new edition of ''Brave New World'': | |||
{{Isfdb title|id=2319|title=Brave New World}}: | |||
*''Brave New World'' | |||
{{blockquote|If I were now to rewrite the book, I would offer ] a third alternative. Between the Utopian and primitive horns of his dilemma would lie the possibility of sanity... In this community economics would be decentralist and ], politics ] and co-operative. Science and technology would be used as though, like the ], they had been made for man, not (as at present and still more so in the Brave New World) as though man were to be adapted and enslaved to them. Religion would be the conscious and intelligent pursuit of man's Final End, the unitive knowledge of immanent ] or ], the transcendent ] or ]. And the prevailing philosophy of life would be a kind of Higher ], in which the Greatest Happiness principle would be secondary to the Final End principle—the first question to be asked and answered in every contingency of life being: "How will this thought or action contribute to, or interfere with, the achievement, by me and the greatest possible number of other individuals, of man's Final End?"<ref>{{cite book |last=Huxley |first=Aldous |title=Brave New World and Brave New World Revisited |year=2005 |publisher=Harper Perennial Modern Classics |page= |isbn=978-0060776091}}</ref> }} | |||
**Aldous Huxley; Perennial, Reprint edition, 1 September 1998; ISBN 0-06-092987-1 | |||
*''Brave New World Revisited'' | |||
] | |||
**Aldous Huxley; Perennial, 1 March 2000; ISBN 0-06-095551-1 | |||
''Brave New World Revisited'' (], US, 1958; ], UK, 1959),<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.betweenthecovers.com/btc/item/60450 |title=Brave New World Revisited – HUXLEY, Aldous | Between the Covers Rare Books |publisher=Betweenthecovers.com |access-date=1 June 2010 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110609233725/http://www.betweenthecovers.com/btc/item/60450 |archive-date=9 June 2011}}</ref> written by Huxley almost thirty years after ''Brave New World'', is a non-fiction work in which Huxley considered whether the world had moved toward or away from his vision of the future from the 1930s. He believed when he wrote the original novel that it was a reasonable guess as to where the world might go in the future. In ''Brave New World Revisited'', he concluded that the world was becoming like ''Brave New World'' much faster than he originally thought. | |||
*''Brave New World and Brave New World Revisited'' | |||
**Aldous Huxley (with a foreword by Christopher Hitchens); Harper Perennial Modern Classics, 2005; ISBN 0-06-077609-9 | |||
Huxley analysed the causes of this, such as ], as well as all the means by which populations can be controlled. He was particularly interested in the effects of ] and ]. ''Brave New World Revisited'' is different in tone because of Huxley's evolving thought, as well as his conversion to Hindu ] in the interim between the two books. | |||
*''Brave New World & Brave New World Revisited'' | |||
**Aldous Huxley (with an introduction by Margaret Atwood); Vintage Canada Edition, 2007; ISBN 978-0-307-35655-0 | |||
The last chapter of the book aims to propose action which could be taken to prevent a democracy from turning into the ] world described in ''Brave New World''. In Huxley's last novel, '']'', he again expounds similar ideas to describe a utopian nation, which is generally viewed as a counterpart to ''Brave New World''.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Schermer |first=M. H. N. |date=June 2007 |title=Brave New World versus Island — Utopian and Dystopian Views on Psychopharmacology |journal=Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy |language=en |volume=10 |issue=2 |pages=119–128 |doi=10.1007/s11019-007-9059-1 |issn=1386-7423 |pmc=2779438 |pmid=17486431}}</ref> | |||
*''Huxley's Brave New World'' (Cliffs Notes) | |||
**Charles and Regina Higgins; Cliffs Notes, 30 May, 2000; ISBN 0-7645-8583-5 | |||
== Censorship == | |||
*''Spark Notes Brave New World'' | |||
According to ], ''Brave New World'' has frequently been banned and challenged in the United States due to insensitivity, offensive language, nudity, racism, conflict with a religious viewpoint, and being sexually explicit.<ref name=":1">{{Cite web|last=Office of Intellectual Freedom|date=2013-03-26|title=Top 10 Most Challenged Books Lists|url=https://www.ala.org/advocacy/bbooks/frequentlychallengedbooks/top10|url-status=live|access-date=2021-06-17|website=American Library Association|language=en|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170728055307/http://www.ala.org:80/advocacy/bbooks/frequentlychallengedbooks/top10 |archive-date=28 July 2017 }}</ref> It landed on the list of the top ten ] in 2010 (3) and 2011 (7).<ref name=":1" /> The book also secured a spot on the association's list of the top one hundred challenged books for 1990–1999 (54),<ref name=":2">{{Cite web|last=Office of Intellectual Freedom|date=2013-03-26|title=100 most frequently challenged books: 1990-1999|url=https://www.ala.org/advocacy/bbooks/frequentlychallengedbooks/decade1999|url-status=live|access-date=2021-06-17|website=American Library Association|language=en|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201010162859/http://www.ala.org/advocacy/bbooks/frequentlychallengedbooks/decade1999 |archive-date=10 October 2020 }}</ref> 2000–2009 (36),<ref name=":3">{{Cite web|last=Office of Intellectual Freedom|date=2013-03-26|title=Top 100 Banned/Challenged Books: 2000-2009|url=https://www.ala.org/advocacy/bbooks/frequentlychallengedbooks/decade2009|url-status=live|access-date=2021-06-17|website=American Library Association|language=en|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200924101705/http://www.ala.org/advocacy/bbooks/frequentlychallengedbooks/decade2009 |archive-date=24 September 2020 }}</ref> and 2010–2019 (26).<ref name=":4">{{Cite web|last=Office of Intellectual Freedom|date=2020-09-09|title=Top 100 Most Banned and Challenged Books: 2010-2019|url=https://www.ala.org/advocacy/bbooks/frequentlychallengedbooks/decade2019|url-status=live|access-date=2021-06-17|website=American Library Association|language=en|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200927125855/http://www.ala.org/advocacy/bbooks/frequentlychallengedbooks/decade2019 |archive-date=27 September 2020 }}</ref> | |||
**Sterling, 31 December 2003; ISBN 1-58663-366-X | |||
*''Aldous Huxley's Brave New World'' (Barron's Book Notes) | |||
The following include specific instances of when the book has been censored, banned, or challenged: | |||
**Anthony Astrachan, Anthony Astrakhan; Barrons Educational Series, November 1984; ISBN 0-8120-3405-8 | |||
* In 1932, the book was ] for its language, and for supposedly being anti-family and anti-religion.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://classiclit.about.com/od/bannedliteratur1/tp/aa_bannedbooks.htm|title=Banned Books|date=2 November 2009|publisher=Classiclit.about.com|access-date=1 June 2010|archive-date=2 October 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101002054544/http://classiclit.about.com/od/bannedliteratur1/tp/aa_bannedbooks.htm|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.pcc.edu/library/news/banned_books.html |title=Banned Books |publisher=pcc.edu |access-date=11 June 2010 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100602184644/https://www.pcc.edu/library/news/banned_books.html |archive-date= 2 June 2010 }}</ref> | |||
Also publications for NSW HSC students. | |||
* In 1965, a ] English teacher alleged that he was fired for assigning ''Brave New World'' to students. The teacher sued for violation of ] rights but lost both his case and the ], with the appeals court ruling that the assignment of the book was not the reason for his firing.<ref name="karolides2011_p472_1">{{cite book|title=120 Banned Books: Censorship Histories of World Literature|last2=Bald|first2=Margaret|last3=Sova|first3=Dawn B.|publisher=Checkmark Books|year=2011|isbn=978-0-8160-8232-2|edition=Second|page=472|quote=In 1965, a teacher of English in Maryland claimed that the local school board had violated his First Amendment rights by firing him after he assigned ''Brave New World'' as a required reading in his class. The district court ruled against the teacher in ''Parker v. Board of Education'', 237 F. Supp. 222 (D.Md) and refused his request for reinstatement in the teaching position. When the case was later heard by the circuit court, ''Parker v. Board of Education'', 348 F.2d 464 (4th Cir. 1965), the presiding judge affirmed the ruling of the lower court and included in the determination the opinion that the nontenured status of the teacher accounted for the firing and not the assignment of a particular book.|last1=Karolides|first1=Nicholas J.}}</ref> | |||
* The book was banned in India in 1967, with Huxley accused of being a "pornographer".<ref>{{cite book|title=Bare breasts and Bare Bottoms: Anatomy of Film Censorship in India|last=Sharma|first=Partap|publisher=]|year=1975|editor-last=Razdan|editor-first=C. K.|location=]|pages=21–22}}</ref> | |||
* In 1980, it was removed from classrooms in ], Missouri, among other challenges.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Sakmann|first=Lindsay|title=LION: Banned Books Week: Banned BOOKS in the Library|url=https://library.albright.edu/c.php?g=117712&p=766842|access-date=2020-06-18|website=library.albright.edu|language=en}}</ref> | |||
* The version of ''Brave New World Revisited'' published in China lacks explicit mentions of China itself.<ref>{{Cite web|last1=Hawkins|first1=Amy|last2=Wasserstrom|first2=Jeffrey|url=https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2019/01/why-1984-and-animal-farm-arent-banned-china/580156/|title=Why 1984 Isn't Banned in China|work=]|date=2019-01-13|accessdate=2021-11-23}}</ref> | |||
==Influences and allegations of plagiarism== | |||
The English writer ] published ''What Not: A Prophetic Comedy'' in 1918. ''What Not'' depicts a dystopian future where people are ranked by intelligence, the government mandates mind training for all citizens, and procreation is regulated by the state.<ref>{{cite journal |url=https://qz.com/quartzy/1498891/the-pillars-of-science-fiction-are-two-writers-you-dont-know/|first=Ephrat|last=Livni|author-link=Ephrat Livni|title=A woman first wrote the prescient ideas Huxley and Orwell made famous|journal=]|date=19 December 2018|access-date=28 October 2020}}</ref> Macaulay and Huxley shared the same literary circles and he attended her weekly literary salons. | |||
] felt ''Brave New World borrowed'' from his 1931 book ''The Scientific Outlook'', and wrote in a letter to his publisher that Huxley's novel was "merely an expansion of the two penultimate chapters of 'The Scientific Outlook.'"<ref></ref> | |||
]' novel '']'' (1901) used concepts that Huxley added to his story. Both novels introduce a society (in Wells' case, that of the Lunar natives) consisting of a specialized caste system, in which new generations are produced in vessels, where their designated caste is decided before birth by tampering with the fetus' development, and individuals are drugged down when they are not needed.<ref></ref> | |||
] believed that ''Brave New World'' must have been partly derived from the 1921 novel '']'' by Russian author ].<ref>{{cite web |author-link=George Orwell |first=George |last=Orwell |url=http://www.orwelltoday.com/weorwellreview.shtml |title=Review |series=Tribune |date=4 January 1946 |website=Orwell Today}}</ref> However, in a 1962 letter to Christopher Collins, Huxley says that he wrote ''Brave New World'' long before he had heard of ''We''.<ref name="Russell, p. 13">{{cite book |title=Zamiatin's We |last=Russell |first=Robert |publisher=Bristol Classical Press |year=1999 |isbn=978-1-85399-393-0 |location=Bristol |page=13}}</ref> According to ''We'' translator Natasha Randall, Orwell believed that Huxley was lying.<ref name="NR1">{{cite news |url=http://www.wnyc.org/shows/lopate/2006/aug/18/underappreciated-literature-yevgeny-zamyatin/ |title=Leonard Lopate Show |date=18 August 2006 |publisher=WNYC |url-status=bot: unknown |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110405075001/http://www.wnyc.org/shows/lopate/2006/aug/18/underappreciated-literature-yevgeny-zamyatin/|archive-date=5 April 2011}} (radio interview with ''We'' translator Natasha Randall)</ref> ] said that in writing '']'' (1952), he "cheerfully ripped off the plot of ''Brave New World'', whose plot had been cheerfully ripped off from Yevgeny Zamyatin's ''We''".<ref>] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090210155908/http://www.playboy.com/magazine/interview_archive/kurt-vonnegut/kurt-vonnegut.html |date=10 February 2009 }}, July 1973.</ref> | |||
In 1982, ] author Antoni Smuszkiewicz, in his analysis of Polish science-fiction ''Zaczarowana gra'' ("The Magic Game"), presented accusations of ] against Huxley. Smuszkiewicz showed similarities between ''Brave New World'' and two science fiction novels written earlier by Polish author ], namely ''Miasto światłości'' ("The City of Light", 1924) and ''Podróż poślubna pana Hamiltona'' ("Mr Hamilton's Honeymoon Trip", 1928).<ref>{{cite book|title=Zaczarowana gra: zarys dziejów polskiej fantastyki naukowej|last=Smuszkiewicz|first=Antoni|publisher=Wydawn. Poznanskie|year=1982|location=]|language=pl|oclc=251929765}}{{Page needed|date=September 2010}}</ref> Smuszkiewicz wrote in his open letter to Huxley: "This work of a great author, both in the general depiction of the world as well as countless details, is so similar to two of my novels that in my opinion there is no possibility of accidental analogy."<ref>"Nowiny Literackie" 1948 No. 4, p 7</ref> | |||
Kate Lohnes, writing for '']'', notes similarities between ''Brave New World'' and other novels of the era could be seen as expressing "common fears surrounding the rapid advancement of technology and of the shared feelings of many tech-skeptics during the early 20th century". Other dystopian novels followed Huxley's work, including ]'s '']'' (1945) and Orwell's '']'' (1949).<ref>{{Britannica|78059|Brave New World|Kate Lohnes}}</ref> | |||
==Legacy== | |||
In 1998–1999, the Modern Library ranked ''Brave New World'' fifth on its list of the 100 Best Novels in English of the 20th century.<ref name=":5" /> In 2003, ] writing for '']'' included ''Brave New World'' chronologically at number 53 in "the top 100 greatest novels of all time",<ref name="McCrum"/> and the novel was listed at number 87 on the ]'s survey ].<ref name="BBC – The Big Read"/> | |||
On 5 November 2019, ] listed ''Brave New World'' on its list of the ].<ref name=Bbc2019-11-05/> In 2021, ''Brave New World'' was one of six classic science fiction novels by British authors selected by ] to feature on a ].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.yorkpress.co.uk/news/national/19220163.stamps-feature-original-artworks-celebrating-classic-science-fiction-novels/|title=Stamps to feature original artworks celebrating classic science fiction novels|website=Yorkpress.co.uk|date=9 April 2021|accessdate=20 September 2022}}</ref> | |||
==Adaptations== | |||
===Theatre=== | |||
* ''Brave New World'' (opened 4 September 2015) in co-production by Royal & Derngate, Northampton and Touring Consortium Theatre Company which toured the UK. The adaptation was by Dawn King, composed by ] and directed by ]. | |||
===Radio=== | |||
* ''Brave New World'' (radio broadcast) ''] Workshop'' (27 January and 3 February 1956): music composed and conducted by ]. Adapted for radio by ]. Introduced by ] and narrated by ]. Featuring the voices of ], ], ], Charlotte Lawrence,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://forgottenactors.blogspot.ca/2012/12/charlotte-lawrence.html |title=Forgotten Actors: Charlotte Lawrence |website=Forgottenactors.blogspot.ca |date=2012-12-04 |access-date=2016-08-11}}</ref> ], ], ], ], ], Herb Butterfield, Doris Singleton.<ref>{{cite web|last=Jones |first=Josh |url=http://www.openculture.com/2014/11/classic-radio-dramas-from-cbs-radio-workshop-1956-57.html |title=Hear Aldous Huxley Read Brave New World. Plus 84 Classic Radio Dramas from CBS Radio Workshop (1956-57) |publisher=Open Culture |date=2014-11-20 |access-date=2016-08-11}}</ref> | |||
* ''Brave New World'' (radio broadcast) '']'' (May 2013) | |||
* ''Brave New World'' (radio broadcast) ''BBC Radio 4'' (22, 29 May 2016) | |||
===Film=== | |||
* '']'' (1980), a ] directed by ] | |||
* '']'' (1998), a ] directed by ] and ] | |||
* In 2009, a theatrical film was announced to be in development, with collaboration between ] and ].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.imdb.com/news/ni0919772/|title=Leonardo DiCaprio And Ridley Scott Team for 'Brave New World' Adaptation|publisher=Filmofilia|date=2009-08-09}}</ref> By May 2013 the project was placed on hold.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Weintraub |first1=Steve "Frosty" |title=Ridley Scott Talks PROMETHEUS, Viral Advertising, TRIPOLI, the BLADE RUNNER Sequel, PROMETHEUS Sequels, More, May 31, 2012 |url=http://collider.com/ridley-scott-prometheus-2-sequel-interview/170207/#more-170207 |website=Collider}}</ref> | |||
* ''Brave New World'' (2014), fan film directed by Nathan Hyde | |||
===Television=== | |||
* ''Brave New World'' (2010), miniseries directed by Leonard Menchiari | |||
* '']'' (2020), series created by David Wiener | |||
*: In May 2015, '']'' reported that ]'s ] would bring ''Brave New World'' to ] network as a scripted series, adapted by ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/live-feed/syfy-brave-new-world-793603|title=Steven Spielberg's Amblin, Syfy Adapting Classic Novel 'Brave New World' (Exclusive) |last=Goldberg |first=Lesley |work=The Hollywood Reporter|date=2015-05-05}}</ref> The adaptation was eventually written by David Wiener with ] and ], with the series ordered to air on ] in February 2019.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Andreeva |first1=Nellie |title='Brave New World' Drama Based on Aldous Huxley Novel Moves From Syfy To USA With Series Order |url=https://deadline.com/2019/02/brave-new-world-aldous-huxley-novel-straight-to-series-order-usa-network-1202556071/ |website=Deadline |access-date=13 February 2019 |language=en |date=13 February 2019}}</ref> The series eventually moved to the ] streaming service and premiered on 15 July 2020.<ref>{{Cite news|first=Nellie|last=Andreeva|url=https://deadline.com/2019/09/nbcu-streamer-peacock-name-slate-of-reboots-dr-death-mike-schur-ed-helms-series-amber-ruffin-parks-recreation-1202736689/|title=NBCU Streamer Gets Name, Sets Slate of Reboots, 'Dr. Death', Ed Helms & Amber Ruffin Series, 'Parks & Rec'|website=Deadline|access-date=2019-09-17|date=2019-09-17}}</ref> In October 2020, the series was cancelled after one season.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://deadline.com/2020/10/brave-new-world-canceled-peacock-one-season-1234603893/ |title='Brave New World' Canceled By Peacock After One Season |work=Deadline |last=Andreeva |first=Nellie |date=28 October 2020 |access-date=31 August 2021 |url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201029012809/https://deadline.com/2020/10/brave-new-world-canceled-peacock-one-season-1234603893/ |archive-date=29 October 2020 }}</ref> | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
{{portal|Novels|Science fiction|World}} | |||
*] against ] | |||
{{Div col}} | |||
*'']'', the play by Shakespeare from which the title is taken | |||
* |
* ] | ||
* ] | |||
*'']'' | |||
* ] | |||
*'']'', Huxley's second, and final, utopian novel | |||
* '']'' | |||
*] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
{{div col end}} | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
=== Citations === | |||
{{Reflist}} | |||
{{Reflist|refs= | |||
<ref name=Bbc2019-11-05> | |||
{{cite news | |||
| url = https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-50302788 | |||
| title = 100 'most inspiring' novels revealed by BBC Arts | |||
| work = ] | |||
| date = 2019-11-05 | |||
| access-date = 2019-11-10 | |||
| quote = The reveal kickstarts the BBC's year-long celebration of literature. | |||
}} | |||
</ref> | |||
}} | |||
=== General bibliography === | |||
==Bibliography== | |||
*{{cite book | |
* {{cite book |last=Huxley |first=Aldous |author-link=Aldous Huxley |title=Brave New World |location=New York |publisher=HarperCollins Publishers |year=1998 |edition=First Perennial Classics |isbn=0-06-092987-1 |url=https://archive.org/details/bravenewworld00huxl_1 }} | ||
*{{cite book | |
* {{cite book |last=Huxley |first=Aldous |author-link=Aldous Huxley |title=Brave New World Revisited |location=New York |publisher=HarperCollins Publishers |year=2000 |edition=First Perennial Classics |isbn=0-06-095551-1 |url=https://archive.org/details/bravenewworldrev00huxl_1 }} | ||
*{{cite book |title=Brave New World |
* {{cite book |last=Huxley |first=Aldous |author-link=Aldous Huxley |title=Brave New World and Brave New World Revisited |location=New York |publisher=HarperCollins Publishers |year=2005 |edition=First Perennial Classics |isbn=0-06-077609-9}} | ||
* {{cite book |editor1-last=Izzo |editor1-first=David Garrett |editor2-last=Kirkpatrick |editor2-first=Kim |title=Huxley's Brave New World: Essays |date=15 July 2014 |publisher=McFarland |isbn=978-0-7864-8003-6 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YZCqGf-D-qYC |language=en}} | |||
*{{cite book |title=Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business |author=Postman, Neil |location=USA |publisher=Penguin USA |year=1985 |isbn=0-670-80454-1}} | |||
*{{cite book |title= |
* {{cite book |title=Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business |last=Postman |first=Neil |author-link=Neil Postman |location=USA |publisher=] USA |year=1985 |isbn=0-670-80454-1}} | ||
* {{cite book |last=Russell |first=Robert |title=Zamiatin's We |year=1999 |publisher=Bristol Classical Press |location=Bristol |isbn=978-1-85399-393-0}} | |||
* | |||
* {{cite book |title=Cliff Notes on Huxley's Brave New World |last1=Higgins |first1=Charles |last2=Higgins |first2=Regina |location=New York |publisher=] |year=2000 |isbn=0-7645-8583-5}} | |||
* {{cite web |title=Brave New World Study Guide |url=https://www.shmoop.com/study-guides/literature/brave-new-world |website=] <!-- |access-date=24 August 2022 -->}} | |||
* {{cite web |last1=Pearce |first1=David |author1-link=David Pearce (transhumanist) |title=Brave New World |url=https://www.huxley.net/ |website=Huxley.net <!-- |access-date=24 August 2022 -->}} | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
{{sister project links|d=Q191949|s=no|v=no|voy=no|m=no|mw=no|species=no|wikt=no|n=no|c=no}} | |||
{{wikiquote}} | |||
* {{ISFDB title|id=2319|title=Brave New World}} | |||
{{wikibooks}} | |||
* {{FadedPage|id=20160545|name=Brave New World}} | |||
* | |||
* |
* {{FadedPage|id=20170658|name=Brave New World Revisited}} | ||
* | * as he reflects on his life work and the meaning of ''Brave New World'' | ||
* | |||
* as he reflects on his life work and the meaning of ''Brave New World'' | |||
* | * | ||
* | |||
*. A critical review of Huxley's novel by ]. | |||
* '''', a critical analysis by ] (also available as a ) | |||
* | |||
* ('']''; 14 November 2018) | |||
<!-- https://www.idph.com.br/conteudos/ebooks/BraveNewWorld.pdf --> | |||
{{Huxley}} | {{Aldous Huxley}} | ||
{{Authority control}} | |||
] | ] | ||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | ] | ||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | ] | ||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] |
Latest revision as of 04:07, 2 January 2025
1932 dystopian novel by Aldous Huxley This article is about the novel. For other uses, see Brave New World (disambiguation). "John the Savage" redirects here. Not to be confused with John Savage.
First edition | |
Author | Aldous Huxley |
---|---|
Cover artist | Leslie Holland |
Genre | Science fiction, dystopian fiction |
Publisher | Chatto & Windus |
Publication date | 4 February 1932 |
Publication place | United Kingdom |
Pages | 311 (1932 ed.) 63,766 words |
Awards | Le Monde's 100 Books of the Century |
OCLC | 20156268 |
Text | Brave New World online |
Brave New World is a dystopian novel by English author Aldous Huxley, written in 1931 and published in 1932. Largely set in a futuristic World State, whose citizens are environmentally engineered into an intelligence-based social hierarchy, the novel anticipates huge scientific advancements in reproductive technology, sleep-learning, psychological manipulation and classical conditioning that are combined to make a dystopian society which is challenged by the story's protagonist. Huxley followed this book with a reassessment in essay form, Brave New World Revisited (1958), and with his final novel, Island (1962), the utopian counterpart. This novel is often compared as an inversion counterpart to George Orwell's 1984 (1949).
In 1998 and 1999, the Modern Library ranked Brave New World at number 5 on its list of the 100 Best Novels in English of the 20th century. In 2003, Robert McCrum, writing for The Observer, included Brave New World chronologically at number 53 in "the top 100 greatest novels of all time", and the novel was listed at number 87 on The Big Read survey by the BBC. Brave New World has frequently been banned and challenged since its original publication. It has landed on the American Library Association list of top 100 banned and challenged books of the decade since the association began the list in 1990.
Title
The title Brave New World derives from William Shakespeare's The Tempest, Act V, Scene I, Miranda's speech:
O wonder!
— William Shakespeare, The Tempest, Act V, Scene I, ll. 203–206
How many goodly creatures are there here!
How beauteous mankind is! O brave new world,
That has such people in 't.
Shakespeare's use of the phrase is intended ironically, as the speaker is failing to recognise the evil nature of the island's visitors because of her innocence. Indeed, the next speaker—Miranda's father Prospero—replies to her innocent observation with the statement "'Tis new to thee."
Translations of the title often allude to similar expressions used in domestic works of literature: the French edition of the work is entitled Le Meilleur des mondes (The Best of All Worlds), an allusion to an expression used by the philosopher Gottfried Leibniz and satirised in Candide, Ou l'Optimisme by Voltaire (1759). The first Standard Chinese translation, done by novelist Lily Hsueh and Aaron Jen-wang Hsueh in 1974, is entitled "美麗新世界" (Pinyin: Měilì Xīn Shìjiè, literally "Beautiful New World").
History
Huxley wrote Brave New World while living in Sanary-sur-Mer, France, in the four months from May to August 1931. By this time, Huxley had established himself as a writer and social satirist. He was a contributor to Vanity Fair and Vogue magazines and had published a collection of his poetry (The Burning Wheel, 1916) and four satirical novels, Crome Yellow (1921), Antic Hay (1923), Those Barren Leaves (1925) and Point Counter Point (1928). Brave New World was Huxley's fifth novel and first dystopian work.
A short passage in Crome Yellow foreshadows Brave New World, showing that Huxley had such a future in mind already in 1921. Mr. Scogan, one of the earlier book's characters, describes an "impersonal generation" of the future that will "take the place of Nature's hideous system. In vast state incubators, rows upon rows of gravid bottles will supply the world with the population it requires. The family system will disappear; society, sapped at its very base, will have to find new foundations; and Eros, beautifully and irresponsibly free, will flit like a gay butterfly from flower to flower through a sunlit world".
Huxley said that Brave New World was inspired by the utopian novels of H. G. Wells, including A Modern Utopia (1905), and as a parody of Men Like Gods (1923). Wells' hopeful vision of the future gave Huxley the idea to begin writing a parody of the novels, which became Brave New World. He wrote in a letter to Mrs. Arthur Goldsmith, an American acquaintance, that he had "been having a little fun pulling the leg of H. G. Wells" but then he "got caught up in the excitement of own ideas". Unlike the most popular optimistic utopian novels of the time, Huxley sought to provide a frightening vision of the future. Huxley referred to Brave New World as a "negative utopia", somewhat influenced by Wells's own The Sleeper Awakes (dealing with subjects like corporate tyranny and behavioural conditioning) and the works of D. H. Lawrence.
For his part Wells published, two years after Brave New World, his Utopian Shape of Things to Come. Seeking to rebut the argument of Huxley's Mustapha Mond—that moronic underclasses were a necessary "social gyroscope" and that a society composed solely of intelligent, assertive "Alphas" would inevitably disintegrate in internecine struggle—Wells depicted a stable egalitarian society emerging after several generations of a reforming elite having complete control of education throughout the world. In the future depicted in Wells' book, posterity remembers Huxley as "a reactionary writer". The scientific futurism in Brave New World is believed to be appropriated from Daedalus by J. B. S. Haldane.
The events of the Great Depression in Britain in 1931, with its mass unemployment and the abandonment of the gold standard, persuaded Huxley to assert that stability was the "primal and ultimate need" if civilisation was to survive the present crisis. The Brave New World character Mustapha Mond, Resident World Controller of Western Europe, is named after Sir Alfred Mond. Shortly before writing the novel, Huxley visited the Billingham Manufacturing Plant, Mond's technologically advanced factory near Billingham, north-east England, and it made a great impression on him.
Huxley used the setting and characters in his science fiction novel to express widely felt anxieties, particularly the fear of losing individual identity in the fast-paced world of the future. An early trip to the United States gave Brave New World much of its character. Huxley was outraged by the culture of youth, commercial cheeriness, sexual promiscuity and the inward-looking nature of many Americans; he had also found the book My Life and Work by Henry Ford on the boat to America and he saw the book's principles applied in everything he encountered after leaving San Francisco.
Plot
The novel opens in the World State city of London in AF (After Ford) 632 (AD 2540 in the Gregorian calendar), where citizens are engineered through artificial wombs and childhood indoctrination programmes into predetermined classes (or castes) based on intelligence and labour. Lenina Crowne, a hatchery worker, is popular and sexually desirable, but Bernard Marx, a psychologist, is not. He is shorter in stature than the average member of his high caste, which gives him an inferiority complex. His work with sleep-learning allows him to understand, and disapprove of, his society's methods of keeping its citizens peaceful, which includes their constant consumption of a soothing, happiness-producing drug called "soma". Courting disaster, Bernard is vocal and arrogant about his criticisms, and his boss contemplates exiling him to Iceland because of his nonconformity. His only friend is Helmholtz Watson, a gifted writer who finds it difficult to use his talents creatively in their pain-free society.
Bernard takes a holiday with Lenina outside the World State to a Savage Reservation in New Mexico, in which the two observe natural-born people, disease, the ageing process, other languages, and religious lifestyles for the first time. The culture of the village folk resembles the contemporary Native American groups of the region, descendants of the Anasazi, including the Puebloan peoples of Hopi and Zuni. Bernard and Lenina witness a violent public ritual and then encounter Linda, a woman originally from the World State who is living on the reservation with her son John, now a young man. She, too, visited the reservation on a holiday many years ago, but became separated from her group and was left behind. She had meanwhile become pregnant by a fellow holidaymaker (who is revealed to be Bernard's boss, the Director of Hatcheries and Conditioning). She did not try to return to the World State, because of her shame at her pregnancy. Despite spending his whole life in the reservation, John has never been accepted by the villagers, and his and Linda's lives have been hard and unpleasant. Linda has taught John to read, although from the only book in her possession—a scientific manual—and another book found nearby by Popé: the complete works of Shakespeare. Ostracised by the villagers, John is able to articulate his feelings only in terms of Shakespearean drama, quoting often from The Tempest, King Lear, Othello, Romeo and Juliet and Hamlet. Linda now wants to return to London, and John, too, wants to see this "brave new world" that his mother so often praised. Bernard sees an opportunity to thwart plans to exile him, and gets permission to take Linda and John back. On their return to London, John meets the Director and calls him his "father", a vulgarity which causes a roar of laughter. The humiliated Director resigns in shame before he can follow through with exiling Bernard.
Bernard, as "custodian" of the "savage" John who is now treated as a celebrity, is fawned on by the highest members of society and revels in attention he once scorned. Bernard's popularity is fleeting, though, and he becomes envious that John only really bonds with the literary-minded Helmholtz. Considered hideous and friendless, Linda spends all her time using soma, which she craved for so long, while John refuses to attend social events organised by Bernard, appalled by what he perceives to be an empty society. Lenina and John are physically attracted to each other, but John's view of courtship and romance, based on Shakespeare's writings, is utterly incompatible with Lenina's freewheeling attitude to sex. She tries to seduce him, but he attacks her, before suddenly being informed that his mother is on her deathbed. He rushes to Linda's bedside, causing a scandal, as this is not the "correct" attitude to death. Some children who enter the ward for "death-conditioning" come across as disrespectful to John, and he attacks one physically. He then tries to break up a distribution of soma to a lower-caste group, telling them that he is freeing them. Helmholtz and Bernard rush in to stop the ensuing riot, which the police quell by spraying soma vapor into the crowd.
Bernard, Helmholtz, and John are all brought before Mustapha Mond, the "Resident World Controller for Western Europe", who tells Bernard and Helmholtz that they are to be exiled to islands for antisocial activity. Bernard pleads for a second chance, but Helmholtz welcomes the opportunity to be a true individual, and chooses the Falkland Islands as his destination, believing that their bad weather will inspire his writing. Mond tells Helmholtz that exile is actually a reward. The islands are full of the most interesting people in the world, individuals who did not fit into the social model of the World State. Mond outlines for John the events that led to the present society and his arguments for a caste system and social control. John rejects Mond's arguments, and Mond sums up John's views by claiming that John demands "the right to be unhappy". John asks if he may go to the islands as well, but Mond refuses, saying he wishes to see what happens to John next.
Jaded with his new life, John moves to an abandoned hilltop lighthouse, near the village of Puttenham, where he intends to adopt a solitary ascetic lifestyle in order to purify himself of civilization, practising self-flagellation. This draws reporters and eventually hundreds of amazed sightseers, hoping to witness his bizarre behaviour.
For a while it seems that John might be left alone, after the public's attention is drawn to other diversions, but a documentary maker has secretly filmed John's self-flagellation from a distance, and when released the documentary causes an international sensation. Helicopters arrive with more journalists. Crowds of people descend on John's retreat, demanding that he perform his whipping ritual for them. From one helicopter a young woman emerges who is implied to be Lenina. John, at the sight of a woman he both adores and loathes, whips at her in a fury and then turns the whip on himself, exciting the crowd, whose wild behaviour transforms into a soma-fuelled orgy. The next morning John awakes on the ground and is consumed by remorse over his participation in the night's events.
That evening, a swarm of helicopters appears on the horizon, the story of last night's orgy having been in all the papers. The first onlookers and reporters to arrive find that John is dead, having hanged himself.
Characters
Bernard Marx, a sleep-learning specialist at the Central London Hatchery and Conditioning Centre. Although Bernard is an Alpha-Plus (the upper class of the society), he is a misfit. He is unusually short for an Alpha; an alleged accident with alcohol in Bernard's blood-surrogate before his decanting has left him slightly stunted. Unlike his fellow utopians, Bernard is often angry, resentful, and jealous. At times, he is also cowardly and hypocritical. His conditioning is clearly incomplete. He does not enjoy communal sports, solidarity services, or promiscuous sex. He does not particularly enjoy soma. Bernard is in love with Lenina and does not like her sleeping with other men, even though "everyone belongs to everyone else". Bernard's triumphant return to utopian civilisation with John the Savage from the Reservation precipitates the downfall of the Director, who had been planning to exile him. Bernard's triumph is short-lived; he is ultimately banished to an island for his non-conformist behaviour.
John, the illicit son of the Director and Linda, born and reared on the Savage Reservation ("Malpais") after Linda was unwittingly left behind by her errant lover. John ("the Savage" or "Mr. Savage", as he is often called) is an outsider both on the Reservation—where the natives still practise marriage, natural birth, family life and religion—and the ostensibly civilised World State, based on principles of stability and happiness. He has read nothing but the complete works of William Shakespeare, which he quotes extensively, and, for the most part, aptly, though his allusion to the "Brave New World" (Miranda's words in The Tempest) takes on a darker and bitterly ironic resonance as the novel unfolds. John is intensely moral according to a code that he has been taught by Shakespeare and life in Malpais but is also naïve: his views are as imported into his own consciousness as are the hypnopedic messages of World State citizens. The admonishments of the men of Malpais taught him to regard his mother as a whore; but he cannot grasp that these were the same men who continually sought her out despite their supposedly sacred pledges of monogamy. Because he is unwanted in Malpais, he accepts the invitation to travel back to London and is initially astonished by the comforts of the World State. He remains committed to values that exist only in his poetry. He first spurns Lenina for failing to live up to his Shakespearean ideal and then the entire utopian society: he asserts that its technological wonders and consumerism are poor substitutes for individual freedom, human dignity and personal integrity. After his mother's death, he becomes deeply distressed with grief, surprising onlookers in the hospital. He then withdraws himself from society and attempts to purify himself of "sin" (desire), but is unable to do so. His unusual behavior eventually attracts the attention of reporters and, later, huge amounts of people, who arrive in helicopters and make John furious with their behavior. Excited by his fury, people start an orgy, which he cannot resist joining. After waking up the next morning, John is horrified by his actions and hangs himself.
Helmholtz Watson, a handsome and successful Alpha-Plus lecturer at the College of Emotional Engineering and a friend of Bernard. He feels unfulfilled writing endless propaganda doggerel, and the stifling conformism and philistinism of the World State make him restive. Helmholtz is ultimately exiled to the Falkland Islands—a cold asylum for disaffected Alpha-Plus non-conformists—after reading a heretical poem to his students on the virtues of solitude and helping John destroy some Deltas' rations of soma following Linda's death. Unlike Bernard, he takes his exile in his stride and comes to view it as an opportunity for inspiration in his writing. His first name derives from the German physicist Hermann von Helmholtz.
Lenina Crowne, a young, beautiful foetus technician at the Central London Hatchery and Conditioning Centre. Lenina Crowne is a Beta who enjoys being a Beta. She is a vaccination worker with beliefs and values that are in line with a citizen of the World State. She is part of the 30% of the female population that are not freemartins (sterile women). Lenina is promiscuous and popular but somewhat quirky in her society: she had a four-month relation with Henry Foster, choosing not to have sex with anyone but him for a period of time. She is basically happy and well-conditioned, using soma to suppress unwelcome emotions, as is expected. Lenina has a date with Bernard, to whom she feels ambivalently attracted, and she goes to the Reservation with him. On returning to civilisation, she tries and fails to seduce John the Savage. John loves and desires Lenina but he is repelled by her forwardness and the prospect of pre-marital sex, rejecting her as an "impudent strumpet". Lenina visits John at the lighthouse but he attacks her with a whip, unwittingly inciting onlookers to do the same. Her exact fate is left unspecified.
Mustapha Mond, Resident World Controller of Western Europe, "His Fordship" Mustapha Mond presides over one of the ten zones of the World State, the global government set up after the cataclysmic Nine Years' War and great Economic Collapse. Sophisticated and good-natured, Mond is an urbane and hyperintelligent advocate of the World State and its ethos of "Community, Identity, Stability". Among the novel's characters, he is uniquely aware of the precise nature of the society he oversees and what it has given up to accomplish its gains. Mond argues that art, literature, and scientific freedom must be sacrificed to secure the ultimate utilitarian goal of maximising societal happiness. He defends the caste system, behavioural conditioning, and the lack of personal freedom in the World State: these, he says, are a price worth paying for achieving social stability, the highest social virtue because it leads to lasting happiness.
Fanny Crowne, Lenina Crowne's friend (they have the same last name because only ten thousand last names are in use in a World State comprising two billion people). Fanny voices the conventional values of her caste and society, particularly the importance of promiscuity: she advises Lenina that she should have more than one man in her life because it is unseemly to concentrate on just one. Fanny then warns Lenina away from a new lover whom she considers undeserving, yet she is ultimately supportive of the young woman's attraction to the savage John.
Henry Foster, one of Lenina's many lovers, is a perfectly conventional Alpha male, casually discussing Lenina's body with his coworkers. His success with Lenina, and his casual attitude about it, infuriate the jealous Bernard. Henry ultimately proves himself every bit the ideal World State citizen, finding no courage to defend Lenina from John's assaults despite having maintained an uncommonly longstanding sexual relationship with her.
Benito Hoover, another of Lenina's lovers. She remembers that he is particularly hairy when he takes his clothes off.
The Director of Hatcheries and Conditioning (DHC), also known as Thomas "Tomakin", is the administrator of the Central London Hatchery and Conditioning Centre, where he is a threatening figure who intends to exile Bernard to Iceland. His plans take an unexpected turn when Bernard returns from the Reservation with Linda (see below) and John, a child they both realise is actually his. This fact, scandalous and obscene in the World State, not because it was extramarital (which all sexual acts are), but because it was procreative, leads the Director to resign his post in shame.
Linda, John's mother, decanted as a Beta-Minus in the World State, originally worked in the DHC's Fertilizing Room, and subsequently lost during a storm while visiting the New Mexico Savage Reservation with the Director many years before the events of the novel. Despite following her usual precautions, Linda became pregnant with the Director's son during their time together and was therefore unable to return to the World State by the time that she found her way to Malpais. Having been conditioned to the promiscuous social norms of the World State, Linda finds herself at once popular with every man in the pueblo (because she is open to all sexual advances) and also reviled for the same reason, seen as a whore by the wives of the men who visit her and by the men themselves (who come to her nonetheless). Her only comforts there are mescal brought by Popé as well as peyotl. Linda is desperate to return to the World State and to soma, wanting nothing more from her remaining life than comfort until death.
The Arch-Community-Songster, the secular equivalent of the Archbishop of Canterbury in the World State society. He takes personal offense when John refuses to attend Bernard's party.
The Director of Crematoria and Phosphorus Reclamation, one of the many disappointed, important figures to attend Bernard's party.
The Warden, an Alpha-Minus, the talkative chief administrator for the New Mexico Savage Reservation. He is blond, short, broad-shouldered, and has a booming voice.
Darwin Bonaparte, a "big game photographer" (i.e., filmmaker) who films John flogging himself. Darwin Bonaparte became known for two works: "feely of the gorillas' wedding", and "Sperm Whale's Love-life". He had already made a name for himself but still seeks more. He renews his fame by filming the savage, John, in his newest release "The Savage of Surrey". His name alludes to Charles Darwin and Napoleon Bonaparte.
Dr. Shaw, Bernard Marx's physician who consequently becomes the physician of both Linda and John. He prescribes a lethal dose of soma to Linda, which will stop her respiratory system from functioning in a span of one to two months, at her own behest but not without protest from John. Ultimately, they all agree that it is for the best, since denying her this request would cause more trouble for Society and Linda herself.
Dr. Gaffney, Provost of Eton, an Upper School for high-caste individuals. He shows Bernard and John around the classrooms, and the Hypnopaedic Control Room (used for behavioural conditioning through sleep learning). John asks if the students read Shakespeare but the Provost says the library contains only reference books because solitary activities, such as reading, are discouraged.
Miss Keate, Head Mistress of Eton Upper School. Bernard fancies her, and arranges an assignation with her.
Others
- Freemartins, women who have been deliberately made sterile by exposure to male hormones during foetal development but are still physically normal except for "the slightest tendency to grow beards". In the book, government policy requires freemartins to form 70% of the female population.
Of Malpais
- Popé, a native of Malpais. Although he reinforces the behaviour that causes hatred for Linda in Malpais by sleeping with her and bringing her mescal, he still holds the traditional beliefs of his tribe. In his early years John attempted to kill him, but Popé brushed off his attempt and sent him fleeing. He gave Linda a copy of the Complete Works of Shakespeare. (Historically, Popé or Po'pay was a Tewa religious leader who led the Pueblo Revolt in 1680 against Spanish colonial rule.)
- Mitsima, an elder tribal shaman who also teaches John survival skills such as rudimentary ceramics (specifically coil pots, which were traditional to Native American tribes) and bow-making.
- Kiakimé, a native girl whom John fell for, but is instead eventually wed to another boy from Malpais.
- Kothlu, a native boy with whom Kiakimé is wed.
Background figures
These are non-fictional and factual characters who lived before the events in this book, but are of note in the novel:
- Henry Ford, who has become a messianic figure to the World State. "Our Ford" is used in place of "Our Lord", as a credit to popularising the use of the assembly line.
- Sigmund Freud, "Our Freud" is sometimes said in place of "Our Ford" because Freud's psychoanalytic method depends implicitly upon the rules of classical conditioning, and because Freud popularised the idea that sexual activity is essential to human happiness. (It is also strongly implied that citizens of the World State believe Freud and Ford to be the same person.)
- H. G. Wells, "Dr. Wells", British writer and utopian socialist, whose book Men Like Gods was a motivation for Brave New World. "All's well that ends Wells", wrote Huxley in his letters, criticising Wells for anthropological assumptions Huxley found unrealistic.
- Ivan Pavlov, whose conditioning techniques are used to train infants.
- William Shakespeare, whose banned works are quoted throughout the novel by John, "the Savage". The plays quoted include Macbeth, The Tempest, Romeo and Juliet, Hamlet, King Lear, Troilus and Cressida, Measure for Measure and Othello. Mustapha Mond also knows them because as a World Controller he has access to a selection of books from throughout history, including the Bible.
- Thomas Robert Malthus, 19th century British economist, believed the people of the Earth would eventually be threatened by their inability to raise enough food to feed the population. In the novel, the eponymous character devises the contraceptive techniques (Malthusian belt) that are practiced by women of the World State.
- Reuben Rabinovitch, the Polish-Jew character on whom the effects of sleep-learning, hypnopædia, are first observed.
- John Henry Newman, 19th century Catholic theologian and educator, believed university education the critical element in advancing post-industrial Western civilization. Mustapha Mond and The Savage discuss a passage from one of Newman's books.
- Alfred Mond, British industrialist, financier and politician. He is the namesake of Mustapha Mond.
- Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the founder and first President of Republic of Turkey. Naming Mond after Atatürk links up with their characteristics; he reigned during the time Brave New World was written and revolutionised the 'old' Ottoman state into a new nation.
Sources of names and references
The limited number of names that the World State assigned to its bottle-grown citizens can be traced to political and cultural figures who contributed to the bureaucratic, economic, and technological systems of Huxley's age, and presumably those systems in Brave New World.
- Soma: Huxley took the name for the drug used by the state to control the population after the Vedic ritual drink Soma, inspired by his interest in Indian mysticism.
- Malthusian belt: A contraceptive device worn by women. When Huxley was writing Brave New World, organizations such as the Malthusian League had spread throughout Europe, advocating contraception. Although the controversial economic theory of Malthusianism was derived from an essay by Thomas Malthus about the economic effects of population growth, Malthus himself was an advocate of abstinence rather than contraception.
- Bokanovsky's Process: A scientific process used in the World State to mass-produce human beings. Specifically, the "Bokanovsky Process" is a method of producing multiple embryos from a single fertilized egg, creating up to 96 identical individuals. This technique is central to the society's efforts to maintain social stability and control, as it allows for the creation of a standardized, docile workforce. It's part of the larger theme in the novel of dehumanization and the reduction of individuality in the pursuit of a controlled, stable society. It is thought that the process's name is a reference to Maurice Bokanowski, a French Bureaucrat who believed strongly in the idea of governmental and social efficiency. Complementing this, Podsnap's Technique accelerates the maturation of human eggs, enabling the rapid production of thousands of nearly identical individuals. Together, these methods facilitate the creation of a large, standardized population, eliminating natural reproduction and traditional family structures, thereby reinforcing the World State's control over its citizens.
Reception
Upon its publication, Rebecca West praised Brave New World as "The most accomplished novel Huxley has yet written", Joseph Needham lauded it as "Mr. Huxley's remarkable book", and Bertrand Russell also praised it, stating, "Mr. Aldous Huxley has shown his usual masterly skill in Brave New World." Brave New World also received negative responses from other contemporary critics, although his work was later embraced.
In an article in the 4 May 1935 issue of the Illustrated London News, G. K. Chesterton explained that Huxley was revolting against the "Age of Utopias". Much of the discourse on man's future before 1914 was based on the thesis that humanity would solve all economic and social issues. In the decade following the war the discourse shifted to an examination of the causes of the catastrophe. The works of H. G. Wells and George Bernard Shaw on the promises of socialism and a World State were then viewed as the ideas of naive optimists. Chesterton wrote:
After the Age of Utopias came what we may call the American Age, lasting as long as the Boom. Men like Ford or Mond seemed to many to have solved the social riddle and made capitalism the common good. But it was not native to us; it went with a buoyant, not to say blatant optimism, which is not our negligent or negative optimism. Much more than Victorian righteousness, or even Victorian self-righteousness, that optimism has driven people into pessimism. For the Slump brought even more disillusionment than the War. A new bitterness, and a new bewilderment, ran through all social life, and was reflected in all literature and art. It was contemptuous, not only of the old Capitalism, but of the old Socialism. Brave New World is more of a revolution against Utopia than against Victoria.
Similarly, in 1944 economist Ludwig von Mises described Brave New World as a satire of utopian predictions of socialism: "Aldous Huxley was even courageous enough to make socialism's dreamed paradise the target of his sardonic irony."
Common misunderstandings
Part of a series on |
Human enhancement |
---|
Advocacy
|
(De facto) germline interventions
|
Somatic interventions |
Opposition
|
Related |
Various authors assume that the book was first and foremost a cautionary tale regarding human genetic enhancement, indeed about – as an infamous report of Bush associate Leon Kass states –: "producing improved perfect or post-human" people. In fact, the title itself has become a mere stand-in used to "evoke the general idea of a futuristic dystopia". Geneticist Derek So suggests that this is a misunderstanding, however. According to him, a 'more careful reading of the text' shows that:
there does not seem to be any genetic testing in Brave New World, and most of the methods described involve hormones and chemicals rather than heritable interventions. Although Huxley wrote that "eugenics and dysgenics were practiced systematically", this seems to refer only to selective breeding and not to any kind of direct manipulation on the genetic level. (The Bokanovsky process does represent a form of cloning, but this is not ethically equivalent to germline genome editing, and references to Brave New World may lead some readers to confuse the two technologies.) While it's true that the upper castes in Brave New World are smarter than the others, this is more because of the deliberate impairment of the lower castes than because the upper castes are "perfect". Rather than reducing the number of individuals born with genetic disorders or handicaps, Huxley's dystopia involves dramatically increasing their number. Quite the opposite: Huxley thought that Brave New World might come about if we didn't start selecting better children.
Overall, Derek So notes that "Huxley was much more worried about totalitarianism than about the new biotechnologies per se that he alluded to in Brave New World." Despite claims to the contrary then, Huxley remained a committed eugenicist all throughout his life, much like his comparably famous brother Julian, and one just as keen on stressing its humanistic underpinnings.
The World State and Fordism
The World State is built upon the principles of Henry Ford's assembly line: mass production, homogeneity, predictability, and consumption of disposable consumer goods. While the World State lacks any supernatural-based religions, Ford himself is revered as the creator of their society but not as a deity, and characters celebrate Ford Day and swear oaths by his name (e.g., "By Ford!"). In this sense, some fragments of traditional religion are present, such as Christian crosses, which had their tops cut off to be changed to a "T", representing the Ford Model T. In England, there is an Arch-Community-Songster of Canterbury, obviously continuing the Archbishop of Canterbury, and in America The Christian Science Monitor continues publication as The Fordian Science Monitor. The World State calendar numbers years in the "AF" era—"After Ford"—with the calendar beginning in AD 1908, the year in which Ford's first Model T rolled off his assembly line. The novel's Gregorian calendar year is AD 2540, but it is referred to in the book as AF 632.
From birth, members of every class are indoctrinated by recorded voices repeating slogans while they sleep (called "hypnopædia" in the book) to believe their own class is superior, but that the other classes perform needed functions. Any residual unhappiness is resolved by an antidepressant and hallucinogenic drug called soma.
The biological techniques used to control the populace in Brave New World do not include genetic engineering; Huxley wrote the book before the structure of DNA was known. However, Gregor Mendel's work with inheritance patterns in peas had been rediscovered in 1900 and the eugenics movement, based on artificial selection, was well established. Huxley's family included a number of prominent biologists including Thomas Huxley, half-brother and Nobel Laureate Andrew Huxley, and his brother Julian Huxley who was a biologist and involved in the eugenics movement. Nonetheless, Huxley emphasises conditioning over breeding (nurture versus nature); human embryos and fetuses are conditioned through a carefully designed regimen of chemical (such as exposure to hormones and toxins), thermal (exposure to intense heat or cold, as one's future career would dictate), and other environmental stimuli, although there is an element of selective breeding as well.
Comparisons with George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four
Further information: Brave New World comparisonsIn a letter to George Orwell about Nineteen Eighty-Four, Huxley wrote "Whether in actual fact the policy of the boot-on-the-face can go on indefinitely seems doubtful. My own belief is that the ruling oligarchy will find less arduous and wasteful ways of governing and of satisfying its lust for power, and these ways will resemble those which I described in Brave New World." He went on to write "Within the next generation I believe that the world's rulers will discover that infant conditioning and narco-hypnosis are more efficient, as instruments of government, than clubs and prisons, and that the lust for power can be just as completely satisfied by suggesting people into loving their servitude as by flogging and kicking them into obedience."
Social critic Neil Postman contrasted the worlds of Nineteen Eighty-Four and Brave New World in the foreword of his 1985 book Amusing Ourselves to Death. He writes:
What Orwell feared were those who would ban books. What Huxley feared was that there would be no reason to ban a book, for there would be no one who wanted to read one. Orwell feared those who would deprive us of information. Huxley feared those who would give us so much that we would be reduced to passivity and egoism. Orwell feared that the truth would be concealed from us. Huxley feared the truth would be drowned in a sea of irrelevance. Orwell feared we would become a captive culture. Huxley feared we would become a trivial culture, preoccupied with some equivalent of the feelies, the orgy porgy, and the centrifugal bumblepuppy. As Huxley remarked in Brave New World Revisited, the civil libertarians and rationalists who are ever on the alert to oppose tyranny "failed to take into account man's almost infinite appetite for distractions." In 1984, Huxley added, people are controlled by inflicting pain. In Brave New World, they are controlled by inflicting pleasure. In short, Orwell feared that what we hate will ruin us. Huxley feared that what we love will ruin us.
The writer Christopher Hitchens, who published several articles on Huxley and a book on Orwell, noted the difference between the two texts in the introduction to his 1999 article "Why Americans Are Not Taught History",
We dwell in a present-tense culture that somehow, significantly, decided to employ the telling expression "You're history" as a choice reprobation or insult, and thus elected to speak forgotten volumes about itself. By that standard, the forbidding dystopia of George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four already belongs, both as a text and as a date, with Ur and Mycenae, while the hedonist nihilism of Huxley still beckons toward a painless, amusement-sodden, and stress-free consensus. Orwell's was a house of horrors. He seemed to strain credulity because he posited a regime that would go to any lengths to own and possess history, to rewrite and construct it, and to inculcate it by means of coercion. Whereas Huxley ... rightly foresaw that any such regime could break because it could not bend. In 1988, four years after 1984, the Soviet Union scrapped its official history curriculum and announced that a newly authorized version was somewhere in the works. This was the precise moment when the regime conceded its own extinction. For true blissed-out and vacant servitude, though, you need an otherwise sophisticated society where no serious history is taught.
Brave New World Revisited
In 1946, Huxley wrote in the foreword of the new edition of Brave New World:
If I were now to rewrite the book, I would offer the Savage a third alternative. Between the Utopian and primitive horns of his dilemma would lie the possibility of sanity... In this community economics would be decentralist and Henry-Georgian, politics Kropotkinesque and co-operative. Science and technology would be used as though, like the Sabbath, they had been made for man, not (as at present and still more so in the Brave New World) as though man were to be adapted and enslaved to them. Religion would be the conscious and intelligent pursuit of man's Final End, the unitive knowledge of immanent Tao or Logos, the transcendent Godhead or Brahman. And the prevailing philosophy of life would be a kind of Higher Utilitarianism, in which the Greatest Happiness principle would be secondary to the Final End principle—the first question to be asked and answered in every contingency of life being: "How will this thought or action contribute to, or interfere with, the achievement, by me and the greatest possible number of other individuals, of man's Final End?"
Brave New World Revisited (Harper & Brothers, US, 1958; Chatto & Windus, UK, 1959), written by Huxley almost thirty years after Brave New World, is a non-fiction work in which Huxley considered whether the world had moved toward or away from his vision of the future from the 1930s. He believed when he wrote the original novel that it was a reasonable guess as to where the world might go in the future. In Brave New World Revisited, he concluded that the world was becoming like Brave New World much faster than he originally thought.
Huxley analysed the causes of this, such as overpopulation, as well as all the means by which populations can be controlled. He was particularly interested in the effects of drugs and subliminal suggestion. Brave New World Revisited is different in tone because of Huxley's evolving thought, as well as his conversion to Hindu Vedanta in the interim between the two books.
The last chapter of the book aims to propose action which could be taken to prevent a democracy from turning into the totalitarian world described in Brave New World. In Huxley's last novel, Island, he again expounds similar ideas to describe a utopian nation, which is generally viewed as a counterpart to Brave New World.
Censorship
According to American Library Association, Brave New World has frequently been banned and challenged in the United States due to insensitivity, offensive language, nudity, racism, conflict with a religious viewpoint, and being sexually explicit. It landed on the list of the top ten most challenged books in 2010 (3) and 2011 (7). The book also secured a spot on the association's list of the top one hundred challenged books for 1990–1999 (54), 2000–2009 (36), and 2010–2019 (26).
The following include specific instances of when the book has been censored, banned, or challenged:
- In 1932, the book was banned in Ireland for its language, and for supposedly being anti-family and anti-religion.
- In 1965, a Maryland English teacher alleged that he was fired for assigning Brave New World to students. The teacher sued for violation of First Amendment rights but lost both his case and the appeal, with the appeals court ruling that the assignment of the book was not the reason for his firing.
- The book was banned in India in 1967, with Huxley accused of being a "pornographer".
- In 1980, it was removed from classrooms in Miller, Missouri, among other challenges.
- The version of Brave New World Revisited published in China lacks explicit mentions of China itself.
Influences and allegations of plagiarism
The English writer Rose Macaulay published What Not: A Prophetic Comedy in 1918. What Not depicts a dystopian future where people are ranked by intelligence, the government mandates mind training for all citizens, and procreation is regulated by the state. Macaulay and Huxley shared the same literary circles and he attended her weekly literary salons.
Bertrand Russell felt Brave New World borrowed from his 1931 book The Scientific Outlook, and wrote in a letter to his publisher that Huxley's novel was "merely an expansion of the two penultimate chapters of 'The Scientific Outlook.'"
H. G. Wells' novel The First Men in the Moon (1901) used concepts that Huxley added to his story. Both novels introduce a society (in Wells' case, that of the Lunar natives) consisting of a specialized caste system, in which new generations are produced in vessels, where their designated caste is decided before birth by tampering with the fetus' development, and individuals are drugged down when they are not needed.
George Orwell believed that Brave New World must have been partly derived from the 1921 novel We by Russian author Yevgeny Zamyatin. However, in a 1962 letter to Christopher Collins, Huxley says that he wrote Brave New World long before he had heard of We. According to We translator Natasha Randall, Orwell believed that Huxley was lying. Kurt Vonnegut said that in writing Player Piano (1952), he "cheerfully ripped off the plot of Brave New World, whose plot had been cheerfully ripped off from Yevgeny Zamyatin's We".
In 1982, Polish author Antoni Smuszkiewicz, in his analysis of Polish science-fiction Zaczarowana gra ("The Magic Game"), presented accusations of plagiarism against Huxley. Smuszkiewicz showed similarities between Brave New World and two science fiction novels written earlier by Polish author Mieczysław Smolarski, namely Miasto światłości ("The City of Light", 1924) and Podróż poślubna pana Hamiltona ("Mr Hamilton's Honeymoon Trip", 1928). Smuszkiewicz wrote in his open letter to Huxley: "This work of a great author, both in the general depiction of the world as well as countless details, is so similar to two of my novels that in my opinion there is no possibility of accidental analogy."
Kate Lohnes, writing for Encyclopædia Britannica, notes similarities between Brave New World and other novels of the era could be seen as expressing "common fears surrounding the rapid advancement of technology and of the shared feelings of many tech-skeptics during the early 20th century". Other dystopian novels followed Huxley's work, including C.S. Lewis's That Hideous Strength (1945) and Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four (1949).
Legacy
In 1998–1999, the Modern Library ranked Brave New World fifth on its list of the 100 Best Novels in English of the 20th century. In 2003, Robert McCrum writing for The Observer included Brave New World chronologically at number 53 in "the top 100 greatest novels of all time", and the novel was listed at number 87 on the BBC's survey The Big Read.
On 5 November 2019, BBC News listed Brave New World on its list of the 100 Most Inspiring Novels. In 2021, Brave New World was one of six classic science fiction novels by British authors selected by Royal Mail to feature on a series of UK postage stamps.
Adaptations
Theatre
- Brave New World (opened 4 September 2015) in co-production by Royal & Derngate, Northampton and Touring Consortium Theatre Company which toured the UK. The adaptation was by Dawn King, composed by These New Puritans and directed by James Dacre.
Radio
- Brave New World (radio broadcast) CBS Radio Workshop (27 January and 3 February 1956): music composed and conducted by Bernard Herrmann. Adapted for radio by William Froug. Introduced by William Conrad and narrated by Aldous Huxley. Featuring the voices of Joseph Kearns, Bill Idelson, Gloria Henry, Charlotte Lawrence, Byron Kane, Sam Edwards, Jack Kruschen, Vic Perrin, Lurene Tuttle, Herb Butterfield, Doris Singleton.
- Brave New World (radio broadcast) BBC Radio 4 (May 2013)
- Brave New World (radio broadcast) BBC Radio 4 (22, 29 May 2016)
Film
- Brave New World (1980), a television film directed by Burt Brinckerhoff
- Brave New World (1998), a television film directed by Leslie Libman and Larry Williams
- In 2009, a theatrical film was announced to be in development, with collaboration between Ridley Scott and Leonardo DiCaprio. By May 2013 the project was placed on hold.
- Brave New World (2014), fan film directed by Nathan Hyde
Television
- Brave New World (2010), miniseries directed by Leonard Menchiari
- Brave New World (2020), series created by David Wiener
- In May 2015, The Hollywood Reporter reported that Steven Spielberg's Amblin Television would bring Brave New World to Syfy network as a scripted series, adapted by Les Bohem. The adaptation was eventually written by David Wiener with Grant Morrison and Brian Taylor, with the series ordered to air on USA Network in February 2019. The series eventually moved to the Peacock streaming service and premiered on 15 July 2020. In October 2020, the series was cancelled after one season.
See also
- Alpha (ethology)
- Anti-nationalism
- Anti-theism
- Anthem
- Brain–computer interface
- Demolition Man
- The Glass Fortress (2016 film)
References
Citations
- "CABELL PUTS STYLE ABOVEIDEA IN a BOOK; Author Confesses He Cannot Define Style, but Calls It 'Very Nearly Most Important.' NEVER AWAITS INSPIRATION in Interview He Recalls Newspaper Days at $25 a Week and Says Recognition Came Slowly". The New York Times.
- "Brave New World Book Details". fAR BookFinder. Retrieved 28 November 2016.
- "Brave New World by Aldous Huxley". British Library. Retrieved 16 October 2022.
- ^ "Modern Library Top 100 - Penguin Random House". sites.prh.com. Retrieved 22 November 2024.
- ^ McCrum, Robert (12 October 2003). "100 greatest novels of all time". Guardian. London. Retrieved 10 October 2012.
- ^ "BBC - The Big Read - Top 100". BBC. April 2003. Retrieved 29 December 2022.
- ^ Office of Intellectual Freedom (26 March 2013). "100 most frequently challenged books: 1990-1999". American Library Association. Archived from the original on 10 October 2020. Retrieved 17 June 2021.
- ^ Office of Intellectual Freedom (26 March 2013). "Top 100 Banned/Challenged Books: 2000-2009". American Library Association. Archived from the original on 24 September 2020. Retrieved 17 June 2021.
- ^ Office of Intellectual Freedom (9 September 2020). "Top 100 Most Banned and Challenged Books: 2010-2019". American Library Association. Archived from the original on 27 September 2020. Retrieved 17 June 2021.
- Anon. "Brave New World". In Our Time. British Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 9 April 2009.
- Bate, Jonathan; Rasmussen, Eric (2007). William Shakespeare: Complete Works. The Royal Shakespeare Company. Chief Associate Editor: Héloïse Sénéchal. Macmillan Publishers Ltd. p. 47. ISBN 978-0-230-00350-7.
- Ira Grushow (October 1962). "Brave New World and The Tempest". College English. 24 (1): 42–45. doi:10.2307/373846. ISSN 0010-0994. JSTOR 373846.
- Martine de Gaudemar (1995). La Notion de nature chez Leibniz: colloque. Franz Steiner Verlag. p. 77. ISBN 978-3-515-06631-0.
- Meckier, Jerome (1979). "A Neglected Huxley "Preface": His Earliest Synopsis of Brave New World". Twentieth Century Literature. 25 (1): 1–20. doi:10.2307/441397. ISSN 0041-462X. JSTOR 441397.
- Murray, Nicholas (13 December 2003). "Nicholas Murray on his life of Huxley". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 13 April 2020.
- "A. Huxley in Sanary 1 - Introduction". www.sanary.com. Archived from the original on 11 January 2017. Retrieved 27 September 2019.
- Wickes, George; Fraser, Raymond (1960). "Aldous Huxley, The Art of Fiction No. 24". Paris Review. Spring 1960 (23). ISSN 0031-2037. Archived from the original on 22 September 2010. Retrieved 24 August 2022.
- Huxley, Aldous (1969). "letter to Mrs. Kethevan Roberts, 18 May 1931". In Smith, Grover (ed.). Letters of Aldous Huxley. New York and Evanston: Harper & Row. p. 348.
I am writing a novel about the future – on the horror of the Wellsian Utopia and a revolt against it. Very difficult. I have hardly enough imagination to deal with such a subject. But it is none the less interesting work.
- Heje, Johan (2002). "Aldous Huxley". In Harris-Fain, Darren (ed.). British Fantasy and Science-Fiction Writers, 1918–1960. Detroit: Gale Group. p. 100. ISBN 0-7876-5249-0.
- Lawrence biographer Frances Wilson writes that "the entire novel is saturated in Lawrence" and cites "Lawrence's New Mexico" in particular. Wilson, Frances (2021). Burning Man: The Trials of D.H. Lawrence, New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, pp. 404–405.
- Nathaniel Ward "The visions of Wells, Huxley and Orwell—why was the Twentieth Century impressed by Distopias rather than Utopias?" in Ophelia Ruddle (ed.) Proceedings of the 2003 Annual Multidisciplinary Round Table on Twentieth Century Culture"
- Haldane, J.B.S. (1924). Daedalus; or, Science and the Future.
- Dyson, Freeman (1976). Disturbing the Universe. Basic Books. Chapter 15.
- ^ Bradshaw, David (2004). "Introduction". In Huxley, Aldous (ed.). Brave New World (Print ed.). London, UK: Vintage.
- Meckier, Jerome (2002). "Aldous Huxley's Americanization of the "Brave New World"" (PDF). Twentieth Century American Literature. 48 (4): 439. JSTOR 3176042. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
- Huxley, Aldous (1932). Brave New World. New York: Harper & Brothers. p. 101. ISBN 978-0-06-085052-4.
- ^ Huxley, Aldous (1932). Brave New World. New York: Harper & Brothers. p. 253. ISBN 978-0-06-085052-4.
- Huxley, Aldous (1932). Brave New World. New York: Harper & Brothers. p. 252. ISBN 978-0-06-085052-4.
- Huxley, Aldous (1932). Brave New World. New York: Harper & Brothers. p. 254. ISBN 978-0-06-085052-4.
- Her name is a in-joke reference to John Keate, the notorious 19th century flogging headmaster of Eton.
- chapter 3, "Our Ford-or Our Freud, as, for some inscrutable reason, he chose to call himself whenever he spoke of psychological matters–Our Freud had been the first to reveal the appalling dangers of family life"
- ^ Naughton, John (22 November 2013). "Aldous Huxley: the prophet of our brave new digital dystopia | John Naughton". The Guardian. Retrieved 7 October 2018.
- Meckier, Jerome (2006). "Onomastic Satire: Names and Naming in Brave New World". In Firchow, Peter Edgerly; Nugel, Bernfried (eds.). Aldous Huxley: modern satirical novelist of ideas. Lit Verlag. pp. 187ff. ISBN 3-8258-9668-4. OCLC 71165436. Retrieved 28 January 2009.
- The Daily Telegraph, 5 February 1932. Reprinted in Donald Watt, "Aldous Huxley: The Critical Heritage. London; Routledge, 2013 ISBN 1136209697 (pp. 197–201).
- Scrutiny, May 1932 . Reprinted in Watt, (pp. 202–205).
- "We Don't Want to be Happy", in: The New Leader (11 March 1932), reprinted in: Donald Watt, Aldous Huxley: The Critical Heritage (1975), pp. 210–13.
- Huxley, Aldous. Brave New World. Harper Perennial Modern Classics; Reprint edition (17 October 2006), P.S. Edition, ISBN 978-0-06-085052-4 — "About the Book." — "Too Far Ahead of Its Time? The Contemporary Response to Brave New World (1932)" p. 8-11
- G. K. Chesterton, review in The Illustrated London News, 4 May 1935
- Ludwig von Mises (1944). Bureaucracy, New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, p 110
- McGee G. (2000). The Perfect Baby: Parenthood in the New World of Cloning and Genetics. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield
- Elliott C. (2003). Better Than Well: American Medicine Meets the American Dream. New York: W.W. Norton
- Spar D. (2006). The Baby Business: How Money, Science and Politics Drive the Commerce of Conception. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press
- 2003. President's Council on Bioethics. Beyond Therapy. Washington, DC: President's Council on Bioethics
- ^ So, Derek (2019). "The Use and Misuse of Brave New World in the CRISPR Debate." CRISPR J. 2(5):316-323. doi:10.1089/crispr.2019.0046. PMID 31599683.
- Fletcher J. (1988). The Ethics of Genetic Control: Ending Genetic Roulette. Buffalo, NY: Prometheus Books.
- Kevles DJ. (1985). In the Name of Eugenics: Genetics and the Uses of Human Heredity. New York: Knopf
- Woiak, Joanne (2007). "Designing a Brave New World: Eugenics, Politics, and Fiction." The Public Historian, 29(3), 105–129. https://doi.org/10.1525/tph.2007.29.3.105
- "Brave New World | Summary, Context, & Reception | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 29 May 2023.
- ^ "Letters of Note: 1984 v. Brave New World". 8 February 2020. Archived from the original on 8 February 2020. Retrieved 8 February 2020.
- Christopher Hitchens, "Goodbye to All That: Why Americans Are Not Taught History." Harper's Magazine. November 1998, pp. 37–47.
- Huxley, Aldous (2005). Brave New World and Brave New World Revisited. Harper Perennial Modern Classics. p. 7. ISBN 978-0060776091.
- "Brave New World Revisited – HUXLEY, Aldous | Between the Covers Rare Books". Betweenthecovers.com. Archived from the original on 9 June 2011. Retrieved 1 June 2010.
- Schermer, M. H. N. (June 2007). "Brave New World versus Island — Utopian and Dystopian Views on Psychopharmacology". Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy. 10 (2): 119–128. doi:10.1007/s11019-007-9059-1. ISSN 1386-7423. PMC 2779438. PMID 17486431.
- ^ Office of Intellectual Freedom (26 March 2013). "Top 10 Most Challenged Books Lists". American Library Association. Archived from the original on 28 July 2017. Retrieved 17 June 2021.
- "Banned Books". Classiclit.about.com. 2 November 2009. Archived from the original on 2 October 2010. Retrieved 1 June 2010.
- "Banned Books". pcc.edu. Archived from the original on 2 June 2010. Retrieved 11 June 2010.
- Karolides, Nicholas J.; Bald, Margaret; Sova, Dawn B. (2011). 120 Banned Books: Censorship Histories of World Literature (Second ed.). Checkmark Books. p. 472. ISBN 978-0-8160-8232-2.
In 1965, a teacher of English in Maryland claimed that the local school board had violated his First Amendment rights by firing him after he assigned Brave New World as a required reading in his class. The district court ruled against the teacher in Parker v. Board of Education, 237 F. Supp. 222 (D.Md) and refused his request for reinstatement in the teaching position. When the case was later heard by the circuit court, Parker v. Board of Education, 348 F.2d 464 (4th Cir. 1965), the presiding judge affirmed the ruling of the lower court and included in the determination the opinion that the nontenured status of the teacher accounted for the firing and not the assignment of a particular book.
- Sharma, Partap (1975). Razdan, C. K. (ed.). Bare breasts and Bare Bottoms: Anatomy of Film Censorship in India. Bombay: Jaico Publishing House. pp. 21–22.
- Sakmann, Lindsay. "LION: Banned Books Week: Banned BOOKS in the Library". library.albright.edu. Retrieved 18 June 2020.
- Hawkins, Amy; Wasserstrom, Jeffrey (13 January 2019). "Why 1984 Isn't Banned in China". The Atlantic. Retrieved 23 November 2021.
- Livni, Ephrat (19 December 2018). "A woman first wrote the prescient ideas Huxley and Orwell made famous". Quartz. Retrieved 28 October 2020.
- "It's a Yoga exercise, of course: but none the worse for that."
- Aldous Huxley and Utopia
- Orwell, George (4 January 1946). "Review". Orwell Today. Tribune.
- Russell, Robert (1999). Zamiatin's We. Bristol: Bristol Classical Press. p. 13. ISBN 978-1-85399-393-0.
- "Leonard Lopate Show". WNYC. 18 August 2006. Archived from the original on 5 April 2011.
{{cite news}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) (radio interview with We translator Natasha Randall) - Playboy interview with Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. Archived 10 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine, July 1973.
- Smuszkiewicz, Antoni (1982). Zaczarowana gra: zarys dziejów polskiej fantastyki naukowej (in Polish). Poznań: Wydawn. Poznanskie. OCLC 251929765.
- "Nowiny Literackie" 1948 No. 4, p 7
- Kate Lohnes, Brave New World at the Encyclopædia Britannica
-
"100 'most inspiring' novels revealed by BBC Arts". BBC News. 5 November 2019. Retrieved 10 November 2019.
The reveal kickstarts the BBC's year-long celebration of literature.
- "Stamps to feature original artworks celebrating classic science fiction novels". Yorkpress.co.uk. 9 April 2021. Retrieved 20 September 2022.
- "Forgotten Actors: Charlotte Lawrence". Forgottenactors.blogspot.ca. 4 December 2012. Retrieved 11 August 2016.
- Jones, Josh (20 November 2014). "Hear Aldous Huxley Read Brave New World. Plus 84 Classic Radio Dramas from CBS Radio Workshop (1956-57)". Open Culture. Retrieved 11 August 2016.
- "Leonardo DiCaprio And Ridley Scott Team for 'Brave New World' Adaptation". Filmofilia. 9 August 2009.
- Weintraub, Steve "Frosty". "Ridley Scott Talks PROMETHEUS, Viral Advertising, TRIPOLI, the BLADE RUNNER Sequel, PROMETHEUS Sequels, More, May 31, 2012". Collider.
- Goldberg, Lesley (5 May 2015). "Steven Spielberg's Amblin, Syfy Adapting Classic Novel 'Brave New World' (Exclusive)". The Hollywood Reporter.
- Andreeva, Nellie (13 February 2019). "'Brave New World' Drama Based on Aldous Huxley Novel Moves From Syfy To USA With Series Order". Deadline. Retrieved 13 February 2019.
- Andreeva, Nellie (17 September 2019). "NBCU Streamer Gets Name, Sets Slate of Reboots, 'Dr. Death', Ed Helms & Amber Ruffin Series, 'Parks & Rec'". Deadline. Retrieved 17 September 2019.
- Andreeva, Nellie (28 October 2020). "'Brave New World' Canceled By Peacock After One Season". Deadline. Archived from the original on 29 October 2020. Retrieved 31 August 2021.
General bibliography
- Huxley, Aldous (1998). Brave New World (First Perennial Classics ed.). New York: HarperCollins Publishers. ISBN 0-06-092987-1.
- Huxley, Aldous (2000). Brave New World Revisited (First Perennial Classics ed.). New York: HarperCollins Publishers. ISBN 0-06-095551-1.
- Huxley, Aldous (2005). Brave New World and Brave New World Revisited (First Perennial Classics ed.). New York: HarperCollins Publishers. ISBN 0-06-077609-9.
- Izzo, David Garrett; Kirkpatrick, Kim, eds. (15 July 2014). Huxley's Brave New World: Essays. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-7864-8003-6.
- Postman, Neil (1985). Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business. USA: Penguin USA. ISBN 0-670-80454-1.
- Russell, Robert (1999). Zamiatin's We. Bristol: Bristol Classical Press. ISBN 978-1-85399-393-0.
- Higgins, Charles; Higgins, Regina (2000). Cliff Notes on Huxley's Brave New World. New York: Wiley Publishing. ISBN 0-7645-8583-5.
- "Brave New World Study Guide". Shmoop.
- Pearce, David. "Brave New World". Huxley.net.
External links
- Brave New World title listing at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- Brave New World at Faded Page (Canada)
- Brave New World Revisited at Faded Page (Canada)
- 1957 interview with Huxley as he reflects on his life work and the meaning of Brave New World
- Aldous Huxley: Bioethics and Reproductive Issues
- Aldous Huxley's Brave New World: BBC Radio 4 In Our Time discussion
- Literapedia page for Brave New World
- Brave New World? A Defence Of Paradise-Engineering, a critical analysis by David Pearce (also available as a video recording)
- The Huxley Trap (The New York Times; 14 November 2018)
- Brave New World
- 1932 British novels
- 1932 science fiction novels
- Aldous Huxley
- Book censorship in the Republic of Ireland
- British novels adapted into films
- British novels adapted into plays
- British novels adapted into television shows
- British philosophical novels
- British satirical novels
- British science fiction novels
- Censored books
- Chatto & Windus books
- Cultural depictions of Henry Ford
- Dystopian novels
- Fiction about eugenics
- Fiction about mind control
- Fiction about suicide
- Futurology books
- Novels about cloning
- Novels about consumerism
- Novels about substance abuse
- Novels about totalitarianism
- Novels by Aldous Huxley
- Novels involved in plagiarism controversies
- Novels set in London
- Novels set in fictional countries
- Novels set in the 26th century
- Religion in science fiction
- Obscenity controversies in literature
- Science fiction novels adapted into films
- Fiction about self-harm
- Social science fiction