Brave New World Analysis

Brave New World - Analysis


“Over the main entrance the words, Central London Hatchery and Conditioning
Center, and in a shield the World State’s motto, Community, Identity, Stability.”
(Huxley,1) As Brave New World opens, the ideas of this motto initially seems like a
decent idea. As the book develops I found there is no community, identity, or stability
and is a mere paradox and false representation to create a stable utopia.

The idea of community we have today is virtually non-existent in this new
world. When I think of community I think of next door neighbors, attending weddings,
and family dinners. In the utopia present by Huxley this is all banished. Solitude and
time that one person needs to be alone to think and relax is highly discouraged. Sexual
promiscuity is formed so there is no family or dependence to occupy one’s mind. The
idea of community that relates to current day church is when Bernard attends the Fordson
Community Singery. Here the twelve individuals eat strawberry ice-cream soma, praise
Ford, and all diverge in an Orgy-Porgy. This felling of community replaces church sine
God is now unheard of. Sex and Ford makes up this utopia’s community. The only true
utopia seen in Brave New World is when Bernard and Lenina visit the Savage
Reservation. Mothers are seen with babies and there are nuclear families. This true
community is viewed by the civilized as grotesque and disturbing due to there
conditioning.

Destiny in Brave New World is chosen for you before you are even decanted.
From the Bokanovsky’s process group details of heredity, jobs, and names are written on
the bottle people are being formed in. Alcohol is injected in the bottle if the person is of
a lower class to make then less intelligent and capable. The jobs are determined and
people are prepared with immunizations and resistance to certain chemicals in
correspondence to their job. Classes are created and people are taught to love their class
and accepting of other class levels. While on a tour of the hatchery the Director says,
“All conditioning aims at that: making people like their inescapable social destiny.”
(Huxley, 16) In present day people are given the chance to do anything , think what they
please and do any job they want. On this extreme, everyone’s life is predestined and set
in advance. The only sense of identity people are given is their name. This is only a label
to categorize people and keep track the Bokanovsky Group. From a single embryo many
twins are created. From a single embryo many twins are created. A whole factory is
staffed with “one hundred and sixty-two Deltas divided into two Bokanovsky Groups of
eighty-four red-headed female and seventy-eight dark dolychocephalic male twins,
respectively.” (Huxley, 208) In this situation it was possible that there was 80 other
people that looked just like each other. These twins had no identity and were stripped of
all human qualities.

Stability is a main goal in this utopia. Producing large amounts of genetically
identical twins are what keep balance. “Borkanovsky’s Process is one of the major
instruments of social stabiltiy.” (Huxley,7) Every person has their job to do and proper

class. Each person is taught to love his or her job so no one is unsatisfied. When people are
satisfied with their job happiness is guaranteed. Hypnopaedia, sleep teaching, is used to
brain wash individuals. “Ending is better than mending” and other propaganda is forced
through sleep beginning at birth. There is no longer any need for literature because
people are taught not to love old things. The new society can not relate to tragedies
because there is no social instability. Science is highly censored and controlled because
if any change occurs a slight imbalance may occur and people may be unconditioned.
Soma is taken like candy and prevents emotions of sadness or depression. The people are
truly unstable because they are constantly dependent on the soma to take holidays from
the world that is suppose to be perfect.

Any scandals, hatred, ignorance, and envy was simply abolished in the name of

technology. People are now happy, hygienic, and economically secure. Brave New

World presents a possible idea for the too near future. Human beings are turned into

mindless, emotionless, walking zombies that only perform menial tasks. This life has to

high of a price to pay for the simple stability it has to offer. Existence would be

meaningless and only serve to keep the human race continuing. Hopefully technology

will never bring us to the point of human destruction. “They’re well off; they’re safe’

they’re never ill; they’re not afraid of death; they’re blissfully ignorant of passion and old

age; they’re plagued with no mothers or fathers; they’ve got no wives, or children, or

lovers to fell strongly about; they’re so conditioned that they practically can’t help

behaving as they ought to.” (Huxley, 220)

Brave New World

Jaime Pomeroy

Huxley, Aldous. Brave New World HarperCollins Publisher Inc. New York, 1932