To be in a relationship with the one person whom you love and adore can be something described as “coming up for fresh air” every time you see or around that special someone. Someone who gives you butterflies or even goosebumps when in the same room with you. And when the right time comes, becoming intimate with your certain someone should be kept very private. Typically, sharing your significant other is not very common as you would wish you’d be the only person they’d have eyes for. Being intimate shouldn’t be a “duty” or forced to please the other. However, that’s not the case in Orwell’s novel 1984, where we learn about a woman named Julia who was taught to maintain celibacy and intimacy is discouraged. On the other hand, in Huxley’s Brave New World, we meet another woman named Lenina, who just like all the other girls in the novel, were conditioned to treat sex as a simple act of intimacy where no feelings or emotions were attached or exchanged. Not only that, but the women in Brave New World were also taught that …show more content…
Julia is a very determined, rebellious and rumbustious character. Although both Julia and Lenina may have their differences, they also have a few similarities. Julia claims to be in an Anti-Sex League that helped advocate celibacy, but we later learn she only used this as a cover to hide the fact that she had been sleeping around. This is one area both women can relate in. They both enjoy sleeping around with several different men and find pride in it. We see this when Winston asks Julia if she’s had sex before and she says, “Of course. Hundreds of times, well, scores of times, anyway” (Orwell, 125). Although both girls enjoyed being promiscuous, they did it for two complete different reason, Julia did it as an act of rebellion while Lenina did it as a way to maintain her loyalty to her