1. Major issues with textual evidence: Major issues in chapters 11-13 include the Director’s resignation, Bernard’s loss of fame and the affair between Lenina and John. Bernard experiences fame and popularity by bringing John the Savage into the civilized world. However, John is disgusted by the sight of dozens of identical twins in a factory. He is also repulsed by the feely Three Weeks in a Helicopter, which Lenina takes him to see. In chapter 12, Bernard disappoints a large party of important people when John refuses to leave his room. John and Helmholtz meet, becoming instant friends, which annoys Bernard. This is evident when Huxley announces, “Helmholtz and the Savage took to one another at once. So cordially indeed that Bernard felt a sharp pang of jealousy” (Huxley 121). When John reads a passage from Romeo and Juliet, Helmholtz bursts into laughter about the absurdity of having a mother and father. Lenina, who is obsessed with John, takes some soma and visits John, attempting to seduce him. She begins to take her clothes off, and John becomes …show more content…
Current Event: A current event that would relate back to the strong patriarchy in Brave New World would the United States presidential election. Political analysts have theorized that the election results contributed to Hillary Clinton’s gender. Huffington post writer Kathleen Reardon wrote, “The United States is a good deal less open to women in positions of power. . . She is being penalized for having a series of traits that people find unacceptable in a woman.” Reardon explains that it is very difficult for our society to accept an ambitious woman who is running for a position of power. This situation can relate back to the World State because women are expected to caress feminine traits, such as being sweet and charming, and are perceived as too weak to lead. Huxley represents strong sexism in the book by referring to women as meat and only placing males as