Matthew Relkin Mrs. Harnish Theme #7, Brave New World 2 May 2017 Real or Not Every child dreams about a fantasy world hoping it becomes the future. One day we can actually take the same drugs or give birth through a test tube the same way as the people in the novel. In this dystopian novel, Brave New World, by Aldous Huxley demonstrates a futuristic world that one day could portray the future. In the novel, the people take a drug called soma. This drug calms and also distracts someone from a problem…
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Pharmaceutical Painkillers Polluting The World Beneath the facade of relief, pharmaceutical painkillers harbor a devastating potential: they can shatter lives and tear families apart through the grip of addiction. The hidden consequences of these seemingly harmless treatments reveal a sobering truth: what starts as relief can end in ruin. In Aldous Huxley’s dystopian novel Brave New World, the citizens who live under the World State indulge in a drug called soma that brings short-term relief and euphoria…
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The use of “soma” in Brave New World also represents drug abuse, that can be seen everyday in American society today. The main character in the novel, Bernard, does not really like soma, but he does it anyways because the society around him already sees him as an outcast. Other signs of drug abuse include the fact that soma was served with almost every meal and taken throughout the day (Huxley 75). The society relied on the drug to keep them happy, but it distracted them from the truth that their…
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Brave New World In the novel Brave New World, soma IS is seen as the ultimate way to escape from your problems. It numbs you from your external existence. In many ways, soma IS is not dissimilar from the many drugs of today. I AM am not speaking of recreational drugs, or even pharmaceuticals, but rather the unseen drugs of our everyday lives. The ways in which we intoxicate ourselves with these drugs can take many forms. The internet, video games, and television ARE are all examples of these…
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In Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World, soma is used by the government to control its citizens. Soma gives the government the power to make you feel however they want you to feel and they claim that it has no side effects on the user. Huxley describes it as a vacation from reality where you don't feel any pain and have no worries. Every day citizens pick up at least half a gramme of soma, but the amount that they receive is based on their mood or level of depression. Soma sedates and distracts the person…
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In this futuristic society based on pleasure without moral consequences, Brave New World manipulates the people into mind numbing dependence. The society is only stable from the loss of freedom and personal responsibility. They are controlled from birth until death. Power in Brave New World is maintained through technological interventions, drugs and conditioning. The government in Brave New World retains control by making its citizens happy and superficially fulfilled. “We also predestine and…
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mindset. However, Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World creates a vision of a utopian society that achieves happiness by altering the mindset of its populace to believe they are happy. In a society depicting such a strange ideology of the future, people are no longer as happy as they make their minds up to be, but as happy as the government allows them to be. Canadians are repugnant to such an idea, despite the many issues leading Canada to a place similar to Brave New World. The excessive use of chemicals…
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Individuality and Humanity in Brave New World What makes someone different from the others could be anything. It could be personality, their interests, hobbies, or religion. In Brave New World by Aldous Huxley, an “individual” is unwanted and discouraged. Huxley’s shows us the importance of individuality, and how much our current world is dependent on it. In the new world that Huxley created, everyone is uniform. The aspects of life that allow the development of individuality are gone…
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Published in 1932, Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World accurately uses satirical techniques in order to ridicule modern society’s flaws. Huxley describes these deficiencies as a result of the Industrial Revolution that took place from the late 1700s to the early 1800s. Because of the development of technological advancements, Huxley scorns the relationship between how the change in technology brings about the change in humanity. One such way that Huxley describes his frustration was through technology…
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Huxley presents the drug soma, which compares to all the painkillers in our world today. By taking the user on a “holiday,” it makes the user unaware of his surroundings. When one takes soma, he would escape the dolorous reality and enter an elated world. One can compare soma with painkillers. People have accommodated with using pain relievers even in at unnecessary times. The pain tolerance level of our society rapidly decreases; therefore, whenever the slightest pain arises, people take painkillers…
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