Comparing Huxley's Nineteen Eighty-Four And Brave New World

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Nineteen Eighty-Four and Brave New World were both written by men who had experienced, what was in their time the largest and most violent war in history. These tremendous world events revealed the truly deplorable and destructive nature of the state mixed with an inherently domineering human nature. Huxley and Orwell portray a satirical depiction of the eventual state of society as an extrapolation of the condition of the world in their own time showing similar stories of totalitarian dominance and complete control of society by world states. And while these narratives have similar dystopias the ways in which the world falls into control and that state supremacy is maintained is a stark contrast making for an interesting comparison. Huxley's image depicts a world in which the industrial revolution expanded beyond material goods to the mass production of humans themselves. Through a process referred to as the Bokanovsky process human are grown in hatcheries using a mixture of in vitro fertilization and cloning. They are conditioned from before they are even matured into babies to fit a predetermined purpose in society using a mixture of hypnopaedic therapy, Pavlovian education, and genetic modification. This combination of conditioning techniques along with other factors in the society keep everyone in the World State …show more content…

Members of the state Oceania are given very little to keep them happy and live under the constant threat of death from the perpetual war with the other two superstates, Eastasia and Eurasia. The Oceanic government, The Party, use this conflict as an excuse to keep the people living in persistent poverty under the guise that all excess goods and luxuries must be sacrificed for the war effort. This poverty combined with constant surveillance for any sign of deviance and mass propaganda and conditioning at every point in one's life prevent rebellion and keep the people of the state content and