How Does Huxley Create A Dystopian Society

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Aldous Huxley is one of the first to use and apply Sigmund Freud's work with deliberate purpose, since Sigmund was a neurologist that brought his ideas to the world within a short interval earlier from Huxley's published book. Freud was the father of psychoanalysis making a big impact in Huxley's writing; enabling him to develop a futuristic novel based on futuristic ideas that questioned the nature of humanity and it's reactions. Maybe it was not the outrageous idea of a dystopian society that made his book so popular, maybe it was the fact that Huxley tried to dig deep into what makes everyone a human and the traumas that might cause people to become monsters. In “Brave New World” the most exploited character to suffer from his unconscious animal desires is John the savage who after all comes from two utopian parents while being raised within the savage reservation. Another well develop part of the psychoanalysis is the infantile sexuality which is accepted by the brave world population. …show more content…

They run naked in the gardens arranged for them to preform such games and all that the director would say is “Charming, charming”, this proves that in the brave new world sexual desires for children are not considered taboo, moreover they become part of a daily routine. The children were pushed into early sexual growth and brainwashed to openly represent their sexual inclinations, each day listening to a hypnopedia of “Elementary Sex for the first forty minutes”. With this Huxley slams the public face by making such unethical description in his book; the 20th society did not easily incorporate the researches Freud developed and backed up with