Utopia And Dystopia In Aldous Huxley's Brave New World

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Brave New World is both, utopia and dystopia. The author Aldous Huxley intended to depict an imagined new world after Ford, an industrial era, where all people would be happy and extremely satisfied or as content as the ideal society would let them be. Yet, to determine utopia and dystopia in Brave New World, we have to look at the new world from our own time and from the time before Ford, seen through the eyes of John the Savage, our predecessor. The world we observe herein reflects a futuristic world, a world that is to come, and a happy world we can imagine with an amount of disbelief. People of our world, the world which is happier than the savages' world, still not as happy as the Ford's world, will have to consider all the facts that make the new world look happy and brave. …show more content…

No feelings exist there, people are not free to make their own choice, their physical existence is abuse of their "blood and flesh" without any pain for "pain's a delusion" (Huxley, 2002:108). Women are "decent" Alpha Leninas, highly respected whores; all people enjoy promiscuity. Svetozar Koljević cites June Deery that "women in the society are seen and regard themselves as "meat" and, as in our society, meat which must be lean, not fat" (Koljević, 2002:136). As sexually immorality caused decay of Rome, so it could have the same implications on BNW. The brave new world is just a technically advanced world, a new world that was foreseen by Ford, the master of mass production. Ford is the God, the master of a technologically perfected world of commodities and consumers, the one who "looks down" at his consumers, who blindly follow their consumer instincts and beliefs. Identity of the consumers comes with their religion in Ford and massive consumption and comforting with their sins. The followers have no freedom to feel, think over or react to all the