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Brave New World by Aldous Huxley

Do Now: 1. Take 15 Minutes to have someone else read your essay and fill out the peer review. 2. When you’re done, you can speak with the person about it and give them your review. 3. Staple the review of your essay to the back of your essay and hand in (Pile on front Wu-Tang desk.).

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Brave New World by Aldous Huxley

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  1. Do Now: 1. Take 15 Minutes to have someone else read your essay and fill out the peer review.2. When you’re done, you can speak with the person about it and give them your review. 3. Staple the review of your essay to the back of your essay and hand in (Pile on front Wu-Tang desk.)

  2. Brave New Worldby Aldous Huxley A satirical piece of fiction, not scientific prophecy

  3. Utopian and Dystopian Literature ELF 40S Ms. Van Den Bussche

  4. A Utopia is a place or society that appears perfect in every way. • The government is perfect, working to improve societies standards of living rather then their own, social aspects of the community run perfectly. What is Utopia?

  5. Dystopia came from the term Utopia. • It defines a place or society which is in complete chaos. • The citizens are all suffering and are miserable. • Often times in novels what appears to be a Utopian society it first by the visiting protagonist is actually revealed to be a dystopian society. What is Dystopia?

  6. Some Famous/Important Dystopian Novels

  7. Dystopian Films

  8. Aldous Huxley was born in England in 1894, big science family…… grandson of the prominent biologist T.H. Huxley and brother of Julian Huxley, also a biologist. He majored in English when he was unable to pursue his chosen career as a scientist.

  9. HISTORICAL TIMELINE Historical Context : Major new fields/ ideas, goings-on of the time. • ----Psychology and the subconscious • ----Industrial Revolution/ Mass Production • ---- Public Relations/ Advertising • ----- Eugenics - is the belief and practice of improving the genetic quality of the human population (Originated in US) • -----Pharmacology/Drugs

  10. Conditioning and conditioned Response: Pavlov’s Famous Experiment

  11. Henry Ford& THE FORD MOTOR COMPANY

  12. THE MODEL-T AND THE ASSEMBLY LINE

  13. THE MODEL-T AND THE ASSEMBLY LINE

  14. Setting: 2540 AD; referred to in the novel as 632 years AF (“After Ford”), meaning 632 years after production of the first Model T car • Narration: Third-person omniscient • Point-of-View: Narrated in the third person from the point of view of Bernard or John, but also from the point of view of Lenina, Helmholtz Watson, and Mustapha Mond

  15. Huxley on advertising, the media, and propaganda "This is rather alarming that you're being persuaded below the level of choice and reason... Advertisement plays a necessary role but the danger of it to a democracy is this: a democracy depends on the individual voter making a rational choice for enlightened self-interest. What these people are doing [advertisers] when their purpose is selling goods, what the dictatorial propagandists are doing, is to try to bypass the rational side of humanity and to appeal directly to these unconscious forces below the surface--so that you are in a way making nonsense of the democratic procedure which is based on conscious choice on rational grounds... Today's children walk around singing beer commercials and toothpaste commercials."  

  16. BRAND ALPHABET

  17. This novel is as applicable today than it was in 1932. This is a time of: propaganda, censorship, conformity, genetic engineering, social conditioning, and mindless entertainment. • This was what Huxley saw in our future. His book is a warning.

  18. Consider the number of ads for prescription drugs, which are permitted only in the United States and New Zealand • Doctors and consumer advocates believe these ads drive up health-care costs and seduce millions into asking their MDs for drugs they don’t need for diseases they had never before heard of, like restless leg syndrome Do we have a modern soma?

  19. Nature of Happiness • Nature of Freedom • Collective vs. Individual • Applied Science (Technology) and what it does to Human well-being, culture, and happiness • Distractions vs. Higher art and thinking Essential Questions to connect the literature to today’s culture:

  20. DHC – Director of Hatcheries and Conditioning • Henry Foster – works at hatchery • Statistician, efficiency engineer Ch. 1 Characters

  21. Social hierarchy: Alpha, Beta, Gamma, Delta, Epsilon • Bokanovsky Process: causes an egg to divide, “bud” • Podsnap’s Technique – quickened the “ripening” of the embryos • “Decanting” Humans are grown in bottles meant to emulate Uteri Ch. 1“Control of the Human Product”

  22. Technology Survey Complete Technology Survey and reflect on the data. Talk with your neighbors and compare what you have to say about that.

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