Brave New World by Aldous Huxley - Mr. Jackson`s Web-site
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Transcript Brave New World by Aldous Huxley - Mr. Jackson`s Web-site
Brave New World
by
Aldous Huxley
Introductory Activities and Notes
Introductory Activities
Has
belief in the power of science
replaced faith in God?
What is happiness, and how can it be
found?
What are some dangers of being
promiscuous?
Why do people use drugs?
I.A., cont.
What are some pros and cons of genetic
engineering? What about cloning?
How are people brainwashed today?
Do you think people are capable of living in
peace? If so, under what conditions?
Why do people dream?
How do you define love?
Introductory Topics
Psychological Conditioning-Pavlovian
conditioning
Sleep teaching
Genetic engineering
Test tube babies
Identity
Social Stability
Community
Intro. topics, cont.
Individual
freedom/happiness
Passion/painful emotion
Consumption of material goods
Mind-altering drugs
Promiscuity
Individual differences
Family in crisis
Intro. topics, cont.
Death
Totalitarianism
Utopia
Henry
Ford/mass production
Karl Marx
Herbert Hoover
Benito Mussolini
Intro. topics, cont.
Propaganda
Overpopulation
Cloning
BNW facts and themes
Science
fiction work
Utopian fiction
Title is from The Tempest by
Shakespeare, and there are numerous
parallels.
Science can be used to control people
Genetic engineering and psychological
conditioning are potentially dangerous
BNW Themes, cont.
Hardship
increases the depth of life
Materialism and pleasure vs.
individuality and freedom
Life without ties is empty
Escapism is often destructive
Study Guide
Chapters 1-2
Do
you think anything like the
hatcheries might be happening today?
How does Bokanovsky’s process work,
and what is it for?
What is the significance of A.F.?
How is Huxley’s depiction of the
Director satirical?
1-2, cont.
What
are some actual scientific
principles presented?
Explain the class system of BNW
What social problems have been
eliminated in BNW?
Explain the motto “Community, Identity,
Stability”
1-2 Cont.
How is Huxley mocking Christianity?
Who are Henry Foster and Lenina Crowne?
Why are the Delta children conditioned to
dislike books and nature?
Why can hypnopaedia be used to inoculate
more beliefs and emotional attitudes but
cannot be used to learn science?
Chapter 3
What
is meant by “history is bunk”?
How are the lectures, the conversations,
and the activities related to each other?
What is the deal with soma?
Why does so much effort go into
conditioning people to be consumers?
What is Huxley satirizing?
Chapters 4 and 5
Share
some opinions about Lenina
How is Bernard different? What are
some things that “trouble” him?
Is Bernard paranoid, or are people
really watching him?
Compare/contrast Helmholtz to Bernard
4 and 5, cont.
What
satire is found in these two
chapters?
What does pneumatic mean?
Chapter 6
Think
of the interaction between Lenina
and Bernard at the beginning of the
chapter. What may they represent?
Is Bernard a coward in this chapter?
What do you think of the Director’s
treatment of Bernard?
What can be inferred about the
Director’s story about his “trip”?
6, cont.
What
is Bernard’s reaction to Iceland?
What is amusing about the scene with
the Warden of the reservation?
Chapter 7
Who
do Bernard and Lenina meet on
the Reservation?
How is Lenina’s reaction to the Rez
satirical?
What is the effect of Lenina’s reaction to
the child nursing?
Compare Linda to Lenina
Chapters 8 and 9
Compare
John and Bernard
Why does Shakespeare have such a
meaning for John?
What theories about London and the
other place does John have? What
gave him these ideas?
When John is alone looking at Lenina
sleeping, what are his thoughts?
Chapters 10 and 11
“…no
offence is so heinous as
unorthodoxy of behavior. Murder kills
only the individual—and after all, what is
an individual?…We can make a new
one with the greatest of
ease…Unorthodoxy threatens more
than the life of a mere individual; it
strikes at Society itself…”
Chapters 12 and 13
“Pierced
by every word that was
spoken, the tight balloon of Bernard’s
happy self-confidence was leaking from
a thousand wounds.”—metaphor
How does John clash with the new
world?
How is love and romance satirized?
12 & 13, cont.
What
is the attitude about science that
the government holds?
What “crimes” have Bernard, John, and
Helmholtz committed?
Shakespeare as “propaganda
technician”
Chapters 14 and 15
Explain
John’s behavior after his mother
dies.
Grief
Death-conditioning
Soma
14 & 15, cont.
Find
quotes in which Huxley satirizes
the following:
Loss
of knowledge of God
The human attempt to create a utopian
world.
Chapters 16 and 17
What
does Mond say is the reason
Othello could not be the same in the
new world?
What happened in the Cyprus
experiment?
The conversation between John and
Mustapha Mond covers at least four
areas:
16 &17 cont.
Their
goal is to arrive at truth through
contradiction
Question and answer is the strategy
There is a logical structure
Each man voices a set of principles
16 and 17, cont.
When
the controller says: “You can’t
make flivvers without steel—and you
can’t make tragedies without social
instability,” what does he mean?
Society is based on the iceberg
Chapter 18
What is John’s new home like, and how does
he feel about it?
How does John handle the taunting that he
endures?
How does Huxley describe John’s suicide?
In the Foreword, how does Huxley explain
why the book had to end this way?
How would Huxley re-write the ending?
Credits
Andrew
C. Jackson
MCMLXXXIII