| 1. | BNW vs 1984 ... The two books were entitled, Brave New World (Huxley) and 1984 (Orwell). ... There is very little, if any way anyone can relate the world today to 1984, even metaphorically.
1984 was a very powerful novel. ...
The book Brave New World was very different from 1984. ...
In 1984 there wer...
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| 2. | 1984 and Brave New World 1984 and Brave New World
The novel 1984 by George Orwell and Brave New World by Aldous Huxley offer two authors perspectives on what life on this earth would be like in the future. ... We are 20 years beyond 1984, and still have a couple centuries until we fit into the Brave New World time ca...
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| 3. | 1984 vs Brave New World 1984 vs Brave New World
Undoubtedly, the thought of living in, or forming a utopian society has flashed through nearly every person’s mind. ...
This dream of forming and maintaining a utopian society was immortalized in two novels dealing with the same basic ideas, 1984 by George Orwel...
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| 4. | 1984 vs Brave New World 1984 vs. Brave New World
Neil Postman validly emphasizes that Aldous Huxley’s vision of a blissful utopian future in Brave New World is more applicable today than George Orwell’s 1984 dystopia. ... The world might be perfect, but would the human race be perfect as well? ... The theme of Brave N...
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| 5. | Brave New World In the novel, Brave New World by Aldous Huxley, several aspects of humanity are brought up. ... In Brave New World, however, that pattern is not only slightly skewed, but almost completely opposite of how we live today. ... But maybe that can only happen with true love, which is hardly evident in...
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| 6. | similarities and differences between 1984 and bnw Similarities and Differences
Similarities and differences among people, society, and ways of life, make up our world today. These similarities and differences also tie together two popular novels as well. 1984, by Aldous Huxley, and Brave New World ,by George Orwell, are two perfect portrayals of...
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| 7. | Social Control Mechanisms in Brave New World in Reference to 1984 The Populations in Huxley’s brave new world and Orwell’s 1984 have been suppressed and controlled completely. ... Orwell’s world in 1984 is controlled by thought control and by language. Huxley’s world is controlled by genetic modification and their drive for individual pleasure. The population in ...
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| 8. | use of Controlling Technology in 1984 and Brave New World “It has become appallingly obvious that our technology has exceeded our humanity”. ... The greatest minds have foreseen the damaging effects that technology can have on our society. Albert Einstein, a man who our society greatly acknowledges and honors, told of the dangers technology can hold. .....
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| 9. | Evolution of Our World Brave New World is a form of the world we all seek to live in; in many respects it is a utopian society. ... The Brave New World’s level of satisfaction may be our goal, but the world itself should never be our destination.
The main reason that the Brave New World should never come to be is that t...
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| 10. | Brave New World ... Use of drugs, racial slurs and conversation in daily life are the evidence of conditioning by the world. ... Furthermore, people in Brave New World take soma as alcohol or drugs in our world. ... In the same way, in Brave New World, people feel sickness and are disgusted with looking Linda. ...
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| 11. | Brave New World ... Brave New World by Aldous Huxley, includes realistic aspects of the political history during the 1930s. ... Henry Ford, the God in Brave New World has been considered the father of the economic success. ... Now the World Controllers in the brave new world are able to control the mass pro...
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| 12. | brave new worlld ... "
Reading that fast-forwarded my imagination to a horrible future, one described in Aldous Huxleys "Brave New World," where women of the future undergo surrogate pregnancies. ... **
In "Brave New World," Huxley envisioned a society divided so accurately that the Alphas alway...
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| 13. | Brave New World Brave New World
The most important theme of Brave New World is science as it influences humanity. ... All traces of the old world order have been diminished. ... The World State’s motto: community, stability, identity, leaves no room for individuality. ...
In Brave New World, identities are...
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| 14. | 1984 Analysis The book 1984, by George Orwell, is about Winston Smith’s fight to withstand totalitarian control. ... 1984 was published in 1948. ... 1984 was George Orwell’s view of what the future might hold. By examining the world and point of view of 1984 as well as the characters and their conflicts...
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| 15. | Brave New World Brave New World Essay
Man has always sought for a perfect society, one in which everyone is equal in rights, one in which man is in a perfect state of harmony with one another and crime is inexistent. ... But as the world wars struck and other negative sides of society were shown, a feeling of d...
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| 16. | Brave New World
A Brave New World is an eerie tale of Aldous Huxley’s grim look into the future. ... The Government conditions its people to know and love their social class in the world. ... “Mother” and “Father” are dirty words to the people of the Brave New World. ... Additionally if a person becomes d...
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| 17. | 1984 and modern society ... The actions of the Party in 1984 prove that they are manipulative, evil and inconsiderate of human nature, which is also very common in the events of our world in recent past years and today. ... The Nazis were alluded to different times in 1984 for a very good reason, all through the book Or...
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| 18. | indomitable spirit of man in brave new world ... This is the case in Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World. ... In the middle of their lesson, the World Controller of Western Europe appears before them. ...
At certain times even Lenina Crowne, an ideal, perfect citizen of the brave new world, responds to situations similarly as an individual i...
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| 19. | Authors Ideas in Orwells 1984 No matter what the topic, authors’ own personal thoughts and opinions will appear in their work. ... George Orwell used his novel 1984 to express the dangers of a totalitarian government to a world at risk of becoming dominated by communism. ...
1984 was written before the computer age in 1949. ....
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| 20. | bnw Both Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World and Geroge Orwell’s 1984 present to the reader anti-utopian societies; societies which, when taken at face value, seem perfect, but really are deeply flawed. Both authors wrote their books because they felt that the world was on a course to disaster and they want...
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