
Alphas and Betas remain individuals the Gammas, Deltas, and Epsilons are often oxygen deprived in the. In Brave New World, each class has a name. The conditioning also keeps them from realizing the dangers of their society, and how their society operates by treating people like machines, organizing them into different classes that do different jobs, and even have different intellectual levels. The people of the society are conditioned to take the soma to calm them. Soma Holidays,’ and its use is encouraged at any opportunity, especially when great emotions, like sadness or love begin to arise. The drug is used as a form of recreation, with people often taking. The drug is most important to the people of the society as it is supposed to keep them from some of the tougher aspects of life, like disappointment and sadness.

What you need is a gramme of soma… All the advantages of Christianity and alcohol none of their defects” (page 15). Soma, the magical ultimate drug is what keeps the population from revolting.

The Brave New World’s society values, “Community, Identity, Stability,” (Huxley 1) are most important. Many of the Brave New World’s social norms are intended to “save” its citizens from anything unpleasant by depriving them of the opportunity to experience emotions and to have their own morals and beliefs. The comparison to a wild jet is intended to show the dangers of these activities. The urge has but a single outlet” (Huxley 41). High spurts the fountain fierce and foamy the wild jet. In this consumer based society, the traditional ideal of love and what reproduction have long been disregarded and despised, “Mother, monogamy, romance. A Brave New World is an excellent demonstration of how the advancement of technology could ultimately lead to downfall and a controlled society. Huxley wrote A Brave New World in 1931 in England. In both novels the main character struggles with his society and government to change, which ends up in disaster. 1984 is a novel about Winston, who finds forbidden love within a society that is not aloud to love. the savage,’ who rejects the society of the Brave New World when and discovers that he could never be truly happy there. A Brave New World is a novel about the struggle of John.

With my analysis of both novels, I have come to the conclusion that they are not as alike as you would believe. 1984 There are many similarities and differences between Aldous Huxley‘s A Brave New World and George Orwell’s 1984.
