Brave New World

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Brave New World
STUDY GUIDE
Chapter 1
What is the very first indication that Brave New World is
a futuristic novel?
2. In a short summary, explain the process of the
“Hatchery”.
3. Do you think that anything like this is happening now or
might happen in the future? Consider that fact that
Huxley wrote this book in 1931 and the many scientific
advances since then.
1.
Chapter 1
4. In what way is the Bokanovsky process a major
instrument of social stability?
5. Describe and explain the response of the students to the
Director.
6. In this World State, what is the primary function of THE
HATCHERY AND CONDITIONING CENTER?
7. What are some actual scientific principles presented?
What seems to be a problem the society has "all but
solved”?
Chapter 1
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
Explain the designations this society gives to
individuals. How are these titles used? What strikes
you as significant about them?
Explain the motto “Community, Identity, Stability.”
What are people giving up to achieve these goals?
At this point, what is your opinion of Huxley’s new
world? Explain your reasons.
How is Huxley mocking Christianity? Why may some
readers be offended by this? Explain.
Who are Henry Foster and Lenina Crowne? What is
your opinion of each?
Chapter 2
In a short summary, explain the processes the
“Conditioning Center.”
2. Why are the Delta children conditioned to dislike
books and nature?
3. Why can hypnopaedia be used to instill more
beliefs and emotional attitudes but cannot be used
to learn science?
4. Near the end of Chapter Two, what does Huxley
state is the aim of the new world’s conditioning?
1.
Chapter 3
Huxley has some fun with names. Note for example, the
allusions of Polly Trotsky, Bernard Marx, and Lenina;
however, the World Controller’s name, Mustapha
Mond, has no reference to a real person. What does
that name suggest to you?
2. What is meant by the paragraph following “History is
bunk”?
3. What about the population did Huxley get wrong?
4. Huxley seems to be using the dialogues of Lenina,
Fanny, Bernard, and Henry to comment on the lecture
or commentary of Mond. What contradictions do you
see between what Mond says and what the others are
expressing?
1.
Chapter 3
5. What were you able to understand about the drug
“soma,” and what is your opinion of this drug? Why
do people need soma?
6. As the chapter progresses, what do you notice
about the shifting of scenes and speakers?
7. How do the Controllers of the new world define
happiness? State why you agree or disagree with
the controllers’ definitions.
8. Why does so much effort go into controlling people
to be consumers? What aspect of his own society is
Huxley satirizing?
Chapter 4
What is your opinion of Lenina? Include some
specific examples of things Lenina says or does that
have influenced your feelings.
2. What makes Bernard stand out among the people
of the new world?
3. In Section 2 of Chapter 4, the narrator gives an
explanation of Bernard’s problems. List the things
that trouble Bernard.
4. Compare Helmholtz to Bernard. Explain both their
similarities and their differences.
1.
Chapter 5
Why do you think Bernard is “much more alone”
and “utterly miserable” during the solidarity service
in Chapter 5? Do you think Bernard is in any way
responsible for his own problem?
2. Huxley has introduced two characters that stand in
opposition to the new world. What is the
significance of these characters?
3. What is the meaning of the frequently repeated
word, “pneumatic”?
1.
Chapter 6
The style of Brave New World is “dialogic” which means several
people with different points of view interact, but no one voice is able to
predominate.
1.
Consider the interaction between Lenina & Bernard at the start of
this chapter. What point of view does each express or represent?
2. Consider Lenina’s reaction to Bernard. What conclusions can
draw about Lenina’s attitude and position? Find examples.
3. Find examples to support the assertion that Bernard’s protest is
more talk than assertion. What is Helmholtz’s reaction to his
friend’s description of the encounter with the Director?
4. What is your opinion of the Director’s treatment of Bernard?
5. When Bernard learns that he actually is going to Iceland, what is
his reaction?
6. What can be considered amusing about the scene with the
Warden of the Reservation?
Chapter 7
What is ironic about Lenina’s comment, “And you feel
so small when you’re on the ground at the bottom of a
hill”?
2. In what ways is Huxley’s description of Lenina’s
reaction to the Indian Reservation satirical? What
makes Lenina seem foolish? How might you apply this
to our attitudes today?
3. What is the effect of the focus on Lenina’s reaction to
the woman nursing a child? What is your reaction to
Lenina’s response?
4. How do you feel about Linda? Why, in your opinion,
has Linda had problems?
1.
Chapter 7
5. Compare Linda and Lenina as they stand together.
6. Explain the irony in Linda’s speech about life on
the Reservation.
7. What do you predict will take place between John
and Lenina and between John and Bernard?
8. Do you think that Lenina would have ended up any
different than Linda if Lenina had been left behind
in the Reservation? Explain.
Chapter 8 & 9
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
What things do you find most interesting about the
details of John’s life? Explain.
Compare John and Bernard.
Why does Shakespeare have such meaning for John?
What theories about London and “the Other Place” does
John have? What gave him these ideas?
What are Bernard’s motives for bringing John back to
London with him?
What do you think will happen to John and Linda in
London? Support your prediction w/details from Ch 8.
When John is alone looking at Lenina sleeping, what are
his thoughts?
Chapter 10 & 11
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
What is your opinion of the Director’s statement: “…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…”?
At this point in the novel, how do you feel about Bernard? About
Lenina? Consider how people in the new world, including
Bernard’s friend Helmholtz, feel about Bernard.
At the feely, John and Lenina view/experience what would today
be considered a pornographic movie. What happens afterward?
What do you see as the main difference between John and Linda
and the other characters, those of the new world?
Describe one activity that the characters engage in during Ch 11
and explain why you would or would not engage in this activity.
Chapter 12 & 13
John clashes with the people, the ideas, and the practices
of the new world.
1.
1.
2.
Describe three specific incidents that illustrate the clash between
John and the people of the new world.
For each incident explain the reason for this clash.
In each of the three incidents, one of the characters of the
new world tries to make his or her position clear to John.
2.
1.
2.
Explain each person’s opposition to John, and copy a short
quotation that best expresses the person’s argument.
Then, explain John’s response to this person and state whether you
agree or disagree with John’s point of view.
Chapter 12 & 13
Chapter 12 ends with Helmholtz’s mockery of Romeo and Juliet.
In Chapter 13, Lenina confides to Fanny her feelings for John and
says, “I shall always like him.” At the end of Chapter 13, we are
told Lenina’s response to John’s remarks about marriage is
genuine shock.
3.
a)
b)
4.
What do you find ironic about this?
What idea about love is suggested to you by these contradictions?
In the middle of Chapter 12, Huxley describes the Controller
rejecting a paper called “A New Theory of Biology.” The Controller
will not allow the paper to be published because it challenges the
idea of “happiness as the Sovereign Good” and this he thinks
might unsettle people in the higher castes. However, the
Controller agrees with the paper’s idea, that the goal of life is
outside the human sphere, and “that the purpose of life was not
the maintenance of well-being, but some intensification and
refining of consciousness, some enlargement of knowledge.”
What do you think is Huxley’s point in this section?
Chapter 12 & 13
5.
6.
7.
8.
Although scientific advances of the past have given humans the
ability to control human reproduction and disease in the new
world, what seems to be the attitude of the government toward
science?
Do you think Bernard has less character than most people would
in his circumstances? Remember that he is undersized for his
caste and has suffered persecution as a result.
At this point in the novel, what behavior of Bernard, John, and
Helmholtz is unorthodox?
We are told that people in the new world do not experience
passion, so they have to be given treatments. For instance, Henry
Foster tells Lenina to get “an extra strong V.P.S. treatment.” We
also see that women get a “pregnancy substitute,” and the
characters take soma on a regular basis so they can escape feeling
passions. What conclusions can you draw from these facts?
Chapter 14 & 15
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Explain John’s behavior after his mother dies. What does he do; why
does he behave this way? How do the people react to him, and why do
they react in this fashion?
How does John act in the incident about the conditioning of the
children? What does he do; why does he behave this way? How do the
people react to him, and why do they react in this fashion?
John’s experiences with the soma distribution and the Bokanovsky twins
are disruptive. What does he do; why does he behave this way? How do
the people react to him, and why do they react in this fashion?
What is the mental picture you have of the Hospital for the Dying?
Do you think that we may see hospitals for the dying like this one if
euthanasia becomes legal in the United States? Do you consider this
death with dignity?
Find quotations in which Huxley satirizes the following:
(A) the loss of any knowledge of God
(B) the human attempt to create a utopian world
What is ironic about the fact that the new world still has a police force,
which appears on the scene quickly?
Chapter 16 & 17
What does Mond say is the reason Othello could not be the same
in the new world? Do you agree with his reason?
What happened to the experiment of an all Alpha society?
As Huxley summarizes his ideas, the dialogic quality of the novel
is heightened. We see this in the dialogue between John and
Mustapha Mond. The argumentative nature of their discussion
appears in four ways:
1.
2.
3.
Their goal is to arrive at truth by exposing the contradictions in each other’s
argument
b) Parts of the discussion are in a question and answer format
c) There is a logical structure which holds their continuous argument together
d) Each man voices a set of principles. The 2 sets of principles are in opposition,
creating an interplay of contradictory principles
a)
Find an example of each of the points listed above. You can quote
some of the dialogue in your answer.
Chapter 16 & 17
4.
5.
6.
7.
The Controller insists that tragedies cannot be written in the New
World. He explains, “You can’t make flivvers without steel–and you
can’t make tragedies without social instability.” What does he mean?
What other reasons does the Controller give for the inability of people
in the new world to understand tragedy?
As this debate progresses, with whom do you find yourself agreeing?
Do you see any evidence of Mond’s viewpoint in today’s world?
What is the Controller’s position on each of the following topics:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Simple-minded people
Leisure time
Change
Science
Individuality
6. Happiness
7. Truth and beauty
8. Religion & belief in God
9. Heroism
10. Passion
Chapter 18
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
What is your impression of the final scene with John,
Helmholtz and Bernard?
Describe John’s new home. How does John feel about
his new home?
What is your opinion of John’s treatment of the people
who come to taunt him?
How does Huxley describe John’s suicide? How do you
feel about John’s death?
Why do you think Huxley wrote this particular ending
to the story?
What ideas about humans, society, life, or science have
you formulated, which ones make sense to you?
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