Confusing Action Reaction Action In The Book example essay topic

679 words
A Brave New World By Aldous Huxley Though Aldous Huxley leaves this book at a definite ending, he leaves you wondering what will their society be like because the "Savage' must have changed it. The theme for this book would have to be, "For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. ' True, this is Newton's third law, but it does apply here. This theme is stated from the beginning of the book, though thoroughly present, it did not seem too important to me until later. When the reader first meets Bernard Marx, they find out that he is a "conditioner. ' His job is to brainwash the citizens of the world as they know it.

In this world with no parents, and your life position determined before they are "decanted,' conditioning, is put into use immediately. The conditioning board, like our commercial writers, make snappy jingles to stick in the people's heads and be triggered when talking about that certain situation. Examples of this are used often in the book. For instance, throughout the book many people use the saying about the rank system in the book. This is, "Alpha children wear gray. They work much harder then Bat as? , because they are so frightfully clever.

I? m awfully glad I? m a Beta. Betas are much better then Gammas and Deltas. Gammas are stupid. They all wear green, and Deltas all wear khaki. Oh, and Epsilons are still worse?' Other examples of conditioning are, "A gramme is always better then a damn,' referring to the soma they take. Soma is our equivalent of a mind altering drug.

In their world they take it like we drink Pepsi or another everyday item. They use soma to ease their troubles and they get daily rations so they will never run out. Another example of the theme being present in the book is the civilized people's promiscuity interacted with John the savage. John grew up on the reservation, which was the closest thing to our kind of world in their time, which had different morals. When Lanina wanted John, he reacted in the way he knew was morally right, (a thing their society didn? t have, morals.) and she acted in the way she was conditioned to. She came on to him strong and he initially reacted, then remembering his conscience and that she probable didn? t understand what love was, changed his mind.

With a small quibble on his part and her freaking out, she locked her self in the bathroom. When he knew he loved Lanina, and that even though she wanted him sexually, she would never love him, he gave up on her. When he asked the Controller if he could join Bernard and Helmholtz, his only friends by being sent to an island, the Controller said "No. ' Because of this John decided to move to an abandoned lighthouse far away from anyone. This is another case of the views and regulations causing a action-reaction. The most prominent and most confusing action-reaction action in the book is the ordeal where John beat and killed Lanina and then killed himself after he realized what he had done.

Because of society's grips and taunts of him at the lighthouse, he gave them what they wanted, a show. As he beat Lanina he yelled, "Strumpet! Fry, lechery, fry!' In these words he was condemning all of the way society was, not just her, for he still loved her. Though this book was confusing and a bit hard to relate with since the honored Ford, the maker of automobiles, instead of God. Many of the points Huxley made were interesting. He stated obscure things and made the reader think of a world with out Shakespeare and free choice.

This book was well written and beyond a doubt, on the weird side.