Are We Living in Huxley's Brave New World? | Book Review and Cultural Insight
Those us who love reading know that there are titles that stay on the TO-READ list for a while. For me "Brave New World", written in 1932 by Aldous Huxley was one of them.
After reading "The Doors of Perception" and "Heaven and Hell" in high school, I was intrigued by this man's forward thinking and insights into human psychology and culture. For those of you not familiar with this author's works you may want to check out some of his writings as they are as relevant today as they day they were written.
This book draws out issues of an apathetic, complacent, disengaged and homogenous culture. The similarities between our modern civilization and this imagined future state is a little creepy in its accuracy.
"Brave New World" is a classic book and essential reading for anyone interested in a unique cultural analysis and insightful fiction. Written in 1932, the book is amazing in its analysis of a possible future which is at times frighteningly similar to the present. Huxley pulls from an extensive understanding of human behavior to draw parallels between his imagined future reality and socially conditioned relationships. Not just a cultural analysis, yet more than a work of fiction, this book takes the reader into a satirical utopia where citizens are not born but decanted and the social stability is upheld through deep and thorough subliminal programming.
We are being programmed and manipulated into believing we live in a freedom-based civilization and fall into believing the State has our best interest at heart.
This book does a great job of creating a fictional future and, in doing so, is able to stimulate a unique criticism of modern culture. This future is one where God is replaced by Ford (the originator of the mass production), family ties are abolished in favor or the belief that "everyone belongs to everyone else" and hypnopaedic conditioning (subliminal sleep programming) replaces unique or individual thoughts. The society is based on stability, "the primal and ultimate need" and the State goes to great lengths to create a population of unwavering and unquestioning citizens.
One parallel that struck me as intriguing was the idea that members of a society were unwilling to question the virtues of the current cultural paradigm. Members of the society are programmed from a very early age to hold a narrow and strict view of acceptable beliefs. Unwilling (or perhaps unable) to be freethinkers, the social order based on stability is upheld. How may folks have you talked with that are unable to comprehend or imagine another reality that what they know?
People are so deeply conditioned, they are unable to consider reality outside of the one they are living.
The citizens unquestioningly fit into a well defined class system, determined at birth. While this takes it farther than the current inequality, it also brings up a lot of question of race and class that may not evident from those steeped within the paradigm of culture. The Epsilon semi-morons do the dirty work for all other classes, whereas the Alphas are the elite class charged with ruling and managing. There is no questioning of this distinct hierarchy.
Social social order is maintained in part due to constant distractions.
The population is constantly stimulated by activities such as electromagnetic golf or feelies (a movie with felt sensations). The idea of spending any time alone is ludicrous, and works of art are outlawed.
The past is erased as it is irrelevant. The individual is dissolved into the collective culture that is manipulated into a constant state of distraction or consumption.
A population that forgets the past and is busy consuming experiences is certainly easy to manipulate and control.
This makes me think of the modern electronic age where we are being programmed to have an ever decreasing attention span and thrive on instant gratification. Consuming one experience and form of media or another; anything to take the attention away form the social inequalities and state of the world. We are being shaped into Sheeple that are great at following the herd. This imagined world does diverge from our current culture in that the "I" phenomenon is much stronger than the collective mind described in this book. One constant though is the push towards consumption.
Consumption is the Key to a thriving society
Both Huxley's future and modern culture share this component. In Brave New World all activities are geared towards consumption- be it through favoring complex forms of recreation that require equipment or the prevalence of personal helicopters among the upper classes. There is no reason to take a walk in the countryside as this consumes few resources.
Just like in this insightful work of fiction, we are duped into believing that consumption is the only road to personal satisfaction. In reality it is benefiting a societal structure, not the collective wellbeing of its members.
Huxley cleverly uses phrase like Ford speed to drive home the innate reliance and focus on consumption. Mechanisms of mass production and consumption replace religion and ideas of God or any force beyond the human-manipulated reality are abolished. This rings true in an era where consumption and convenience are favored over creativity and authenticity.
This book was an insightful and interesting read
Both the historical context (written pre WWII) and modern cultural comparison are worthwhile aspects of the book. For anyone interested in human behavior and how culture affects us as a collective and as individuals, this is a MUST READ. Of course, we still have access to non reference books (not so in this Brave New World) and an ability to execute our freedom of thought and expression. I feel this should be required reading as it points out some serious dangers of an increasingly mechanized and consumption-based culture where we lose a large part of our humanness.
Great write up on this @mountainjewel, I believe we are living in the "brave new world" reality right now. Most people are not questioning the new rules and regulations that are growing day by day. In my city the local government is trying to put new licenses on people that use airbnb and restricting access to police body cam footage. No one seems to mind, no one seems to care. I don't blame them to much though, everyone is working constantly to get by. They are so tired from working a job they hate, and so stressed by the end of the day, all you can do is escape into the unlimited amounts of entertainment available. A world of convenience has been built around us unknowingly trapping us into peaceful slavery. There is an alternative to this reality, but it comes with personal responsibility. It is the harder road and the one less traveled, but I think we need the struggle to feel alive. I think this age of comfort and convenience is part of why there is so much depression/anxiety. I feel like we are meant to feel the pain of existence, and through the struggle, grow to support each other toward their growth.
I totally resonate with what you're saying @makinstuff, although I DON'T resonate with how true it is... Like you point out, the increasing control is scary and downright oppressive.
"A world of convenience has been built around us unknowingly trapping us into peaceful slavery" sums it up pretty well. The wage slavery debt cycle of the modern capitalistic paradigm is a tough one to break, and doing so require A LOT of effort, energy, will and commitment. My partner and I are doing our best, and have certainly touched some of the reasons why everyone ins't dropping out of the maintsream. It requires SOOO much to walk to road less travelled, essentially something thats never happened before. In times past, living connected to the Earth and cycles included tribal, familial and cultural support. Stepping back into that without the cultural framework is a choice that ask much of us.
"I think this age of comfort and convenience is part of why there is so much depression/anxiety" YES YES YES. We go from climate controlled scenarios to avoid the shifting sensations of out environment. We don't allow ourselves to feel truly feel alive when we have distractions and convenience allowing us to avoid so much of life.
Very insightful and well written comment, thanks for contributing to the conversation.
I wish to build a world of peace, truth, individual liberty, and abundance. I believe by withdrawing all support of the current system and focusing support to those on the path to individual self-sufficiency and morality will bring this future about.
I give this a big thumbs up! Me too, and working towards this reality is a daily commitment for me.
good highlight. Yes, we've got to bring technology away from screens and into physical space via AR etc..? And sure be nice to see more green spaces, more harmony with natural world.
We need to feel the hope that technology like blockchain can bring to modern world. And people will always love growing things, be it business, family, microgreens, trees. Mindsets just need to keep changing and get more harmonious, less power-crazy.
That last line really struck me. More harmonious and less power hungry indeed.
I agree that the blockchain offers tangible and realist opportunities for growth, without forsaking the natural world. We're steeming with solar power from our off grid homestead, and steemit is offering a viable income for us.
I am hopeful, if sad at where our cultural values of consumption have led us.
Very good review. This is one of my favorite books. I read it about once a year, along with Orwell's 1984.
I think both Huxley and Orwell had a grasp on cause and effect, as well as the idea that nothing's new and everything works in cycles: the rise of freedom, the complacency that follows, the willingness to give up freedom for benefits, the suppression of freedom, the gaining strength of the ruling class, the end of freedom, the anger of the people, the uprising and revolution, back to freedom cycle.
Good reminder. reading these works yearly seems like a great way to keep these themes in mind.
I think you summed up that cycle brilliantly, well said! It really is an archetypal cultural paytern. The rise, fall, sacrifice,0 revolt, destroy rebuild...
I'll have to read 1984 again, thanks for reminding me.
Its an incredible read but so depressing .. I taught it to 16 year olds last year and they sadly didn't like it.. too wordy for them. The youth of today tsk
Such an important novel. Wonderful post!
George Orwell, “The more people chant about their freedom and how free they are, the more loudly I hear their chains rattling.”
Such a quotable dude.
Such a classic book. I love this kind of dystopian speculative fiction... yet it's not anymore is it... more truth!!! Have you read The Machine Stops by EM Forster?
Great review.