Monday, November 25, 2013

What sort of mood does Huxley try to create in this book? How does he accomplish this?

In addition to the excellent answer
above:


Brave New World is a comedy.
 He uses several devices of comedy to achieve this novel of
ideas:


situational irony: he
presents two extreme worlds in sharp contrast (the utopia of the Brave New World and the
dystopia of the Savage
Reservation).


satire: the
novel is a mix of parody and satire in order to hold up a mirror to human weakness and
folly.  Huxley creates a "worst case scenario" in order to show the downfall of
human


caricature: Huxley uses
real people and distorts their beliefs.  Henry Ford becomes a god, and Vladimir Lenin
becomes a good-looking nurse (Lenina), all as means of showing how pride and folly
distorts us all.


verbal irony
(hyperbole): Huxley says the opposite of what he means.  He exaggerates
so as to achieve thoughtful laughter and to make his audience realize the slippery slope
in the directions of science and technology as they relate to the death of the
individual.


science fiction:
Huxley changes time and venue to create a futuristic world state.  Little did he know
that the dystopias of the Holocaust and World War II were only a few years away, not 400
years in the future.

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