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Rakhi Dalal's Reviews > Brave New World and Brave New World Revisited

Brave New World and Brave New World Revisited by Aldous Huxley
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really liked it
bookshelves: dystopia, haunting
Read 2 times. Last read April 5, 2017 to April 14, 2017.

1984 by Orwell was the first work of dystopian fiction that I laid my hands on. It left me so numb that I couldn't gather my thoughts on the experience of reading it. Then I read Brave New World by Huxley and then We by Zamyatin followed by the little story (The New Utopia) by Jerome.

BNW inspired me to read We. That makes for a reverse order in terms of their time of publication.I am not sure why I felt drawn to these books in succession. May be these readings came in wake of the increasing uncertainty towards the kind of future we are standing on the brink of. I don't know if the nations have become more hostile towards each other than they were ever, whether we the people have become more intolerant towards each other or whether it is because of the faster and consistent accessibility to the happenings around the world that it appears to be the case.

May be I felt that these readings might help me understand the extent to which we humans can advance in order to maintain the supremacy of a selected few/ one in power so that some form of uniformity may be imposed in the name of forced ideals. What these readings really did was to lay bare the fragility of societal structure which can crumble and surrender to the whims of its "selected few/one". But it also made clear the neccessity to exercise our faculties rationally, to be aware of the dangers such advances may hold for the future of human civilization itself.


P.S : Only thing which really didn't go down well with me about this book was the portrayal of the character of John (the Savage). He is born in a savage society, there is no mention of him being ever educated but he has read the complete works of Shakespeare and his discourse later on shows a kind of deep understanding and adherence to an idea of morality which is difficult to imagine owing to his savage upbringing.
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Reading Progress

April 5, 2017 – Started Reading
April 5, 2017 – Started Reading (Hardcover Edition)
April 5, 2017 – Shelved (Hardcover Edition)
April 14, 2017 – Finished Reading
April 14, 2017 – Finished Reading (Hardcover Edition)
July 23, 2017 – Shelved as: dystopia
July 23, 2017 – Shelved
July 23, 2017 – Shelved as: haunting

Comments Showing 1-11 of 11 (11 new)

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message 1: by Shishir (new)

Shishir Chaudhary Nice review, Rakhi! Totally agree with the "..we the people have become more intolerant towards each other.."


Rakhi Dalal Shishir wrote: "Nice review, Rakhi! Totally agree with the "..we the people have become more intolerant towards each other..""

Thanks,Shishir :)


message 3: by Lisa (new)

Lisa Great reflections on why dystopian fiction matters, Rakhi! I also read those books in that order, and to me, 1984 still matters most, even though I recognise that BNW and We have some additional points that are almost more important today than Newspeak and Big Brother's hate propaganda.


Rakhi Dalal Lisa wrote: "Great reflections on why dystopian fiction matters, Rakhi! I also read those books in that order, and to me, 1984 still matters most, even though I recognise that BNW and We have some additional po..."

Thanks, Lisa :) There seems so much going on in the world which is terrifying if we think of the future of next generations. How can we make a difference in terms of making a change in these situations is the question which haunts me. I just hope they have a better world to live in.


message 5: by Colin (new) - added it

Colin Aldous describes how John worked his way through books, and I believe it's implied that he receives more books from his mother's sex-friend.

Later on when John portrays a deep understanding of moral decisions, I believe this is Aldous showing us that literature educates us in moral lessons. I'm of course only half way through currently, but so far John hasn't exceeded what I would expect from his self education.


Rakhi Dalal Colin wrote: "Aldous describes how John worked his way through books, and I believe it's implied that he receives more books from his mother's sex-friend.

Later on when John portrays a deep understanding of mor..."


Yes, Aldous implies that but it is never brought to notice how he learns to read in the first place. I had trouble imagning his mother's or her sex-friend's ( who is also violent at times if I remember correctly?) contribution in his early introduction to written word.


message 7: by Colin (new) - added it

Colin I thought his mother helped teach him to read that operations manual? After that i thought it was explained how he stumbled his way through other books?

My mother taught me how to sound out words (like im sure everyone was taught), and from there i continued reading. Perhaps I am projecting, but this is what i thought Aldous was implying.

Its entirely impossible that I'm incorrect, but this is how I interpreted it.


Rakhi Dalal Colin wrote: "I thought his mother helped teach him to read that operations manual? After that i thought it was explained how he stumbled his way through other books?

My mother taught me how to sound out words ..."


Perhaps you are right. Quite possible that I might have missed that. Time for a re-read I guess :)


message 9: by Colin (new) - added it

Colin Randomly happened to be reading this article. It happenes to be unintentionally relevant: #


Rakhi Dalal Colin wrote: "Randomly happened to be reading this article. It happenes to be unintentionally relevant: #"

Thanks for the link, Colin. I enjoyed reading it, found it well articulated and agreed with the importance given to attention while reading.I also agree that reading makes us better human beings. Thanks again :)


message 11: by Matthew (new) - added it

Matthew Cramer My mom made me read 1984 and then Brave New World immediately afterwords.


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