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Brave New World by Aldous Huxley

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Science Fiction4.01.7M ratings·Published 1932

Brave New World

by Aldous Huxley

Pages311
DifficultyModerate
ToneCool
CategoryScience Fiction
Kineno editors

Editorial review

If '1984' is the dystopia of pain, 'Brave New World' is the dystopia of pleasure — and in many ways the more disturbing of the two, because most of its citizens are happy. Postman's argument that we got Huxley's future, not Orwell's, has only sharpened.

In brief

AI-generated summary

In the World State of 632 A.F. (After Ford), human beings are decanted from bottles, conditioned into rigid social castes, and kept docile by sex, soma, and entertainment. Into this society stumbles 'John the Savage' — and the novel becomes a study in what 'happiness' is allowed to cost.

What you'll leave with

Key takeaways

  • 1

    Soft control through pleasure can be more effective than hard control through fear.

  • 2

    Stability and meaning often pull in opposite directions.

  • 3

    The right to be unhappy is itself a serious freedom.

  • 4

    Mass conditioning works best when its subjects help maintain it.

Who should read this

The right reader

Anyone reading or rereading '1984.' Together they form the canonical dystopian pair.

Themes

What it touches

DystopiaPleasureConditioningFreedom
Emotional tone

How it reads

Cool, ironic, prescient.

Reading difficulty: Moderate

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