Leonard Gaya's Reviews > Brave New World

Brave New World by Aldous Huxley
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Brave New World is a young man's novel, written in the interwar years. Huxley was then living in a collapsing world: a world where the optimist 19th-century dreams of progress, of improved humanity, of a new and superior man, had been shattered in the trench warfare of World War I and were about to be burned amidst the horrors of the concentration camps.

Huxley seems to be sensing that grave danger is looming on the horizon, and he imagines a utopia where a single superstate is ruling the whole planet. The dream of a “superior humanity” has eventually come true, thanks to the extensive use of eugenics and mass cloning (babies in bottles). Not all people get the best genetic formula, however: some of these manufactured humans are reduced to imbecility, perform the lowest functions, and are nonetheless content with their lot. Children, of course, are all brainwashed and conditioned with hypnotic techniques (sleep teaching). There are no families anymore, and sexual promiscuity is pervasive. Adults get a further supply of silly entertainment (Feelies) and drugs (Soma) that renders them docile, keeps them young, and make them love their voluntary servitude. People have lost interest in art and science, and religion has been replaced by Henry Ford’s cult (i.e. assembly line applied to human beings) and occasional orgiastic ceremonies (orgy-porgies). In short, humanity has achieved happiness and reached the End of History.

To some extent, Huxley’s prophecies have become a reality, less than a century later: rational, hierarchical, hyper-efficient and optimised capitalism and cheery consumerism have conquered most of the world. The sexual revolution has indeed taken place — although full sexual libertarianism is still a pipe dream. Pharmacopoeia, narcotics, antidepressants, tranquillisers and rejuvenating treatments are broadly available; as well as irrelevant and mind-numbing 3D entertainment, peppered with commercial slogans. Genetic engineering and biotechnology are everywhere (although not used to select humans as yet).

Brave New World is a novel structured around a set of (rather crude) characters and plots; there is, however, no clear protagonist. Huxley has a witty tongue-in-cheek sense of humour throughout. Some passages even have a purely poetic or musical quality: particularly through the use of Shakespeare’s lines for the character of John Savage, or the cross-cutting technique employed in chapter 3. But by and large, the book feels like a philosophical essay or social satire, in the style of Voltaire’s Candide or Swift’s Gulliver's Travels. Obviously, Huxley had Plato’s Republic in mind, when designing his Alpha / Bêta / Gamma / Delta / Epsilon caste system (he was probably also referring to the school grades: A+ to F, already in use when he was a pupil at Eton College, or even to the caste system in India). Certainly, he remembered Nietzsche’s “Letzte Mensch” from Zarathustra’s prologue: a human type that has indeed invented happiness, comfort and social stability, but ultimately a petty and lethargic sort of humankind. A type of humanity that might well be appealing to us right now, who knows…

Brave New World is obviously a fascinating political statement that spoke to the European crisis of the 1930s. But its visionary impact and influence on speculative fiction cannot be overstated, from Orwell’s 1984 to Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451, to Atwood's Oryx and Crake, and to Houellebecq’s La Possibilité d'une île.

See also my review of Brave New World Revisited.

Edit: Watched Universal’s 2020 TV series adaptation. It is by and large faithful to the novel’s plot and characters, but ends up taking more and more liberties as the episodes go by. It’s also focusing way more on the entertainment potential of the book (especially the erotica aspects of the orgy-porgies) than on the political debate around the problem of happiness vs freedom. All references to Shakespeare have been removed as well, although the romance is a central part of the show (not so much in the book). Ultimately, Huxley’s philosophical novel serves as the rib cage of the series, but its heart is more like Black Mirror, Westworld, The Matrix or even Fritz Lang’s Metropolis. Nonetheless, a pleasant “feely” with some nice eye candy!
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Reading Progress

January 31, 2015 – Shelved
January 31, 2015 – Shelved as: to-read
September 12, 2017 – Started Reading
September 25, 2017 – Finished Reading
September 28, 2018 – Shelved as: favorites

Comments Showing 1-27 of 27 (27 new)

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message 1: by Jill (new)

Jill Hutchinson Brilliant review, Léonard.


Leonard Gaya Thanks, Jill! :)


Adina (way behind) Great review. i was impressed by this dystopia.


Leonard Gaya Thanks, Adina. I'm not sure I'd say it's impressive (as in spectacular), but indeed disturbing.


message 5: by Martel (new)

Martel Amazing review, Léonard :)


Leonard Gaya Thanks so much, Martel! :)


Kevin Ansbro Excellent review of Huxley's enduring, somewhat prophetic, classic, Léonard.
As well as being a satirist-turned-philospher, he was possibly clairvoyant too!


message 8: by Dan (last edited Oct 10, 2020 01:18PM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Dan Lutts Great review, Leonard -- especially the way you tie it to modern times today.


Leonard Gaya Thank you very much, Dan! And yes, some parts of this novel are like a foreboding our our current time.


message 10: by Mick (new) - rated it 5 stars

Mick Dubois Great and insightful review


Leonard Gaya Thanks, Mick!


message 12: by Gary (new) - rated it 5 stars

Gary K Bibliophile Great review Leonard! This book is definitely an interesting (if not bizarre at times) prediction of the future - quite impressive considering when it was written


Leonard Gaya Thanks, Gary! Yes, I am quite fascinated by Huxley’s vision. Even though he didn’t get everything right, he was indeed incredibly close!


Swati Excellent review, Leonard! :)

I Just finished reading the book yesterday. Even my first thought about the social hierarchy system in the book was that it reflects the Hindu caste system. I haven't read The Republic, so I can't relate to that.

I was keen on watching the TV series too, but wanted to read the book first. I saw the first episode, and they take liberties from the beginning, which was a bit disappointing (they literally altered Helmholtz entire personality, in fact none of the characters really match the book version). As you rightly mentioned it seems only focused on the entertainment value and the book only serves as the rib cage. Had I watched the show before, I think I would have liked it more. Though I will still watch it.

Have you watched the old film adaptation?


Leonard Gaya Thanks very much, Swati! Glad to know I wasn’t completely wrong regarding the caste system. I agree, quite often watching the movie/TV adaptation is more enjoyable without prior knowledge of the book—I guess the flaws go unnoticed then. No, I don’t remember watching the old film, is that the 1998 version?


Swati Hi Leonard

I noticed 2 film adaptations, 1980 & 1998. Was wondering if you saw either and if it's any good. But I already have my answer.

Basically wanted to know if those adaptations are worth watching.


Leonard Gaya I’m glad you already know the answer to your question, because I don’t—haven’t watched any of those. Curious to know what you think though… Random thought since we’re on the topic of cinema: I guess you could find quite a few similarities between Huxley’s novel and Fritz Lang’s Metropolis from around the same time (sci-fi, political satire, caste system, revolution, etc.).


Swati I looked online, and it seems everyone prefers 1980 version over the 1998 version. I'm not sure if I'll find the 1980 version but will try, perhaps YouTube will have snippets if not the full version.

Also, thank you for recommending Metropolis, will check it out. :)


message 20: by Leonard (last edited Jul 15, 2021 03:55PM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Leonard Gaya Michael wrote: "https://www.goodreads.com/quotes/7942..."

Thanks for that quote, Michael. It seems Huxley feared a lot of things—in fact, the same things Nietzsche described in Zarathustra’s Prologue, when talking about the last man…


message 21: by Leonard (last edited Jul 15, 2021 04:00PM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Leonard Gaya Swati wrote: "Also, thank you for recommending Metropolis, will check it out. :)"

Of course! Metropolis is a masterpiece, that had a huge influence on the sci-fi genre (e.g. Blade Runner). Hope you’ll enjoy it!


Kevin Carson It included a couple of themes that seem to have been fairly common in the 20th century. 1) The obsession with how to deal with overproduction -- similarly addressed through forced consumption in "The Midas Plague"; 2) Visions of global technocratic rule being imposed through co-dominium of all the strategic air forces of the major nations, or some comparable entity (H.G. Wells, Heinlein in Starship Troopers, etc).


message 23: by Michael (last edited Jul 15, 2021 04:52PM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Michael Perkins Just re-read about "the last man." Uncanny. Nietzsche was incredibly insightful.

I also think of the Book of Ecclesiastes (Qoheleth) in the Hebrew Bible. Q has done it all and is tired of life and says "all is vanity." (Some scholars consider the stuff about praising God a gloss).

Also the Legend of the Grand Inquisitor in Brothers K where the Churchman says that people don't know what to do with their freedom, so the Church has decided to tell them what to believe and what to do.


Leonard Gaya Kevin wrote: "It included a couple of themes that seem to have been fairly common in the 20th century. 1) The obsession with how to deal with overproduction -- similarly addressed through forced consumption in "..."

Thanks, Kevin. You’re probably right, although I don’t think these topics are stated in these exact terms. As you know, Huxley developed his ideas in a more didactic fashion in Brave New World Revisited. Worth a read as a sort of appendix to the novel.


message 25: by Leonard (last edited Jul 23, 2021 11:05PM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Leonard Gaya Michael wrote: "Just re-read about "the last man." Uncanny. Nietzsche was incredibly insightful.

I also think of the Book of Ecclesiastes (Qoheleth) in the Hebrew Bible. Q has done it all and is tired of life an..."


Absolutely, absolutely! In fact, I think Nietzsche was warning us against that Qo/Schopenhauerian spirit of despair that might (and, in a way, did) lead to a culture of short-sighted-nihilistic-hedonistic sheep—described in Huxley’s novel, as a sci-fi allegory!


Michael Perkins Haven't read Schopenhauer. Very interesting. Makes me think of the excesses of The Weimar Republic. Eat, drink and be merry, for tomorrow we die.


Leonard Gaya Ha, the Weimar Republic lives on!


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