ABOUT THIS BLOG

This blog contains the literature reviews, political rants, and literary doings of Steven Wittenberg Gordon, the Editor-in-Chief of Songs of Eretz Poetry Review.

Saturday, March 4, 2017

Review of Brave New World by Aldous Huxley

At my (then) teenaged son’s urging, I put Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World (First Harper Perennial Modern Classics edition, 2006, first published by Harper & Brothers, 1932) on my reading list.  He had been required to read it for a high school English class and was deeply moved and disturbed by it.  The book finally rose to the top of my reading queue, and I can see why, as my son is a fine artist (painting and illustration), he felt the way he did about the novel.

As a poet, I share my son’s revulsion at the dystopian world depicted in the novel, but as a scientist and physician I am impressed by Huxley’s prescience.  In the world of the novel, war, disease, famine, poverty, and even the effects of aging and the fear of death have been eradicated by an all-powerful world order ruled by a loyal elite.  Through a disturbingly accurate prediction of the direction of biology, eugenics, and psychology for someone writing in 1932, the inhabitants of Huxley’s world also are devoid of jealousy, romantic love, appreciation of high art and literature, personal ambition, and loneliness.  Taking a psychedelic wonder drug called soma solves any rare breakthrough dysphoria.  There is also no room in this world for God as we understand Him.  His role has been replaced by the reverence of Henry Ford; the cross of Christ replaced by the T (a reference to Ford’s model T).

There are no family ties or obligations in this “brave new world,” as all its human inhabitants are bred in laboratories.  Acceptance of one’s assigned lot in life (there is a strict caste system) is bred into each individual.  This acceptance is hypnotically reinforced, and any residual rebelliousness is quashed by soma.  Happiness (of a sort) is therefore universal, and since “everybody belongs to everybody,” meaningless sex with anyone one desires is easily sought and freely given.

The novel really gets interesting when the bastard son of a high-ranking official is discovered in one of the uncivilized reservations of humanity, who basically live as the American Indians did long ago.  “John Savage,” or simply “The Savage,” an eighteen-year-old who has read all of the works of Shakespeare (one of many forbidden authors), is brought to civilization as an experiment.  He becomes an immediate curiosity and sensation and is given immediate and unwanted celebrity.  He is at once fascinated and filled with revulsion by the civilized world, and his inability to adjust eventually leads to a self-imposed exile.

The edition of Brave New World that I read is fortunate to have a “PS” containing a transcription of a letter from Huxley to George Orwell from 1949, the year 1984 was published.  In it, Huxley predicts that humanity is headed toward something Orwellian in the not-too-distant future, but that such a world will be temporary, a stepping-stone.  Huxley predicts that rule by the threat and application of pain depicted by Orwell will eventually evolve into rule by the elimination of pain.  This “utopia” will come at the terrible price described--a world without passion, poetry, painting, politics, personality, and preference--a cowardly new world.  Ford forbid!