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Summary Brave New World Theme

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This Brave New World study pack gives a clear, chapter-linked breakdown of every major theme—control, technology, conditioning, consumerism, happiness vs truth, caste, love, religion, art, nature, and alienation—explained simply and connected to key scenes and characters. Each theme includes quick “exam angles” to help you turn the notes into strong essay points fast, making this a concise, high-impact guide for revising the novel efficiently.

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November 15, 2025
Number of pages
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GRADE 12 IEB
BRAVE NEW WORLD
theme




english hOME LANGUAGE

, 1. Control vs Freedom
Core idea: The World State sacrifices freedom to guarantee stability, comfort and “happiness.”
Ch. 1–2: Total control from before birth
- Hatchery as symbol of control:
The Central London Hatchery is basically a factory for humans. It replaces natural
unpredictability with absolute planning. No one gets to choose:
o their parents (there are none),
o their body,
o their intelligence,
o or even the climate they will “like.”
- Bokanovsky’s Process = control through sameness:
Splitting one egg into up to 96 identical embryos lets the State create whole groups of
interchangeable workers. If people are clones:
o they are easier to manage,
o they don’t feel “special,”
o and it’s easier to replace any one of them.
- Podsnap’s Technique & numbers:
Speeding up egg maturation and bragging about “record yields” shows how human life is
measured like factory output. Freedom is replaced by production quotas.
- Pre-destination:
In the Social Predestination Room, embryos are chemically fixed into castes. This is literal pre-
destination:
o No one is free to choose a career.
o “Choice” becomes an illusion because your abilities and desires have been designed to fit
your job.
Ch. 2: Conditioning of behaviour and thought
- Neo-Pavlovian conditioning:
Deltas are shocked into hating books and flowers. The point isn’t just to stop them reading; it’s
to control what they will never even want.
- Fear + pain → permanent obedience:
The combination of explosions, alarms, and electric shocks shows that emotional responses (fear,
disgust) are engineered the same way as physical traits.
- Economic control disguised as moral duty:
The D.H.C. frames conditioning as “for their own good” and “for the good of society.” This
language hides the fact that these babies never had a choice.
Ch. 3–6: Control of emotions and desires
- Abolition of families = abolition of private loyalties:
Mond explains that family and strong love create loyalties that compete with loyalty to the State.
So:
o No parents → no deeper primary loyalty than the State.
o No marriage → relationships stay shallow, flexible, and easy to break.
- Soma and entertainment as emotional control tools:
Soma is used to:
o block grief (Linda’s death, Lenina’s upsets),
o block anxiety (Lenina at the Reservation),
o block dissatisfaction (Bernard, when he feels “wrong”).
Games, sports and feelies keep people too entertained to think.
- Promiscuity as anti-freedom:
It looks like “sexual freedom,” but it actually removes the freedom to form deep attachment.
“Everyone belongs to everyone else” is a rule, not a choice.
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