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.