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Summary Literary Devices Brave New World IEB

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A concise, powerful guide to Brave New World, this document explains how Huxley uses imagery, symbolism, irony, and satire to expose a society that trades individuality and truth for comfort and control. It clearly outlines the novel’s major themes and Huxley’s warning about the dangers of engineered happiness — ideal for fast, effective revision.

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November 18, 2025
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, 1. Conditioning and the Loss of Individuality


Huxley develops the theme of conditioning through symbolism and mechanical imagery in the opening
Hatchery scenes. The Central London Hatchery is described like a factory, with “bottles,” “conveyor belts,”
and “standardised” embryos, turning human reproduction into mass production. This use of industrial
imagery symbolically reduces people to products. The diction is cold and technical—“Bokanovsky process,”
“gamma-minus,” “surrogate”—which creates a dehumanised tone. The setting itself functions as an
extended symbol of a world in which individuality has been literally engineered out of existence.

Repetition and slogan-like phrasing are crucial devices for showing how conditioning invades the mind.
Phrases like “Everyone belongs to everyone else” and “Ending is better than mending” are repeated like
advertising jingles and pseudo-prayers. Huxley uses alliteration and rhythm in these slogans so that they
sound catchy and childlike, mirroring how hypnopaedia works: ideas are not argued, they are simply
drilled in until they feel natural. The very form of the sentence (short, balanced, memorable) is the
device that makes the content so powerful and insidious.


Huxley also uses narrative technique and irony to expose conditioning. The narrator adopts an
apparently neutral, almost textbook-like tone when the Director proudly explains how babies are
conditioned to hate books and nature. This dry, explanatory style is an example of dramatic irony: the
Director sees the process as scientific progress, but the reader recognises it as moral horror. The gap
between the calm explanation and the reader’s shock is where Huxley’s critique lives. The narrator’s
seemingly objective voice therefore becomes an ironic device that highlights how abnormal this “normal”
world is.


Characterisation is another key device: Bernard Marx, Helmholtz Watson, and later John the Savage all
act as foils to the conditioned masses. Bernard’s discomfort—his feeling that “there’s something wrong
with me”—is shown not only through what he says but through free indirect discourse, where his internal
thoughts are blended with the narrator’s voice. This technique lets us feel the clash between his individual
consciousness and the collective norms around him. By making a character’s inner unease stylistically
seep into the narration, Huxley shows how rare—and fragile—individual thought is in a world of total
conditioning.

Industrial Imagery / Symbolism


“The bottles advance… the procession of embryos.”
This imagery turns human life into a factory product. It symbolises the systematic removal of
individuality through industrial mass-production.

Hypnopaedic Slogans (Repetition & Rhythm)


“Everyone belongs to everyone else.”
“Ending is better than mending.”
These rhythmic, catchy lines mimic advertising jingles. Their repetition shows how conditioning replaces
thinking with memorised sound-bites.

Dramatic Irony


“We also predestine and condition. We decant our babies as socialised human beings.”
The Director proudly explains cruelty as progress. The scientific tone is ironic because the reader
recognises the horror behind his confidence.
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