In communist nations, Huxley points out, leaders used to control individuals with punishment, just as the representatives of Big Brother frighten and at times torture citizens into submission in Orwell's novel. In describing the modern, postwar world, Huxley acknowledges the prophetic power of George Orwell's 1984. In the depths of the Cold War, a totalitarian world state - a Communist dictatorship, perhaps - seemed a distinct possibility and so, with the world on the verge of destruction or tyranny, Huxley felt compelled to search for and find the hope for freedom missing in his novel. Part of Huxley's reason for "revisiting" the themes of Brave New World stems from his horrified recognition that the world he created in fiction was in fact becoming a reality. In a sense, then, Huxley opened his debate about the future in fiction - for artistic purposes - and then continued it in philosophy with persuasion in mind. In Brave New World Revisited, Huxley dispenses with the fictional construct altogether and lets the ideas themselves form and inform his work. Although the form differs - the work is nonfiction instead of fiction - Huxley's characteristic intelligence and wit enlivens the essays of Brave New World Revisited just as it did in his novel.īrave New World has been called a "novel of ideas," because Huxley takes as his primary focus for the fiction the contrast and clash of different assumptions and theories rather than merely the conflict of personalities. In 1958, Aldous Huxley published a collection of essays on the same social, political, and economic themes he had explored earlier in his novel Brave New World.
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