ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
Author Videos 248 videos
We may all be fools when it comes to love, but thankfully none of us will accidentally switch places with our twin brother and fall in love with ou...
Books become classics because they either reflect on or influence the world around us. As was the casewith Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart. Of...
Brave New World 79224 Views
Share It!
Description:
Brave New World is supposed be an exciting book about a negative utopia and the corrupt powers of authority. So where’s the big car chase? What's with all the talking?
Transcript
- 00:04
Brave New World, a la Shmoop. Car crashes, epic battles, cliffhangers, passionate
- 00:11
kisses...
- 00:11
...sounds like enough to keep us entertained for an afternoon.
- 00:14
But the last thing we'd want is a lull in the action.
- 00:17
So why does Aldous Huxley's boundary-pushing book, Brave New World, take two whole chapters
Full Transcript
- 00:23
off to... navel-gaze?
- 00:26
When John, AKA "The Savage,"...
- 00:29
...heads to the big city...
- 00:30
...he finds it full of identical clones controlled by drugs, sex, and genetic engineering.
- 00:36
And he isn't even in southern California.
- 00:40
The brains of this operation is "World Controller" Mustapha Mond, <Moose-toffa Mahnd> who likes
- 00:45
to exile people to islands.
- 00:50
Gotta have a gimmick, right? When John and Mustapha finally meet in Chapter
- 00:54
16, it's the perfect time for a showdown.
- 00:57
Will there be an arm-wrestling match, or... torture?
- 01:00
Nah. Instead, these two main characters have a no-holds-barred, knock-down, drag-out...chat.
- 01:08
Why does Huxley put the brakes on for the rambling conversations in Chapters 16 and
- 01:13
17?
- 01:13
Is he getting paid by the word?
- 01:16
Or was he influenced by multiple viewings of Spider-Man?
- 01:26
Here's one thought... Huxley could be advertising his own beliefs.
- 01:30
Brave New World predicts a future where knowledge is forgotten and replaced with slogans and
- 01:34
instant gratification.
- 01:36
Mustapha has well-reasoned arguments as to why independence should be suppressed...
- 01:41
...but is John right to desire freedom with all its flaws?
- 01:44
Or, maybe these chapters were a shout-out to the Bard. Brave New World references over
- 01:49
15 of Shakespeare's plays.
- 01:51
The Tempest gives the book its name, which comes to mean different things to John over
- 01:55
time.
- 02:03
The Tempest also helps John in matters of love, when he's trying to get rid of Lenina.
- 02:09
<Lennon-uh>
- 02:10
Chapters 16 and 17 may also be a shout-out to a technique that all the cool playwrights
- 02:15
use...the philosophical dialogue.
- 02:19
Philosophical dialogue breaks down a topic through a conversation between two characters.
- 02:24
Through Mustapha and John, Huxley can look at art, science and religion from totally
- 02:29
different viewpoints... kind of like playing yourself at chess.
- 02:33
Philosophical dialogue lets an author make two arguments at the same time—and in this
- 02:37
case, Huxley really wants John to win. So why does Huxley slow it down for chapters
- 02:42
16 and 17?
- 02:44
Is he using "Brave New World" as a billboard for his beliefs?
- 02:48
Or is he proving his status as Shakespeare's BFF?
- 02:52
Shmoop amongst yourselves.
Related Videos
They say that honesty is the best policy, but Jack lies about his identity and still gets the girl. Does that mean we should all lie to get what we...
Ever wish you could remember everything that you ever studied? How about everything that everyone has ever studied? Yeah, pretty sure our brains ju...
Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man is an American classic. Hope you're not expecting any exciting shower scenes though. It's not that kind of book.
Do not go gentle into that good night. In fact, if it's past your curfew, don't go at all into that good night. You just stay in your good bed and...