Conformity In Brave New World

Words: 520
Pages: 3

Aldous Huxley, in the chapter 15 excerpt from, ‘Brave New World,’ admonishes his audience of the deficiency of a conformist society and the hypocrisy of John The Savage’s hostility towards this aspect of society. In Chapter 15, Huxley exemplifies the trance-like feeling often coupled with an individual’s obliviousness and reinforces how, in this case, the cost of happiness is one’s own freedom. As an observer of this spectacle, John The Savage’s feels deceived and attempts to educate the pairs of twins how their life of happiness is in actuality their shortcoming. However, John fails to identify this aspect of his own life and as a result lives in his own hypocrisy.
In lines 10-24, John observes how the Delta’s are merely two Bokanovsky groups consisting of 84 identical members per group. John furthermore
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Throughout the excerpt, John experiences three different understandings of the phrase, ‘O Brave New World.’ Initially, John understood the phrase to be inspiring; however, throughout this passage, John altered his perception and regarded it with disgust. On line 40, John discerns a new understanding for the phrase saying, “the singing words seemed to change their tone. They had mocked him through his misery and remorse.” Further on in the passage, John later corrects his observations and appreciates it as a phrase meant to evoke a nihilist passion, applies it to his situation and uses it to cause a revolution among the Deltas. John goes through differing perceptions of the phrase, ‘O Brave New World,’ reflecting on it in awe, disgust, and as rebellion. However, his lack of distinct understanding for the phrase highlights how many of his beliefs are based on following the teachings of others. John, therefore, is similar to the deltas in the sense that both parties conform to society without fully understanding