Social Isolation In Brave New World

Words: 526
Pages: 3

In The Machine Stops, what causes a social isolation environment is the Machine. Forster depicts increasing human reliance on the Machine, a “dystopian” world where they live underground because the surface is not viable and they depend on a sophisticated system. For instance, Vashti says “The surface of the earth is only dust and mud, no life remains on it, and you would need a respirator, or the cold of the outer air would kill you” (53). Therefore, the main matter is a sense of isolation, “the clumsy system of public gatherings had been long since abandoned; neither Vashti nor her audience stirred from their rooms” (54). Forster describes that the people live in “a small room, hexagonal in shape, like the cell of a bee” (51). They are unable …show more content…
From the beginning of the novel, Huxley paints a picture of the imaginary world state that uses technology as a means of social control in which it is called self-isolation. Huxley depicts that an isolated virtual world based on new concepts such as “COMMUNITY, IDENTITY, STABILITY” ( ). Where control begins from the moment of testing in the embryonic hatching tube to death through a complete cycle of the life of creature born through technology and genetic engineering; “racks upon racks of numbered test-tubes...they have to be kept at thirty- five instead of thirty-seven. Full blood heat sterilizes” (16). Huxley shows the process of adapting its population before they rely on embryos in the reproduction tubes. A person is created in an absolute self- isolate, away from family emotions that have become repugnant. “Family, monogamy, romance ... a narrow channeling of impulse and energy” (45). Father and mother function is dispensed with. The industry of people who have no ability to revolt because they do not want it. From the beginning of the novel, Huxley paints a picture of the imaginary world state that uses technology as a means of social control and “makes for virtue and happiness; generalities are intellectually necessary evils” (16). Consequently, Huxley targets a broad category that exists in different societies and belongs to all classes. A group living alone without a real family, a partner, a friend and excluded from the social presence in order to get