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Lenina worries as Bernard hovers over rushing water and expresses how it makes him feel like an individual. Bernard attends his mandatory community solidarity service where the twelve participants eat soma, sing hymns, and have an orgy.Ĭhapter 6: Lenina and Bernard go on a date. Hemholtz desires to write something more meaningful than Hypnopaedic expressions.Ĭhapter 5: Henry and Lenina enjoy their date, with the help of soma. Bernard visits his friend Hemholtz, a physically superior Alpha plus, and the two discuss their yearning for individuality. Chapter Summaries for Brave New World: 4-6Ĭhapter summaries for Brave New World, albeit useful, make a poor substitute for actually reading the novel.Ĭhapter 4: Lenina accepts Bernard’s invitation to visit the Indian reservation. Huxley’s world combines the worst aspects of socialism–the loss of individuality–and capitalism–an unsatiated desire for consuming. Devices used to promote stability are sex, drugs, music, brainwashing, and class consciousness. In their efforts to create social and economic stability, world leaders and scientist use technology and psychology to eliminate individuality and discourage all activity that requires solitude or thought. Lenina tells her roommate, Fanny, that he’s accepted Bernard’s invitation to visit an Indian reservation.Īnalysis: Brave New World, like Orwell’s 1984, portrays a dystopia. Bernard Marx overhears Henry Foster’s conversation in the men’s room and is disgusted by it. Lenina’s roommate advises her to be a good girl and be more promiscuous. Mond discusses industrialization, the world before the revolution, and the invention of soma, the perfect drug used by all citizens to escape from their troubles. The remainder of the chapter involves constant scene switching among Mustapha Mond’s lecture to the students, Lenina Crowne’s conversation with her roommate, and Henry Foster’s conversation with coworkers. The clocks strike four and the day shift ends. Students are shocked that sexual behavior in children and adolescents used to be discouraged. The Director then explains hypnopaedia, a process in which sleeping children are conditioned according to caste by the replay of messages as they sleep.Ĭhapter 3: The Director leads the students to a garden where hundreds of naked children engage in erotic play. The lower castes are also conditioned to love transportation and elaborate sports in order to increase consumption. The whole scene is meant to condition Deltas to hate books and nature. Once they reach the items, alarms sound, followed by electric shocks. They observe a group of 8-month old Deltas crawling towards books and flowers. The embryos are then treated based on its predetermined social caste–Alpha, Beta, Gamma, Delta, Epsilon.Ĭhapter 2: The Director continues his tour and brings the students to the nurseries. The director explains the Bokanovskification process, which takes one embryo and splits it into multiple soon-to-be babies. The director and Henry Foster are conducting a tour. 632 in the social conditioning and hatchery center in London. Chapter 1: The novel opens in the year A.F.
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