Transcription of Brave New World
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Aldous Huxley sBrave New WorldBloom s GUIDESCURRENTLY AVAILABLE1984 All the Pretty HorsesBelovedBrave New WorldCry, the Beloved CountryDeath of a SalesmanHamletThe Handmaid s TaleThe House on Mango StreetI Know Why the Caged Bird SingsThe Scarlet LetterTo Kill a MockingbirdAldous Huxley sBraveNew WorldEdited & with an Introduction by Harold BloomBloom s GUIDES 2004 by Chelsea House Publishers, a subsidiary of Haights 2004 by Harold rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means without the written permission of the and bound in the United States of Printing1 3 5 7 9 8 6 4 2 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication DataApplied ForISBN: 0-7910-7566-4 Chelsea House Publishers1974 Sproul Road, Suite 400 Broomall, PA editor: Aislinn GoodmanCover design by Takeshi TakahashiLayout by EJB Publishing ServicesContentsIntroduction7 Biographical Sketch 9 The Story Behind the Story12 List of Characters16 Summary and Analysis19 Critical Views 70 Peter Bowering on Huxley s Use of Soma70 Jerome Meckier on Huxley s Ironic Utopia72 Laurence Brander on the Mass Community 75 Peter Firchow on Satirical versus Futuristic Readings79 Ira Grushow on Brave N
mysticism and Eastern philosophy. These tendencies were augmented when he moved to southern California in 1937. With Heard and Christopher Isherwood, Huxley formed the Vedanta Society of Southern California, and his philosophy was embodied in such volumes as The Perennial Philosophy(1945) and Heaven and Hell (1956).
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