Dystopias are inherently conservative. They project contemporary trends into a future where all their negative implications are realised and all their benefits fall away. Human beings, they tell us, cannot be trusted with science- and new technologies will always be used to oppress and destroy- so turn your back on progress and stick with the tested verities of family, home and the boy or girl next door. Don't go up to the big city, child, stay here in the village and help mum and dad raise goats. Above all, be safe.
No, I don't like Brave New World. I don't like its snooty cynicism about human nature and I don't think it's much cop as a novel either. Characterisation is minimal, ambiguity has gone walkabout. The first thirty or forty pages are devoted to the itemisation of a process of baby-manufacture which was always fanciful and which actual scientific progress has rendered terribly wide of the mark- which means, apart from anything else- that it's boring. Nothing dates faster than prophecy. The satire is broad, unsubtle- in the manner of undergraduate review. And why in the name of Ford is a consumerist society that has scrubbed out its history full of people named for the heroes of international communism? A girl called Lenina? Give me a break. Maybe if I read on I'll be given a cogent reason- but I'm not going to enjoy reading on.
It's all so terribly 20th century.
No, I don't like Brave New World. I don't like its snooty cynicism about human nature and I don't think it's much cop as a novel either. Characterisation is minimal, ambiguity has gone walkabout. The first thirty or forty pages are devoted to the itemisation of a process of baby-manufacture which was always fanciful and which actual scientific progress has rendered terribly wide of the mark- which means, apart from anything else- that it's boring. Nothing dates faster than prophecy. The satire is broad, unsubtle- in the manner of undergraduate review. And why in the name of Ford is a consumerist society that has scrubbed out its history full of people named for the heroes of international communism? A girl called Lenina? Give me a break. Maybe if I read on I'll be given a cogent reason- but I'm not going to enjoy reading on.
It's all so terribly 20th century.
no subject
Date: 2018-01-22 07:37 pm (UTC)Just as there's no point in rebelling against the overlords so there's no point in trying to better the human condition through science and research. I don't suppose Huxley would have thought of himself as being anti-scientific- but all the science we see in BNW is bad science- or rather science used in the service of oppression- and the moral seems to be don't mess with test tubes, boys and girls, because only harm can come of it.
A few years back I read Island- which is Huxley's attempt to balance BNW with a Utopia. It's a very bad novel but not so very much worse than BNW.
The Huxley I have time for is the groovy old Californian dude who wrote books about mysticism and psychedelics.
no subject
Date: 2018-01-22 07:57 pm (UTC)He's one of my favorite science fiction writers and less obscure than he used to be, but still not as celebrated as he deserves. I discovered him with "The Ballad of Lost C'mell" (1962), which I still love. It looks as though a number of other stories are available at the same site if you like it enough to read more.
It's a very bad novel but not so very much worse than BNW.
Is it bad in the same ways?
The Huxley I have time for is the groovy old Californian dude who wrote books about mysticism and psychedelics.
I can see that.
no subject
Date: 2018-01-23 09:10 am (UTC)