Thursday, 9 April 2009

EUGENICS-BRAVE NEW WORLD- HUXLEY-GALTON- DARWIN -ORWELL

BRAVE NEW WORLD- HUXLEY-  EUGENICS.-GALTON- DARWIN -ORWELL


In Our Time banner
Listen to the latest editionThursday 9.00-9.45am, repeated 9.30pm.

Programme details

Thursday 9 April 2009
The author of Brave New World Aldous Huxley (1894-1963) pictured at his typewriter circa 1946
BRAVE NEW WORLD

Find out more about this subject by using our research page

In Act V, Scene I of Shakespeare’s The Tempest, the character Miranda declares:

“O wonder! How many Godly creatures are there here!
How beauteous mankind is! O Brave new world! That has such people in it!”

It’s perhaps the only line of Shakespeare to be made famous by someone else, for Brave New World is not associated with Prospero’s Island of sprites, magic and wondrous noises, but with Aldous Huxley’s dystopia of eugenics, soma and zero gravity tennis. A world, incidentally, upon which literary references to Shakespeare would be entirely lost.

Brave New World is a lurid, satirical dystopia in which the hopes and fears of the 1930s are writ large and yet the book seems uncannily prescient about our own time. But why did Huxley feel the need to write it and is Brave New World really as dystopian as we are led to believe?

Contributors

David Bradshaw, Reader and Tutor in English Literature at Worcester College, University of Oxford

Daniel Pick, Professor of History at Birkbeck, University of London

Michèle Barrett, Professor of Modern Literary and Cultural Theory at Queen Mary, University of London

In Our Time banner
Conduct your own research by using our links and reading list.
Brave New World

Further Reading

The Hidden Huxley by David Bradshaw (Faber, 2002) 

Aldous Huxley: The Critical Heritage, ed. Donald Watt (Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1975)

The Intellectuals and the Masses: Pride and Prejudice Among the Literary Intelligentsia, 1880-1939 by John Carey (Academy Chicago Publishers, 2002)

In the Name of Eugenics: Genetics and the Uses of Human Heredity by Daniel Kevles (Harvard University Press, 1998)

The Mismeasure of Man by Stephen Jay Gould (Norton, 1996)

Faces of Degeneration: A European Disorder, c. 1848-1918by Daniel Pick (Cambridge University Press, 1993)

Brave New World Revisited by Aldous Huxley (Harper Perennial Modern Classics, 2006)


Links

Brave New World

Brave New World Revisited

Wikipedia