Brave New World Podcasts
Monday, 19 September 2011
Animal Imagery
An examination of the animal motif developed throughout the text. The presentation looks at some specific examples, the language choices made by Huxley and the implications these choices have on our attitude towards the World State.
Sex and Violence Wrap Up
A bringing together of the various threads from this module of work - mainly looking at the way sex is represented in the text and what Huxley is using it for in terms of his wider intentions.
Wednesday, 14 September 2011
Sex and Violence
Huxley makes frequent connection between sex and violence in his text. This presentation examines a number of those incidents and explores why Huxley might have wanted to develop such explicit connections between pleasure and pain.
Monday, 12 September 2011
Consent - John and Lenina
A discussion of issues that go beyond the text and Huxley's broader intentions. This presentation looks at how events in the novel connect to very modern issues, outside of Huxley's immediate awareness. By investigating the relationship between John and Lenina, we can find resonances of modern issues around consent - keeping the novel meaningful and relevant well beyond its own time.
The Solidarity Service
An exploration of Chapter Five. Providing a close reading of this event as a means of exploring how Huxley creates a comic, yet disturbing quasi-religious ceremony to further alienate us from the World State and assist us in seeing its fundamental inhumanity.
Sunday, 11 September 2011
Special Topic - Religion, Art, Brave New World
A recount of what we looked at during a specific lesson. Considerations of the connection between religion and art and how art might replace religion in a society completely disconnected from religion.
John vs. Helmholtz - Art and Expression
An exploration of the how character foil can provide some insight into the power and impact art has. John's ability to express through art is countered by Helmholtz's comparative inability to express. Conclusions about what Huxley is saying can then be drawn.
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