Chapter 1-2
Chapters 3-6
Chapters 7-9
Chapters 9-10
Potpourri
100
Name each caste in order, from most superior to least.
Alpha, Beta, Gamma, Delta, Epsilon.
100
What is the term for sleep teaching?
Hypnopaedia.
100
What satisfies Linda's desire for soma?
Mescal (hard liquor).
100
What is the first thing Lenina does when she's back at her rest-house?
Pop a ton of soma.
100
What is the motto of the World State?
Community, identity, stability.
200
What is decanting? 
Birth, essentially.  The bottles are kept under red lights for 267 days and then poured out into the sunlight.
200
Who is Mustapha Mond?

Resident Controller (1 of 10 World Controllers)


200
Who is Linda's lover and what does John do to him?
Pope - and John stabs him repeatedly.
200
Why does Mustapha Mond allow Bernard to bring Linda and John to London?

He finds them of "sufficient scientific interest."


200
What are Solidarity Services? What is the purpose of these services?
Mandatory service (every other week). Twelve people sit in a circle and take soma, recite verses, and have an orgy. The goal is to "become one" -- another example of "everyone belongs to everyone else."
300
What is the Bokanovsky Process?  Who receives this process (and who doesn't)?

The process causes the fertilized eggs to split into identical genetic copies of the original (up to 96).

Only the lower castes (not Betas and Alphas).

300
What happens to people when they die? What becomes of their bodies?

Slough Crematorium --> the gases produced are treated and the phosphorus is then used for fertilizer. (How cool that dead citizens can be still useful!)

300
Why doesn't Linda get along with the other savages? What do the women do to her as punishment?
She sleeps with all the men. They whip her.
300
How does Bernard act after receiving permission to bring Linda and John back with him? What does this tell us about his personality?
He is self-assured and almost rude to the Warden. Bernard seems to enjoy holding power over others...His motives for bringing Linda and John to London are probably not "scientific."
300

How are citizens conditioned to become consumers? Why would appreciating culture or nature be at odds with consumption? 

Consumerism and the pursuit of pleasure acts as a numbing agent. Don't think, just keep moving forward and satisfying your needs. 


Citizens of the World State do not question. "Ending is better than mending."

400
How are the lower castes conditioned to not like flowers and books? Why does the State do this?
They are electrocuted when in contact with flowers and books. A very loud alarm also plays. Books/flowers represent culture, individual thoughts, and leisure. The lower castes especially do not need these functions (they need to know how to work).
400

Explain the allegory that the Director makes using water under pressure in a pipe. How does it illustrate the danger of monogamy or other exclusive relationships?

Monogamy is constricting and leads to temptations and unhappiness. Emotions lead to instability. Better have a free-for-all where detachment leads to happiness.
400

What ceremony is John excluded from participating in? How does he respond to his exclusion? 

"Boy to manhood" ritual. He simulates his own ritual and says that surviving alone and being close to nature and death served as a true coming of age ritual.
400

What is the Director's reaction to seeing Linda & John? What causes an uproar of laughter from the workers?


"Pale, wild-eyed, the Director glared about him in an agony of bewildered humiliation." 

John calling the D.H.C. his "father." This acts as comedic relief.

400

“Lying in bed, he would think of Heaven and London and Our Lady of Acoma and the rows and rows of babies in clean bottles and Jesus flying up and Linda flying up and the great Director of World Hatcheries and Awonawilona” (Ch 8).

What is the context of this quote? What does this passage help us understand about the character referenced?

This quote describes John's upbringing and his influences. He knows (1) the Reservation, (2) his mother's stories about London, and (3) Shakespeare's plays. His knowledge of the world is a mashup of these elements. 
500

What does Huxley mean when he compares hypnopædia to drops of sealing wax falling on granite? (as opposed to regular learning, which is like water on rocks?)

Water can wear holes in the hardest of granite; wax adheres to and becomes part of the rock. Sleep teaching is like the wax - until the mind IS the suggestion. Water takes a long time; wax is immediately gripping, and lasts forever (childhood into adulthood).

500
How does Helmholtz act as a character foil to Bernard? Explain both the comparisons and the contrasts.
They are similar in that they both question their society, but they are different in that Helmholtz is at the top of the social ladder, while Bernard is at the bottom (within his caste). 
500

Miranda is a character in Shakespeare’s play, The Tempest. Explain why John might connect to her character. 

Miranda was on an island with only her father and one other person (from ages 3-15). She does not know anything other than the island, just as John only knows the Reservation. (Also: Miranda instantly falls for Prince Ferdinand, and John instantly falls for Lenina).

500

What is John tempted to do when he finds Lenina sound asleep? Why does he stop?

Touch her. He doesn't allow himself to do this, though. Instead, he is ashamed of himself for his immodest thoughts. 
500

“‘How many goodly creatures are there here! How beauteous mankind is!’ ... ‘O brave new world...John laughed, but for another reason--laughed for pure joy…’O brave new world,’ he repeated. ‘O brave new world that has such people in it” (Ch 8).

Explain the meaning of the quote. What is John referencing as the "brave" and "new" world? Why? Why do you think Huxley titled his novel "Brave New World"?

After hearing that Bernard will take him to London, (and that Lenina and Bernard are not married), John is overjoyed. He is excited to finally see the world that his mother has been telling him about (London). 
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