Social Outcast, Lonely, and Scholarly In the novel Brave New World, the three main characters each had their own unique qualities. Bernard was a social outcast, John was a lonely savage, and Mustapha Mond was a scholarly world controller. These three interesting qualities made the characters more fascinating and exciting. Throughout the book, Bernard Marx is displayed as an outcast of society. Bernard doesnt think and feel the same way a majority of the society does. In one scene, Fanny questions Lenina’s judgment about Bernard.
“But his reputation”They say he doesn’t like obstacle Golf,”and then he spends most of his time by himself, alone!” (44).
In chapter 10 the Director of Hatcheries and Conditioning tries to make “a public example” (149) by explaining his decision on sending Bernard to a Sub-Centre of the lowest order. He announces, “By his heretical views on sport and soma, by the scandalous unorthodoxy of his sex life, by his refusal to obey the teachings of Our Ford… He has proved himself an enemy of Society, a subverter, ladies and gentlemen, of all Order and Stability, a conspirator against Civilization itself” (151).
These example’s show how Bernard is displayed as an outcast of society. John is depicted as being very lonely. When John is introduced to his father for the first time, it shows how lonely he must be. For his entire life he has not known his father. When he does meet him it is in front of people he doesnt know in a world he doesnt know. “He came in at once, paused for a moment just inside the door, looked around, then soft on his feet strode quickly across the room, fell on his knees in front of the Director, and said in a clear voice: ‘My father’ ” (153).
The Essay on The Amish: A Small Society by: John A. Hostetler
In the article “The Amish: A Small Society” by John A. Hostetler, John is talking about the Amish society. The Amish societies are a group of highly Christian religious people who are extremely traditional and refuse to adopt conveniences of modern technology. They are known for their simple living, plain dressings, and their reluctance to transition or change with our ever growing societies. ...
“Laughter broke out, enormous, almost hysterical, peal after peal, as though it would never stop” (153).
After Johns mother dies and he realized Lenina only wants him for sex, h feels very lonely. He wants to go with Helmholtz to the islands but is not allowed. “I went to see the Controller this morning, to ask if I mightn’t go to the islands with you. He wouldn’t let me, he wanted me to go on with the experiment. I’m damned if I go on being experimented with.
Not for all the Controllers in the world. I shall go away tomorrow too. Anywhere, I don’t care, so long as I can be alone” (250).
John ends up going to a light house before he eventually kills himself. John is upset and lonely throughout the novel. Mustapha Mond is portrayed as being very scholarly.
He is one of few people who knows much about the ways of the past. He shares his knowledge with a group of fortunate students. “Home was as squalid psychically as physically. Psychically, it was a rabbit hole, a midden, hot with the friction’s of tightly packed life, reeking with emotion” (37).
“The world was full of fathers was therefore of every kind of perversion from sadism to chastity; full of brothers, sisters, uncles, aunts full of madness and suicide” (38).
“Mothers and fathers, brothers and sisters. But there were also husbands, wives, lovers. There were also monogamy and romance, though you probably don’t know what those are” (39).
Mustapha wants society to think the ways of the past are horribly disgusting so nobody would want to know it. These three characters each have their unique trait.
Bernard is a social outcast. John is a lonely savage. Mustapha is a scholarly world controller. The diversities of these three characters make the novel more well rounded and enjoying.