Un mundo feliz

Paperback, 267 pages

Spanish language

Published Nov. 8, 1994 by Plaza & Janés.

ISBN:
978-84-01-42285-0
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
434055181

View on OpenLibrary

4 stars (71 reviews)

Originally published in 1932, this outstanding work of literature is more crucial and relevant today than ever before. Cloning, feel-good drugs, antiaging programs, and total social control through politics, programming, and media -- has Aldous Huxley accurately predicted our future? With a storyteller's genius, he weaves these ethical controversies in a compelling narrative that dawns in the year 632 AF (After Ford, the deity). When Lenina and Bernard visit a savage reservation, we experience how Utopia can destroy humanity. A powerful work of speculative fiction that has enthralled and terrified readers for generations, Brave New World is both a warning to be heeded and thought-provoking yet satisfying entertainment. - Container.

63 editions

A bit too "on-the-nose"

3 stars

I guess it might be the point of the book, but I couldn't feel that any character was real, everything felt stereotypical; while at the same time that "prediction" of the future does not seem plausible to me.

And I repeat, it might be the point of the book, so, if that is the case, then great job. I just did not enjoy it or gained any interesting insight.

Class and capitalism destroy what should be good

5 stars

What we remember most is how disappointed we were that the story spun all the wonderful potential benefits of science into a dystopia where class and capitalism prevailed. The book disturbingly portrays how a society with admiral goals can go wrong with rigid and fanatical application. Society, it is to flourish, it needs to be open and alive.

reviewed Un mundo feliz by Aldous Huxley (Ave fénix -- 185)

Review of 'Un mundo feliz' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

Obra sobrevalorada donde las haya. Es cierto que Huxley es un adelantado a su tiempo ya que describe una sociedad que en algunos aspectos se va pareciendo peligrosamente a la nuestra, pero en mi opinión, sigue un planteamiento erróneo. Desde el aspecto político, describe una sociedad en la que el Estado cubre todas tus necesidades (comunismo) y al mismo tiempo somete a la población a continuos estímulos y drogas para que los ciudadanos crean que son felices (capitalismo), una contradicción como una casa. Entre eso y la burda selección de nombres de los personajes (Lenina, Marx, Trotsky…), es evidente que lo que ha escrito este señor británico de familia acomodada no es más que un panfleto con el que difundir la absurda idea de que “los extremos se tocan”.

Review of 'Brave New World' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

I find the book fascinating in all the reality that the author created. I felt it as if I was in a nightmare. The pace of the book shifts a bit... I do like some of the moments. The audiobook version narrated by Michael York is very very good.
I couldn't help comparing it to 1984, maybe because my reading of that one is still fresh. In comparison I find this less beautiful and more frightening. The usage of England and the vocabulary of the era strikes as an odd thing. :) I guess this book feels closer to current western civilization than 1984 and I couldn't detach from that feeling. Kudos to Aldous

Review of 'Brave New World' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

Brave New World paints a future that still hasn't found the secrets of automation through robotics and computing. This makes it especially interesting, as the world Aldous Huxley imagines is so much different from ours, but eerily similar as well.

However, I feel like this utopian satire falls short to scrutiny in the modern era with the advent of computers and robotics. Huxley's future society still relies on the inefficiencies of human labor, and as such, has become dystopian solely through it's need for human capital. This is not to say that aspects of Huxley's dystopia do not ring true today; psychological conditioning and manipulation in the pursuit of capitalistic interests are issues facing society today.

While I enjoyed the book, I found it to be more akin to philosophical allegory than a powerful piece of narrative fiction. I was constantly feeling as if the characters were dropping character so …

Review of 'Brave New World' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

This felt dated.

The idea of a utopian dystopia of easy consumerism is one that is worth exploring, and Huxley certainly deserves credit for developing the concept. But in narrative terms, Brave New World really doesn't hold together particularly well. Part of this is an unavoidable case of 1930s attitudes being reflected in the novel, but at least as much - if not more - comes down to the characters, their motivations and the reactions to them, none of which rings true.

Brave New World is certainly worth reading, but I can't help but feel that Ray Bradbury covered the same ground much more effectively with Fahrenheit 451.

Review of 'Brave New World' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

There is much to be learned from reading this book and it is easy to forget that it was written early in the last century, not this one. Sadly, the warnings Huxley offers about what society was becoming were largely ignored and we've come to a society that so closely mirrors his "civilization" that it could have been a metaphor about our current state of affairs written by a contemporary author.

It is a very short novel but full of warnings and lessons that are as applicable, or even more so, today as they were in 1930. It is a lesson in mass manipulation by the media and big pharma. It is a lesson in treating people ultimately as mere resource rather than persons. And it is a lesson in extremes, extreme pain v. extreme pleasure and the wrongheadedness in submitting to either.

Review of 'Brave New World' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

In some ways a rather predictable read (at this point) for anyone who reads dystopian literature; people equal sheep and all that. There were some key differences however between this book and say 1984, V for Vendetta etc that make it extremely intriguing.

Sexuality was perhaps the most obvious. In most dystopian novels the authoritative government has mostly forced people into nuclear family groups that lack any sort of emotional connection and generally squelching that part of human nature. At this point I have no idea what Huxley’s actual views were, but if I had to guess I would say they probably run more conservative then Orwell’s. Of course, as illustrated by this and other books, both extremes are dangerous.

The Utopian element of it all was another strange aspect. In most dystopian novels the society is failing and/or people are miserable to one degree or another. In Brave New …

Review of 'Brave New World' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

a still powerful and thought-provoking novel about a quite possible future...

short plot description: in the year AD 2540 humanity has developed a stable world society with a rigid social system. War, poverty and disease are almost unknown as are families, relationships, religions, natural reproduction and arts. Children are not born but cloned and conditioned from an early age to fit into their alloted place in society. Almost everyone is almost always happy and if not there is always Soma to take your worries away. Only in places called reservations people are living a low-tech natural live. After an introduction to the current status quo we follow the events as John Savage (whose mother was originally from the civilised society) gets taken out of a reservation and introduced to this Brave New World.....

my thoughts: feels in places more like an essay than a novel and its age is showing …

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Subjects

  • Propaganda -- Fiction
  • Brainwashing
  • Lavado de cerebro -- Ficción
  • Science fiction
  • Ciencia-ficción

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