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Topic: Mustapha Mond


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  Free College Essays.com - Free Essays, Term Papers and Book Reports.
Mustapha Mond exercises this type of control easily because it is a means of limiting population and controlling flaws in future citizens of his society.
Mustapha Mond is a man who uses his position of power to limit the freedoms and individuality of the citizens in the World State.
Mustapha Mond declares that soma has “all the advantages of Christianity…none of [its] defects” (54) to emphasize his belief that religion is not a necessity for stability.
www.free-college-essays.com /Book_Reports/12335-Brave_New_World_-_Mustapha_Mond.html   (1502 words)

  
 Brave New World Book Notes Summary by Aldous Huxley: Chapter 17
Mond reminds him that he must stick to one context, that according to the context of the World State, which is the only context remaining, the man is happy.
The Savage tells Mond that the Indians bear things patiently and do not let pleasant vices degrade them, and Mond tells him that they are not Indians, and that men acting on their own would degrade the social order.
He asks Mond if there is something in living dangerously, and Mond explains the Violent Passion Surrogate treatments, which are mandatory and involve flooding a person's system with adrenin, the physiological equivalent of fear and rage without any of the inconveniences.
www.bookrags.com /notes/bnw/PART21.html   (854 words)

  
 SparkNotes: Brave New World: Chapter 3
Mond quotes Ford, saying, “History is bunk” (an actual quote from the real-life Henry Ford) in order to explain why the students have not learned any of the history that the Director explains to them.
As Mond explains it, these old institutions shared the work of mediating the conflict between the individual’s interests and the interests of society with the State, but the personal institutions and State institutions were themselves out of alignment, creating instability.
Implicit in Mond’s statement that “history is bunk” and his discussion of the history of the World State, is the fact that Mond and the other nine World Controllers have a monopoly on historical knowledge.
www.sparknotes.com /lit/bravenew/section3.rhtml   (1610 words)

  
 Chapter 16
Mond has heard John’s quotations from Shakespeare, and illustrates that he is acquainted with the works of Shakespeare, much to John’s surprise.
Mond goes on to concede that instability and unhappiness can be more exciting, but that those at the bottom of the pyramid, the Gammas, Deltas etc., do not have the ability to understand high art.
Even the man at the top, Mond, has to make sacrifices, the loss of his own freedom and individuality, and for him, the sacrifice is more painful because he does have some understanding of what has been lost, but he is alone with his sacrifice because he has to portray orthodoxy to those below him.
www.bookwolf.com /Free_Booknotes/Brave_New_World_by_Aldous_Huxl/Chapter__16-Brave_New_World/chapter__16-brave_new_world.html   (472 words)

  
 Nuova pagina 16
Mustapha Mond is the protagonist of this chapter.
Mond says it must be forbidden because the world is so different now and nobody would understand the problems people in old literature had to deal with.
Mond sees the island as something positive and sometimes he regrets that he has chosen to be a controller over the island himself.
www.itiscannizzaro.net /Ianni/booksweb/bnwweb/chapters/pag16.htm   (772 words)

  
 Summary of Mustapha Mond’s speech
Mond says, that people don’t turn to God any longer, because they no longer have to suffer from illnesses, inconveniences, unhappiness, fears etc. so they can be independent of God and religion.
John claims that God is the reason for everything noble and heroic, but Mustapha Mond tells him that there is no need for nobility or heroism, because everyone is conditioned: they can’t help doing what ought to be done and this is so pleasant that they don’t feel the need to complain about anything.
Mustapha Mond is not able to convince John of his ideas and principles — in the end of their conversation John says that he claims the right to be unhappy, to become old and ugly, to have cancer and all sorts of illnesses, to have too little to eat, to be tortured….
www.stubenbastei.at /fachbereiche/englisch/mustaphamond.htm   (408 words)

  
 Mustapha monds soma essays
Mustapha Mond is one of the controllers of the new society in Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World.
Mond tires hard to ensure that everyone in his society is happy by eliminating any painful emotions, which means every deep feeling and every passion, which is part of normal behavior.
Mond believes that people are better off with a societal view of happiness then with their own individual view of happiness and truth.
www.megaessays.com /viewpaper/597.html   (520 words)

  
 Brave New World Book Notes Summary by Aldous Huxley: Chapter 3
The students are awed by the presence of Mustapha Mond.
As the work day ends, the rest of this chapter describes short interludes between Mustapha Mond and the students, Lenina and her friend Fanny, and Bernard Marx and Henry Ford.
It is important to note that the lines of dialogue are like a collage, alternating without notice between the three conversations, and that the lines become shorter and shorter until they are not even attributed to a speaker anymore, and are only distinguishable by their subject matter.
www.bookrags.com /notes/bnw/PART3.html   (1106 words)

  
 CliffsNotes::Brave New World:Book Summary and Study Guide
Mond came to an acceptance of dystopian values, he confesses, after a radical youth, during which he experimented with forbidden science.
Mond’s declaration that in his society everyone is happy—even (and, he argues, especially) Epsilons—recalls the image of the Epsilon elevator-operator, sighing in joy at his brief glimpse of the roof before being sent back down into the darkness again.
Mond’s satisfaction with his own view of the dystopia is apparent, but Huxley leaves the matter of freedom and justice open to the reader.
www.cliffsnotes.com /WileyCDA/LitNote/id-45,pageNum-53.html   (563 words)

  
 GradeSaver: Brave New World - Study Guide
Mustapha argues that science cannot be allowed to progress without strict controls, since science can lead to social instability.
Mustapha explains that since society eradicated the fear of death and since everyone is artificially kept youthful until they die, there is no need of religion.
Mustapha argues that by their society's standards each man is happy and perfect as he is. The argument continues: self-denial is condemned as being bad for the economy and opposed to happiness, chastity is described as leading to passion, which in turn creates instability.
www.gradesaver.com /classicnotes/titles/bravenewworld/section7.html   (2204 words)

  
 mustapha mond
Mustapha Mond, one of the world controllers in the novel, sums up physical happiness with the statement: The world is stable nowTheyre well off They...
Mustapha Mond, leader of the society, would not allow this kind of reading in the society, because it would introduce ideas that would get the citizens...
His name is Mustapha Mond, and he is regarded with some alarm by the Director of Hatching and Conditioning because he has read all the forbidden books he...
www.directessays.com /essay_search/mustapha_mond.html   (823 words)

  
 Wolfnotes brought to you by FreeBooknotes.com
It turns out that John was given birth “not produced by the state” by the wife of Tomakin, the Director of Hatcheries who had left her in the Reservation.
Bernard obtains permission from Mustapha Mond, one of the 10 World Controllers, to bring John and his mother, Linda, back to London where he proudly parades the ‘primitive’ savage before his fellow citizens.
Mustapha Mond is furious with the three, and tells them that they must conform to the requirements of the state.
www.freebooknotes.com /bookwolf/brave_new_world/context-brave_new_world.shtml   (351 words)

  
 Chapter Chapter 16 of Brave New World by Aldous Huxley
Mustapha Mond shook hands with all three of them; but it was to the Savage that he addressed himself.
He had been prepared to lie, to bluster, to remain sullenly unresponsive; but, reassured by the good-humoured intelligence of the Controller’s face, he decided to tell the truth, straightforwardly.
To be labelled as the friend of a man who said that he didn’t like civilization—said it openly and, of all people, to the Controller—it was terrible.
www.bibliomania.com /0/0/100/1956/26050/1.html   (471 words)

  
 somaweb.org > Aldous Huxley's Americanization of the Brave New World typescript - Critical Essay
Mustapha Mond's jurisdiction forms part of an insanely rational society for which several of Huxley's finest holograph insertions blame America's archetypal technocrat.
One concludes that the "revolt" was to be a consequence of the meeting between Mond and the Savage, not its cause.
TS 200-07, 208-11,215-18, and 231-48--the soma riot, the two parts of the Mond interview with Watson and Marx present, and John's suicide at the lighthouse are all in dark purple type.
somaweb.org /w/sub/Americanization.html   (12017 words)

  
 litblog - Brave New World
The idea, according to World Controller Mustapha Mond, is that people will love what is forced on them.
Mond believes it is. The reader is apparently left to decide for themselves, but Huxley is as skilled at propaganda as the World Controllers; with Nazi Germany inexorably rising, and later, with the Cold War looming as Huxley wrote Brave New World Revisited, he ensured that the only possible choice is in favour of freedom.
Mond, on the other hand, inspires respect and fear in Alphas and Betas.
www.angelfire.com /art/fibonacci/blog/brave.html   (737 words)

  
 Brave New World summary
The group is surprised by Mustapha Mond, the World Controller for Western Europe, who tells them about the way things were before the time of (Henry) Ford, and how events led up to the enlightened present age.
His head is so swelled by his new fame that he forgets himself in his reports to Mustapha Mond, who bides his time to strike at this impudent man.
Mond gives Helmholtz a choice of islands to which to be exiled, and Helmholtz chooses the Falkland islands.
members.fortunecity.com /dorge/bnwsumm.html   (1121 words)

  
 Mond process - Encyclopedia.com
Chemical Market Reporter; 12/24/2001; 375 words; BRUNNER MOND, Europe's second largest soda ash producer...
CONGRESSIONAL REVIEW ACT:RAY MOND E. Congressional Testimony; 3/27/2001; 3223 words;...
Lanaudire region, Sbastien mond and Bruno Mailloux have...
www.encyclopedia.com /doc/1E1-X-Mondproc.html   (912 words)

  
 Dr. Kenneth Grant :: English IV - CP
This chapter is potentially confusing because it switches among three scenes: 1) the tour continues but Mustapha Mond (a World Controller) takes over from the DHC; 2) we meet Bernard Marx and Henry Foster for the first time.
Mustapha Mond gives John an audience, accompanied by Helmholtz and Bernard.
Mustapha Mond and John have a big discussion of what society's purpose should be.
www.pickens.k12.sc.us /ehsteachers/English/grantk/BNWstudysheet.html   (495 words)

  
 Brave New World - The Significance of John in Brave New World
In Brave New World, there are three societies: the civilized society of Bernard and Mustapha Mond, the savage society of John and Linda, and the old society, which is not explicitly in the book but is described by the characters.
When the riot is subdued, John is apprehended and taken to have a talk with Mustapha Mond.
This talk with Mustapha Mond is very enlightening for John, and it creates his connection with the old society.
www.123helpme.com /view.asp?id=10463   (1116 words)

  
 [No title]
Mustapha Mond made a number of important points that perhaps I was too quick to dismiss.
Not that I would go as far as Mond does, perhaps, but certainly there should be room for some kind of reasonable compromise between his extreme position in which all life is controlled by the state, and my extreme position in which total freedom prevails.
Mond argued that the focus of the ideal society changed the focus of humanity from "truth and beauty" to "comfort and happiness", and I angrily counter-argued that without truth and beauty there could be no real happiness.
www.nyu.edu /classes/keefer/twenty/avisha.html   (1552 words)

  
 1998 - Brave New World
Now Controller I begins to worry: "We cannot afford another disturbance" and talks to the savage in his private rooms which are decorated with art and reveal shelves full of books, sharing that he too has sacrificed his studies of science for serving humanity and that it is not forbidden to educate oneself.
John: "You sacrificed truth." Later Mond comforts the others: "Our system is so stable, we can even tolerate a savage in our midst." John wants to be alone.
Mond offers Marx a position as director – he should not deny himself anything and Lenina is called in to defend her teaching "off the book" in class.
www.ponilla.org /Nimoy/movies_BNW.htm   (1552 words)

  
 English: Brave New World
Mustapha Mond when referring to the Holy Bible says that "they're old; they're about God hundreds of years ago.
Mustapha Mond is saying that with the evolution of time the need for religion has disappeared and has been replaced by the worship of another God who is Ford.
You now have to picture how much you would like it if you were born there and followed the same treatment as the others.
www.studyworld.com /basementpapers/repce/English/167.htm   (1647 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: )
John and Mond debate the value of the World State’s policies, John arguing that they dehumanize the residents of the World State and Mond arguing that stability and happiness are more important than humanity.
From Mond’s discussion with John, it is possible to identify two main types of truth that the World State seeks to eliminate.
Mond agrees that John and Linda are a matter of scientific interest to the World State.
www.caffeine.zeonhost.com /misc/school/BRN.doc   (10774 words)

  
 Mustapha Mond Article, MustaphaMond Information
Mustapha Mond was the fictional World Controller of Western Europe, in AldousHuxley's dystopian novel, Brave New World.
Mond is one of the World Controllers, a senior member of the Alpha caste who runs the entire society.
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www.anoca.org /world/he/mustapha_mond.html   (174 words)

  
 Historicizing Maps of Hell > Dystopias of the Great War Era
Mond’s justification for physical and mental oppression is that he is making people happy (229).
As Mustapha tells John the Savage, a society had existed that was populated by geniuses, but this society ultimately failed because the geniuses fought amongst themselves: “The land wasn’t properly worked, there were strikes in all the factories; the laws were set at naught, orders disobeyed [.
Huxley is deeply suspicious of science, and he imbues Mustapha Mond with this same suspicion.
www.sedhe.net /dystopia/thesis_1.php   (2422 words)

  
 Hausarbeiten.de - Huxley, Aldous - Brave New World - Referat / Schulaufsatz
He also made reports to Mustapha Mond on what he had found out about the savage′s reaction and behavior.
Mustapha Mond talks with the three of them about society, civilization, books, etc. He tells them of when he was in their position and he chose Controlership over tampering with Science.
Mustapha Mond talks with the three of them about society, civilization, books, etc. A decision is made to send Helmholtz and Bernard to one of the many islands for those who break away from civilization and become individuals.
www.hausarbeiten.de /spiegel/hausarbeit/enc/20432.html   (3863 words)

  
 CliffsNotes::Brave New World:Book Summary and Study Guide
A man of two worlds, Mond is familiar with the history that others are forbidden to know, and so his thinking ranges both inside and outside the present social order.
With Helmholtz and John, Mond discusses the unspoken assumptions of the society they find so constricting, even confessing his own youthful experiments in challenging authority.
Mond knows the nature of the malcontent—he once was one—but he is committed to keeping the society stable.
www.cliffsnotes.com /WileyCDA/LitNote/Brave-New-World.id-45,pageNum-66.html   (276 words)

  
 De-Puzzling Ch. 3: Part 3   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Mond spends a lot of time on page 36-43 talking about “home” and what that experience was like, repeating the phrase “my baby, my baby,” and more.
First, what effect do you think Mond was trying to have on the group of students he is talking to in the chapter?
Second, since Huxley (the author) created Mond and his speech here and knew that people like us would be the audience, what effect do you think Huxley was trying to have on the readers?
s.spachman.tripod.com /BNW/ch3_part3.htm   (1535 words)

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