The texts 'Brave New World'(BNW) by Aldous Huxley and 'Bladerunner' (BR) by Ridley Scott, despite their differing form and social epochs, both offer an insight into what they expected man and society to be like at some future time.

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The texts ‘Brave New World’(BNW) by Aldous Huxley and ‘Bladerunner’ (BR) by Ridley Scott, despite their differing form and social epochs, both offer an insight into what they expected man and society to be like at some future time, and in effect both explore the notion of humanity and its relationship with the natural world and its rhythms.

It can be seen that both composers were heavily influenced by their own contexts as both texts present a fairly critical view of the society in which they were produced.

For example, the novel BNW was composed during a time of scientific and technological advancement, in a world where communist powers were on the rise, and with the influence of growing trends in industrialization and consumerism, Huxley was concerned with his society’s lack of morals and exploitation of nature during the twenties. By translating his fears into a satiric critique of his 1920’s society, Huxley created a dystopian portrait of society in the future that was superficially a perfect world. This was his attempt to show his audience (the intellectuals of his time) his fears of the present, while simultaneously providing a warning of what the future may bring.

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In effect, Huxley deliberately endowed the "ideal" futuristic society with features likely to alienate his audience, making the “Brave New World” an unsettling, sinister place where nature has been marginalized and natural rhythms such as child birth have been replaced with substitutes and surrogates. The setting of the novel immediately accentuates the harsh reality of the ‘world state’ in the opening paragraphs when the reader is confronted with a ‘squat grey building’ where the atmosphere is as ‘cold for all the summer beyond its panes’, emphasizing the coldness, paleness and clinical nature of the Central London Hatchery and Conditioning Centre, ...

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