Aldous Huxley
Aldous Leonard Huxley was born on July 26, 1894,
into a distinguished family members of the English ruling class made up
of the intellectual elite. Aldous' father was the son of Thomas Henry Huxley,
a great biologist who helped develop the theory of evolution. His mother
was the sister of Mrs. Humphrey Ward, the novelist; the niece of Matthew
Arnold, the poet; and the granddaughter of Thomas Arnold, a famous educator
and the real-life headmaster of Rugby School who became a character in
the novel Tom Brown's Schooldays.
Undoubtedly, Huxley's heritage and upbringing
had an effect on his work. In " Throughout Brave New World you can see
evidence of an ambivalent attitude toward such authority assumed by a ruling
class.
Like the England of his day, Huxley's Utopia
possesses a rigid class structure.
Huxley's own experiences made him stand apart
from the class into which he was born. Even as a small child he was considered
different, because his intelligence, what his brother called a superiority.
Huxley felt that heredity made each individual unique, and the uniqueness
of the individual was essential to freedom. Like his family, and like the
Alphas of Brave New World.
Another event that marked Huxley was his mother's
death from cancer when he was 14. This, he said later, gave him a sense
of the transience of human happiness. Perhaps you can also see the influence
of his loss in his literary works.
When Huxley was 16 was student at the prestigious
Eton colege, an eye illness made him nearly blind. He recovered enough
vision to go on to Oxford University and graduate with honors, but not
enough to fight in World War I, an important experience for many of his
friends, or to do the scientific work he had dreamed of. Scientific ideas
remained with him, however, and he used them in many of his books, particularly
Brave New World.
He entered the literary world while he was at
Oxford, meeting writers like Lytton Strachey and Bertrand Russell and becoming
close friends with D. H. Lawrence, with whom you might think he had almost
nothing in common.
Huxley published his first book, a collection
of poems, in 1916. He married Maria Nys, a Belgian, in 1919. Their only
child, Matthew Huxley, was born in 1920. The family divided their time
between London and Europe, mostly Italy, in the 1920s, and traveled around
the world in 1925 and 1926, seeing India and making a first visit to the
United States.
His experiences in fascist Italy, where Benito
Mussolini led an authoritarian government that fought against birth control
in order to produce enough manpower for the next war, also provided materials
for Huxley's dystopia, as did his reading of books critical of the Soviet
Union.
Huxley wrote Brave New World in four months in
1931. It appeared three years after the publication of his best-seller,
the novel Point Counter Point. During those three years, he had produced
six books of stories, essays, poems, and plays, but nothing major. His
biographer, Sybille Bedford, says, "It was time to produce some full-length
fiction--he still felt like holding back from another straight novel--juggling
in fiction form with the scientific possibilities of the future might be
a new line."
In 1937, the Huxleys came to the United States;
in 1938 they went to Hollywood, where he became a screenwriter (among his
films was an adaptation of Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice, which starred
the young Laurence Olivier). He remained for most of his life in California,
and one of his novels caricatures what he saw as the strange life there.
In 1946 Huxley wrote a Foreword to Brave New World
in which he said he no longer wanted to make social sanity an impossibility,
as he had in the novel. Though the wars like2nd . Huxley had become convinced
that while still "rather rare," sanity could be achieved and said that
he would like to see more of it. In the same year, he published The Perennial
Philosophy, an anthology of texts with his own commentaries on mystical
and religious approaches to a sane life in a sane society.
He also worried about the dangers that threatened
sanity. In 1958, he published Brave New World Revisited, a set of essays
on real-life problems and ideas you'll find in the novel--overpopulation,
overorganization, and psychological techniques from salesmanship to hypnopaedia,
or sleep-teaching. They're all tools that a government can abuse to deprive
people of freedom, an abuse that Huxley wanted people to fight.
In the 1950s Huxley became famous for his interest
in psychedelic or mind-expanding drugs like mescaline and LSD, which he
apparently took a dozen times over ten years. Sybille Bedford says he was
looking for a drug that would allow an escape from the self and that if
taken with caution would be physically and socially harmless.
He put his beliefs in such a drug and in sanity
into several books. Two, based on his experiences taking mescaline under
supervision, were nonfiction: Doors of Perception (1954) and Heaven and
Hell (1956). Some readers have read those books as encouragements to experiment
freely with drugs, but Huxley warned of the dangers of such experiments
in an appendix he wrote to The Devils of Loudun (1952), a psychological
study of an episode in French history.
Another work centering on drugs and sanity was
Island (1962), a novel that required 20 years of thought and five years
of writing. Among other things, Island was an antidote to Brave New World,
a good Utopia. Huxley deplored the drug he called soma in Brave New World--half
tranquilizer, half intoxicant--which produces an artificial happiness that
makes people content with their lack of freedom. He approved of the perfected
version of LSD that the people of Island use in a religious way.
Huxley produced 47 books in his long career as
a writer. The English critic Anthony Burgess has said that he equipped
the novel with a brain. Other critics objected that he was a better essayist
than novelist precisely because he cared more about his ideas than about
plot or characters, and his novels' ideas often get in the way of the story.
But Huxley's emphasis on ideas and his skin as an essayist cannot hide one important fact: The books he wrote that are most read and best remembered today are all novels--Crome Yellow, Antic Hay, and Point Counter Point from the 1920s, Brave New World and After Many a Summer Dies the Swan from the 1930s. In 1959 the American Academy of Arts and Letters gave him the Award of Merit for the Novel, a prize given every five years; earlier recipients had been Ernest Hemingway, Thomas Mann, and Theodore Dreiser.
He also wrote an early essay on ecology
that helped inspire today's environmental movement. And he was a pacifist.
This belief prevented him from becoming an American citizen because he
would not say his pacifism was a matter of his religion, which might have
made him an acceptable conscientious objector.
Huxley remained nearly blind all his life. Maria
Huxley died in 1955, and Huxley married Laura Archera a year later. He
died November 22, 1963, the same day that President John F. Kennedy was
assassinated. He was cremated, and his ashes were buried in his parents'
grave in England.
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