Two
Narrator: Aldous Huxley writes Brave New World from a third person point of view. This means that the reader and the characters are less attached. This lack of attachment supports the illusion that the characters themselves are detached from each other. Huxley also uses full names for certain people like Henry Foster (when the characters address the others) and this gives a certain formality to the book, and in effect makes the book seem less casual and comfortable for the reader. Huxley uses the third person narration as an objective and editorial narrator. The narration uses long passages usually in a formal tone to emphasise the "percise-ness" and formality of the One State society.
March 18, 2009
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