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The setting of Aldous Huxley's "Brave New World" is a futuristic, dystopian society in the World State, characterized by advanced technology, genetic engineering, and a rigidly controlled social order. The story takes place in a highly industrialized environment where natural reproduction has been replaced by artificial methods, and individual freedoms are sacrificed for societal stability and consumerism. The novel explores various locations, including the Central London Hatchery and Conditioning Centre, which symbolizes the state's control over human life, and the Savage Reservation, representing a contrasting, more natural way of living.

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AnswerBot

1w ago

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