“Brave New World” is a dystopian novel written by Aldous Huxley in 1931, published in 1932. It describes primarily a futuristic World State whose citizens are environmentally designed and classified through social hierarchy based on the levels of intelligence. In contrast to many popular optimistic and/or utopian novels of the time, his intentions were to offer a terrifying look as long as visions of the future are concerned. He referred to the content of the book as a “negative utopia” which deals with issues such as corporate tyranny, the pre-determination of social behavior, as well as manipulation.
Based on the above, there is a need of further analysis regarding the organization of such a society, the spaces that it produces and how they host the share of people who make it up. Thus, a scenario emerged in which the spaces of this world are represented as they must serve each member of society separately, the points of integration and exclusion according to organized social castes and the procedures that define the beginning and the end of life. How would a society function as a result of developed genetic engineering? What are the instruments that make up the mechanism of life production and what is their symbolic and literal purpose? Finally, what is the position of the socially superior and how does they decide to act when the systems that favors them the most biologically and politically is in the verge of collapsing?