Climax: This is the point that changes everything. BRAVE NEW WORLD Discussion Questions English 4 Academic Work: Brave New World vs. the Savage … Brave New World John is one of the main characters in Aldous Huxley's Brave New World. In Brave New World by Aldous Huxley, the Savage Reservation is the complete opposite of the controlled and sterile society of Brave New World. He is the character closest to being the hero of the novel. The savage reservation is a place outside of the World State where "savages" live. Even though he is the son of two upper class utopians, he grows up in the depths of Malpais: The Savage Reservation. future. His father is the Director. The savage, usually a man grows up isolated from others yet possesses a sense of morality. Brave New World: Setting The main character, Guy Montag, is a character who originally is happy with his life, but soon realizes that his intellectuality makes him different from those around him. The society is divided to different castes, based on intelligence and labor. The “savages” still give birth, believe in gods and endure physical pain and emotional suffering. The “savages” still give birth, believe in gods and endure physical pain and emotional suffering. After spending his entire young life isolated in the Savage Reservation, John The Savage suddenly finds himself immersed in a world that he doesn’t recognize; the “Brave New World” (World State). The people and customs of the Savage Reservation are modeled loosely on the traditions of Zuñi Native Americans. The falling action of the novel takes place after John exiles himself from the city, and attempts to live a life as free of comfort and ease as possible. 4 Minutes. Write. Another dystopian novel, Fahrenheit 451 explores archetypes very similar to the ones present in Brave New World. Here, on the Savage Reservation, age changes people unchecked by chemicals and hormones; women give birth and breastfeed their babies; and the natural process of decay produces sights and smells that appall the sensitive Lenina. Brave New World by Aldous Huxley portrays the future in which there are two very different worlds. Brave New World I’ve always wanted to see a Savage Reservation.’” (Huxley 32).