https://zompist.wordpress.com/2012/03/0 ... new-world/
zompist quotes Margaret Atwood with the observation that 1984 is more famous, but Brave New World is more likely.
Now, as it happens, Orwell himself did once briefly comment on Brave New World. In his fairly short essay Prophecies of Fascism, in which he discussed a few early-20th-century dystopian works, he wrote
So, what do you think? Does a hedonistic outlook inevitably doom the position of a ruling class? That sounds like a very questionable idea these days, but perhaps it just looks questionable to us because our current rulers' follies haven't yet caught up with them?In Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World, a sort of post-war parody of the Wellsian Utopia, these tendencies are immensely exaggerated. Here the hedonistic principle is pushed to its utmost, the whole world has turned into a Riviera hotel. But though Brave New World was a brilliant caricature of the present (the present of 1930), it probably casts no light on the future. No society of that kind would last more than a couple of generations, because a ruling class which thought principally in terms of a “good time” would soon lose its vitality. A ruling class has got to have a strict morality, a quasi-religious belief in itself, a mystique. [Jack] London was aware of this, and though he describes the caste of plutocrats who rule the world for seven centuries [in London's novel The Iron Heel] as inhuman monsters, he does not describe them as idlers or sensualists. They can only maintain their position while they honestly believe that civilisation depends on themselves alone, and therefore in a different way are just as brave, able and devoted as the revolutionaries who oppose them.