1958: ALDOUS HUXLEY Interview | Monitor | Writers and Wordsmiths | BBC Archive

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  • čas přidán 27. 11. 2022
  • "I would certainly like to have written a very good novel. I don't think I ever have." - Aldous Huxley
    John Lehmann, the poet and editor of London Magazine, interviews Aldous Huxley about his illustrious and varied writing career. Is Huxley an educator or an entertainer? Is he a novelist or an essayist? Is his post-war focus on non-fiction evidence that he has lost faith in the novel as an art form? Does it surprise him that so many of the forecasts he made in Brave New World have already come to pass in reality?
    Originally broadcast 12 October, 1958.
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Komentáře • 63

  • @Retroflex01
    @Retroflex01 Před 11 měsíci +11

    Huxley is so humble

  • @TheHarrip
    @TheHarrip Před rokem +53

    What an unbelievable conversion. In 2022 nobody does interviews of such quality

    • @silversurfermusicco5263
      @silversurfermusicco5263 Před rokem +8

      Totally agree. Its rare film

    • @johnsrabe
      @johnsrabe Před rokem +7

      You’re exactly right. Nobody does interviews like this anymore.

    • @elroyr1
      @elroyr1 Před rokem +6

      Purely open and intellectual dialog, quite rare indeed.

    • @thebiggingerjock
      @thebiggingerjock Před rokem +5

      I absolutely love these interviews/conversations. Nobody pauses and thinks how their answer will be interpreted or what may be inferred. Just relevant questioning and probing, respecting the interviewee, affording an unguarded response. Wonderful.

    • @goldwhitedragon
      @goldwhitedragon Před rokem

      remember, the best Whites died during WW2 so today a lower average IQ plus higher mutational load is correlated to a decrease in the ability to articulate and think.

  • @bcactus3510
    @bcactus3510 Před rokem +22

    A great mind, the doors of perception was spot on

  • @Iceni007
    @Iceni007 Před rokem +28

    A brilliant mind - so modest too. Brave New World, Eyeless in Gaza, Point Counterpoint - all classic novels. And his early works so very witty and entertaining - Crome Yellow, Antic Hay. The Doors of Perception should be mandatory reading in secondary schools and for anyone with an open and enquiring mind. Huxley - prophet, visionary, philosopher, all-round polymath genius. Peerless.

    • @sebp400
      @sebp400 Před 8 měsíci +1

      The Art of Seeing.. ah ah..

  • @Orf
    @Orf Před 8 měsíci +6

    “I would certainly like to have written a very good novel. I don’t think I ever have.”
    -Aldous Huxley (1958)

  • @Ridersonthestorm8899
    @Ridersonthestorm8899 Před rokem +6

    Interviewed by John Lehmann, brother of the novelist Rosamund and the wonderfully creepy actress Beatrix.
    Great stuff.

  • @garryleeks4848
    @garryleeks4848 Před rokem +10

    Remember talking hours about these sort of subjects at eton and Cambridge, very fascinating and interesting , now back to my day job watching paint dry in Essex 😮

    • @garryleeks4848
      @garryleeks4848 Před rokem +3

      @@Philrc it’s fascinating watching paint dry , sometimes you think it’s dry but it’s not, then end up with a fingerprint, come on we have all done that 🙄🙄🙄

  • @nwsanagnwsths
    @nwsanagnwsths Před 7 měsíci +2

    Today 60 years from the death of Aldous Huxley are completed!!!
    It was 22/11/1963

  • @user-cx3jy3of9w
    @user-cx3jy3of9w Před 9 měsíci +2

    The novels he's talking about in 3:10 are probably The genius and the goddess, published in 1955, and The island, his latest work.

  • @alancawfield6549
    @alancawfield6549 Před rokem +7

    "Population pressure, pressing upon resources" he speaks about it in the interview, and yet 60 years later it is still not being taken seriously. It is by far the biggest problem the world faces and yet world wide it never seems to be a viewed by politicians,economists and scientists as something worth pushing to the forefront of public discourse.

    • @andydixon2980
      @andydixon2980 Před 10 měsíci +2

      I think the attitude of British(possibly the U.S also etc) governence now is MORE people, MORE TAX PAID. They don't care about the wider problems of over-population.

  • @thecaveofthedead
    @thecaveofthedead Před rokem +23

    Well, he was right about novels in audio form becoming important - although he couldn't see how there could be long novels affordably recorded like that. He was also right that the dangers to civil liberties that weren't acute then in the liberal democracies have become acute. And he did manage to successfully blend his satirical phase and his mystic phase in Eyeless In Gaza.

  • @libanmuse-bj2kp
    @libanmuse-bj2kp Před 5 dny

    Nice to hang out with you

  • @alancawfield6549
    @alancawfield6549 Před rokem +16

    Brave New World is a great novel,, really makes you think.

    • @BadgerBotherer1
      @BadgerBotherer1 Před rokem +5

      Along with "1984", it's been used as the blueprint for our modern world.

    • @marcelkuiper5474
      @marcelkuiper5474 Před 11 měsíci

      Made me sick, I was born in 1984, I have been expecting thus gradual descent into slavery/spiritual death for quite some time, I think we are nearly there and past the point of no return

  • @Johnlikeme
    @Johnlikeme Před rokem +5

    Fantastic interview! The book "Island" that they are talking about at the end is his best book I think.

    • @yaosteen
      @yaosteen Před rokem +2

      I have to agree, it’s an amazing and deeply underrated novel.
      It’s interesting to hear how he thinks about it as he was just starting to write it. I think it ended up a little more cynical about human nature then a traditional utopia novel does.

    • @Arareemote
      @Arareemote Před 2 měsíci +1

      It's truly a shame he never finished his final novel. Laura includes a chapter of it in her Personal Memoir of Aldous called "This Timeless Moment"
      It would've been something remarkable.

  • @bradleymilton9372
    @bradleymilton9372 Před 8 měsíci

    Fantastic

  • @agamemnom
    @agamemnom Před rokem +15

    not very often you see someone 60 years ahead of their time, he was right about the spoken novel rising except its in online audiobook form rather than the gramophone 🤣

  • @QED_
    @QED_ Před 2 měsíci +1

    Huxley's career and life is one of the better examples of an intellectual who realized the limits of intellect and made sustained personal efforts to balance it with emotive and somatic perspectives (drugs, bodywork, etc). It's worthwhile to read about his life from that angle . . .

  • @graemeyetts3465
    @graemeyetts3465 Před 15 dny

    Most of the truly great ideas come from a good, or at least benign place, and then too often go bandy
    Here's my imaginary modern-day and brief conversation with this humble,prophetic gentleman.
    Me:
    "Mr Huxley;Imagine a world where not only can your latest novel be transmitted across the globe electronically in a mere moment, but this can be done with or without human intervention and in any language and across your entire catalogue!!"
    (Kindly allow the license poetique.)
    A.H. :
    He reponds with an avuncular but quizical smile.
    "That would be interesting "

  • @robertalenrichter
    @robertalenrichter Před rokem +2

    It would be nice if you put the more intellectual clips on a playlist, as you have, for example, the movie stars. The interesting bits are only to be found by scrolling and scrolling, scattershot and cheek by jowl.

  • @joeydennis7834
    @joeydennis7834 Před 5 měsíci

    Dude was brilliant af ong frfr

  • @marcelkuiper5474
    @marcelkuiper5474 Před 11 měsíci +1

    The idea is, we as a society should have had listened to those who can peek over the edge without falling in the abyss, we used to listen to our shamans, to our sages and wise men.

    • @DSAK55
      @DSAK55 Před měsícem

      and now we have CZcams influencers

  • @castelodeossos3947
    @castelodeossos3947 Před 11 měsíci +1

    '...there are no rules, except to do it well' (3:37). Echoes of Oscar Wilde. Those were the days. Now, sensitivity readers and others in the employ of publishers arbitrarily lay down rules that must be followed, on pain of cancellation. '...menaces to individual liberty... grave threats... although they may not be acute, particularly in the democratic countries, are potentially very grave indeed... some of them were foreseen [in 'Brave New World'], and I think, some of them I didn't have sufficient imagination to foresee' (8:30). 'Menaces' is indeed the right word.

  • @SaneSociety1
    @SaneSociety1 Před 2 měsíci

    My new crush.

  • @edwardmulholland7912
    @edwardmulholland7912 Před rokem +1

    Island and Eyeless in Gaza are great books. Not to sure about his political views. Huxley was into eugenics.

  • @davidreid8075
    @davidreid8075 Před měsícem

    A more interesting world...

  • @dragosnc4624
    @dragosnc4624 Před 5 měsíci

    many people say he was a visionary but actually, he was in touch with those who planned the future. Maybe he was one of those men actually.
    Many people don't realize that the future was planned way before with decades from the present moment.
    Even now are presented to us many things from the future and many still don't believe these things could happen.
    But the Bible presented us things from 2000 years from now and the majority still don't believe it is true.

  • @pj1481
    @pj1481 Před 9 měsíci

    This guy was British intelligence, Orwell also. The global elite have been measuring the masses' response for very long time. Both books reveal the two ways they had or have in mind for total control of the masses. If a book, or a movie gets over whelming attention and media time, decade after decade, then they are force feeding it, and keeping you mindful. Millions of books written and these two get referred to and we continue to get reminded about them. Seems strange to me. Reminds me of Manson, Son of Sam, Gary, Bundy, BTK, you would think they were the only serial killers that ever existed or mattered. Big Bro is behind more studies and experiments then most people realize. They are very devious, don't under estimate.

  • @hilaryepstein6013
    @hilaryepstein6013 Před rokem +13

    Recommending LSD to open up the mind. Is this where the 50s/60s drug culture started I wonder.

    • @garryleeks4848
      @garryleeks4848 Před rokem +1

      It started right here after there conversation, hippies and flower power , my god wish I was there 😮

    • @Charles-zd9mj
      @Charles-zd9mj Před rokem

      Absolutely it is!

    • @Charles-zd9mj
      @Charles-zd9mj Před rokem +8

      If the doors of perception are cleansed, then everything would appear as it truly is...Infinite.

    • @BOZ_11
      @BOZ_11 Před rokem +2

      It started thousands of years ago. Ancient cultures used psychedelics

    • @Volker_GR
      @Volker_GR Před rokem

      History has to be rewritten. Sorry Timothy Leary 🙂

  • @FrankBass-tf8qe
    @FrankBass-tf8qe Před 2 měsíci +1

    Humility is overrated, and will only get you so far.

  • @jimferry6539
    @jimferry6539 Před rokem +12

    If he was alive today he’d just be a guest on the joe rogan 😅

    • @tentringer4065
      @tentringer4065 Před rokem +5

      I can just imagine that dunce Rogan's furrowed brow.

  • @stocktonjoans
    @stocktonjoans Před rokem +3

    "I don't think you could have a very long [spoken] novel [...]"
    The audio novel i'm currently listening to is nearly 17 hours long

    • @flaggerify
      @flaggerify Před rokem

      I think he meant fiction for audio only, not print. So a fiction podcast?

  • @jiggerinokobalis609
    @jiggerinokobalis609 Před rokem +4

    The BBC wasn't always hot garbage.