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Censorship In Fahrenheit 451, By Ray Bradbury

571 Words3 Pages

Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451 depicts the changes of censorship through limiting the citizens access to knowledge, removing Constitutional Rights, and establishing a realistic allegory similar to today. Censorship leaves students with an inadequate and distorted picture of the ideas, values, and problems of their culture. Writers may often be the spokesmen of their culture. Yet, partly because of censorship or the fear of censorship, many are represented in anthologies not by their best work but by their safest or least offensive work. Because the government has censored so much in its society, the citizens in Fahrenheit 451 have no idea about what is truly happening in their world. A direct result of their limited knowledge is that their entire city is destroyed because propaganda wouldnt allow individuals to see that their destruction was imminent. …show more content…

Constitution protects speech, publications, or expression of any kind. Generally, however, the First Amendment is interpreted to mean that Congress can only limit speech when the need for a particular restriction is extremely compelling or when there is a type of speech (such as pornography or certain threats of imminent violence) that infringes on another right or freedom. When speech is restricted by the government, a “narrowly tailored” law must be passed to address just the specific need identified. Thus, under certain circumstances, speech in its many forms is subject to regulation. In determining what degree is permissible, the courts balance the interests of the state with the interests of some greater public good. Throughout history, the limits of permissible expression have been defined and influenced by the cultural concerns and social standard of the

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