In Fahrenheit 451, it soon becomes clear that the pages are littered with social commentary, much of it concerning the people’s behavior in this society, One important aspect of this social commentary is the citizen’s emotional detachment. Mildred, Guy Montag’s wife, is one of many examples of this emotional detachment. Her and many other citizens almost kill themselves accidentally by taking too many sleeping pills. They do not truly care for anybody and so they do not think of what will happen when they take too many pills, but only want to be able to rest well. It is a rather common problem as the paramedics who came to help Mildred stated that they get around ten of those cases per night, showing that there is a problem in the society as …show more content…
Ray Bradbury was particularly influenced by the censorship related to books in his early life. In Fahrenheit 451, this influence is noticeable in the role of the firemen in this society, burning books rather than stopping fires like they originally did. This burning of the books can be connected back to the time during Ray Bradbury’s life when Hitler and the Nazis were burning books. Another aspect of this censorship towards books is seen in the bias some librarians held towards stocking certain books in their libraries simply because they did not like them. While this censorship may not be as heavily present today as it was back then, censorship does still exist in our world even if it may not be obvious. Standards for what is okay to read, watch, or listen to are constantly changing, and eventually we may all end up reading the same few books every school year. While this censorship may not hurt us physically, it can become dangerous to our individuality because if people begin telling us exactly what we can or can’t do then we may begin to lose our uniqueness and creativity. Ray Bradbury loved books so all that he had seen and experienced when he was younger influenced him heavily when he was writing this