Comparing Fahrenheit 451 And 1984 By Ray Bradbury

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The novels Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury and 1984 by George Orwell are different and alike the same. Both authors portray possible outcomes of the future. Fahrenheit 451 is an example of what society will become if people do not cease to let their lives revolve around the material items surrounding them, whereas Orwell portrays the dangers of a totalitarian state. The most notable similarity between the two novels has to be the fact that Montag, the main protagonist from Fahrenheit 451, and Winston, the main protagonist from 1984, both began working for their governments, believing they were doing it for the “greater good” of the society. Montag was a firefighter, and not the kind that put out fighters, but instead burned down houses that …show more content…

In Fahrenheit 451, books are banned as a way to prevent the citizens from seeing what the government thought would change their outlook on life. The people of that society do not know what happiness is, nor are they truly content with the life they live. They believe they are happy and content because they can only feel each up to a certain extent. Books would lead them into a freethinker’s mind, filled with ideas such as love, freedom, true happiness and many other things citizens of the society wouldn’t be able to even fathom, which would plant seeds inside their heads and cause them to begin questioning the government’s real nature. Banning the books is similar to the concept of “newspeak” in 1984 because the idea of “newspeak” was to limit the vocabulary of an Oceania citizen so there would be no way to come up with thoughts that went against the Party or Big Brother. The difference between the two is the reason for its origination. According to Beatty, books began to become unpopular when “minorities” within their civilization were constantly being offended, which ultimately led to the burning of books, and in 1984, “newspeak” was created by government officials to limit the range of thought. Technology is a major part of the following aspect because in Fahrenheit 451, the parlor walls are installed to keep the citizens of that society constantly occupied, and each parlor wall is fit to the viewer, brainwashing them even more. The