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Futurism In Ray Bradbury's 'The Pedestrian'

293 Words2 Pages
Futuristic and dystopian stories are oftentimes a way for their authors to express grievances and hopes about the way their particular society progresses. For example, Ray Bradbury uses the cold, lonely, urban setting in “The Pedestrian” to suggest that extreme, government-enforced conformity leads to a frigid lack of human identity and dignity. Set in 2053, “The Pedestrian” follows an old man on an evening walk through “long moonlit avenues of pavement.” The streets are empty, the air “frosty,” and even the cottages are dark. The whole scene is like a graveyard: completely void of warmth where “grey phantoms” seem to appear through the curtains of faintly lit homes. In the midst of the cold, however, Leonard Mead walks the silent, empty
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