Imagine a world which is almost empty of love, peace, and goodness. A world whose people find it entertaining to drive over animals and humans. People who mindlessly pass day by day without a meaning of life.(122) Such this world is implemented in a dark, but beautiful book, Fahrenheit 451. Guy Montag wept deeply for Clarrise because she had, taken the “mask” from him, which enabled him to emerge from the shadows, and, by doing this, she helped shape his destiny.(9)
In Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451, the struggle for freedom is shown through Montag’s perseverance to read and own books from the beginning of the novel to the end. After Montag quickly decides that his wife deserves to know that he had hidden books, “Then he reached up and pulled back the grille of the air-conditioning system and reached far back inside to the right and moved still another sliding sheet of metal and took out a book” (Bradbury 65). At the end of part one, this event occurs and it describes how serious of an issue it was if they went against the law and kept books to read.. Furthermore, this quote from the novel proves that the struggle for freedom is shown in the image it gives to a reader's mind of how skillfully he had to
Having a Fulfilling Life Imagine where you would be if you have never read a book in your life. Unread every book you’ve ever read. It’s kind of depressing. You live in the same, plain world as everyone else.
Living in a society where everyone does the same thing and follows the same rules wouldn’t be a fun place to live. Everybody would act the same and no one would be who they really are. The theme in Fahrenheit 451 that Ray Bradbury is trying to express is that you shouldn’t give into society’s pressure. Just because everyone else is doing something doesn’t mean you should too. Be who you really are because everyone else is already taken.
In the book, Fahrenheit 451. Illiteracy has led people into a dystopian world and not being educated has made the people of this society easily taken in and advantageous. Bradbury explains and warns us that the more society develops technology and leaves books, the more people will be illiterate and society will be easily controlled. In the book, Fahrenheit 451 the character Faber said “ The books are to remind us what asses and fools we are.”
Are you a bad person if you conform to a dystopian society, without knowing it is wrong? Clarisse McClellan embraces her curious personality, which makes her a rebel. Mildred Montages benighted personality makes her a conventional society member. The curious personality of Clarisse and benighted personality of Mildred show that different people have different experiences in the same society. Clarisse McClellan’s curious personality makes her rebellious in the dystopian society.
Towards the end of the book, Montag escapes from the police and he assimilated himself into a small but growing community of refugees who had successful fled the autocratic, repressive society that saw books as tools of dissent and rebellion. Bradbury’s novel’s takes place during a time of war and the city from which Montag has fled is destroyed by aerial assault. After sitting around their makeshift camp, the group of refugees decides to go back to the grim demolished city and Granger states “There was a silly damn called a Phoenix back before Christ: every few hundred years he built a pyre and burned himself… We know all the damn silly things we’ve done for a thousand years, and as long as we know that and always have it around where we can see it, some day we’ll stop making the goddam funeral pyres and jumping into the middle”. Granger references the mythical bird
MIP-3) When you slow down you encounter the benefits like emotion and realization, that others who don't slow down won't get. (SIP-A) When given the chance to slow down you encounter time to gather thoughts and think about other people. (STEWE-1)
The most significant characteristics of human nature are independent thinking, social interaction, and emotional response. Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury chronicles the life of Guy Montag, a firefighter whose sole responsibility is to burn books within the community. As Montag struggles with the monotony of life, he engages with a book and begins the journey to free society from its self-destruction. Bradbury, throughout the novel, develops the themes of the dangers of suppression of information, the negative impacts of rapid tech growth, and the importance of independent thinking to foreshadow the dangerous impact and negative consequences when society is void of individual thinking and emotion.
The book Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury takes place in a futuristic world in which books are banned, free thought is rare, and firemen burn books. The main character, Guy Montag, reevaluates himself after he sees how curiosity can affect you. This happens when he meets Clarisse, his new neighbor. Clarisse is outgoing and got Guy to think for himself. Guy’s wife Mildred, however, lets the parlor walls think for her.
In Fahrenheit 451 one of the author's messages seems to be how the government uses power to control the populace, and one main conflict in the book is Montag's battle with society and the government, and we can see this when he says, “Last night I thought about all of the kerosene I've used and for the first time I realized that there was a man behind each one of those books. A man had to think them up. A man had to take a long time to put them down on paper. ”(55) This quotation connects to the conflict because Montag is battling with society and the government, and when he says that it shows that he is actually thinking about books and disobeying the governments and societies laws.
At the beginning of “Fahrenheit 451,” Montag is ignorant. He burns books for a living as a firefighter and does not question society. He sees this world as normal and follows as such He even enjoys seeing the burning taking place. His obedience towards society is shown when he is talking to Clarisse about his job: “‘Do you ever read any of the books you burn’ He laughed ‘That’s against the law’ ‘Oh. Of course’ ‘It’s fine work.
Taking a Stand with Votes and Arguments (Attention Getter quote) “There must be something in books, things we can’t imagine, to make a woman stay in a burning house; there must be something there. You don’t stay for nothing.” (Bradbury 47). (Background) In the novel, Fahrenheit 451, by Ray Bradbury, Guy Montag is a firefighter in a dystopian future society where the firefighters burn books because they are illegal, for the first few years of his job he's satisfied and thinks he's happy; but after sometime and learning the dark truth Montag completely begins to change.
Montag is a newborn phoenix, risen from it’s ashes, ready to begin a new life the moment he destroyed his own home, which are full of memories that’s to be left behind forever. A society of where brainwashed families spend most of their entire lives watching television and listening to seashell radios. A society of where the government prohibits the existence of books by sending firemen to incinerate them on a daily basis. This dystopian society, is where the knowledgeable are to be feared and hated. For that reason, Montag attempts to figure out why books were banned in the first place and why people would rather spend most of their hours on technology then enjoy life.
No Nips Allowed A breast cannot be seen as nonsexual in today’s society “I think the real obscenity comes from raising our youth to believe that sex is bad and ugly and dirty, and yet it is heroic to go spill guts and blood in the ghastliest manner in the name of humanity but ask yourself this question what is more obscene sex or war?” (Forman). Today, in America it is illegal for a woman to be topless or breastfeed in public. States such as Louisiana a woman showing her breast can be sent to jail for up to three years, or fined a ridiculous amount.