The Theme Of Oppression In Fahrenheit 451

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To Kill A Mockingbird is a Pulitzer Prize-awarded book that many love and will read about in school and other tasks in someone's life. This book is only one of two books Ms.Lee wrote, the other one being found shortly after her death in 2016. It is a mostly well-received book; it has growth, personality, and insight into the American world back in the 1930s into the Depression, and tells the story of two young siblings Jem and Scout Finch, and their father Atticus Finch who is a lawyer in the small town of Maycomb. The book along with Fahrenheit 451 was deemed canceled but both these books show a theme of oppression by those in power keeping the lower class down. The Biloxi School Board says it “makes people uncomfortable” (Little). Is the …show more content…

On the part of its entire premise is censorship and how it dehumanizes people and we should think for ourselves. Fahrenheit 451 follows a man named Guy Montage, Guy is a firefighter, and this kinda firefighter is very different from the normal fireman. Fahrenheit 451 takes place in a dystopian future where houses are flameproof, so firefighters do not put out fires, they make them. Over the course of time, it seems that the world has decided that being your own person is not worth it. That having a personality is not worth it, that idealism is not worth it. Causing everyone to be in the bluntest aspect of it “cogs in the machine”. The guy is a not-so-happily married man with a woman named Mildred, poor Millie shows signs of severe depression and is very distant from her husband. Some evidence of this is the way she acts, in this future, there are “Walls” or “The Parlor” these are really large TV-like devices that play shows and can even be interacted with and Millie comes to find them as a “Family”. Mildred will always have them Blasting at full volume which often upsets Guy and she doesn’t like turning them down. She often ignores him and will isolate herself in the “Parlor”. “Well, wasn't there a wall between him and Mildred, when you came down to it? Literally not just one wall but, so far, three! And expensive,