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Fahrenheit 451 is a book that talks about ingorance/knowledge and censorship. I will be telling you about what I think about ingorance/knowledge. I will use the pages 9 and pgs 56-57 to point out some examples of ingorance/knowledge. I will also have my own opinion about the topic with my own examples of ingorance/knowledge.…
First off, I really like this book in general because it has a lot of descriptive language and over all makes the book really interesting and makes it easy for following along because of all the imagery that is given. I honestly feel like Montag and Clarisse's relationship is much more than a “father and daughter” relationship. Clarisse is also so much different from everyone around her, in all honesty if I were to ever meet Clarisse in person id feel like she'd be such a unique individual, She would not care about what anybody said because she knows exactly who she is. In my opinion her uniqueness is probably why Montag is so intrigued by her. Her knowledge is very advanced, in the first few pages Clarisse points out that many people do…
Fahrenheit 451, by Ray Bradbury, is a book set in a dystopian future. It revolves around Guy Montag, a fireman whose job is to burn books, which are forbidden. After talking with Clarisse, a weird girl who lives nearby, he begins to question his life’s work. Why are books so bad? One thing leads to another, and Guy is suddenly takes dangerous steps to save what he once burned.…
The Fahrenheit 451 symbol I created is an atomic bomb with the tail of a book. This represents Montag because he spread knowledge and the importance of books to the society and it ended with the fall of the city. He knew the power of books and people hated him for it. The background is perfect blue skies with clouds because it shows how shielded from the truth people were in the society by the government. they don't even know anything about neighboring cities. “And across the world, thought Montag, how many other cities dead? And here in our country, how many? A hundred, a thousand?” (155) Everyone thought everything was okay and just another war until suddenly the bomb came and decimated everything around them and the intellectuals and montage…
He never even thought to mention or think about it until he met Clarisse. Most people in this time prefers to watch tv or have a good time. Clarisse is a very knowledgable 17 year old girl who is interested in other things beyond what the society around her is interested in, or being forced and limited to. She draws Montag into the life she has lived and became so interested in. Montag starts to genuinely become interested in the things that she are saying and starts to question and also wonder what is really going on around him. After the burning of a woman’s books, house, and also herself, he decides to see for himself. After realizing that everyone is on edge about him confiscating the book from the woman’s house, he then realizes that its not only the decreasing use of books in the society that is the issue but the content that they hold. A content that could possibly change lives band change how they…
Most people today think nothing of knowledge and take it for granted because they think it is easy to gain. In fact, many young adults tend to resist gaining knowledge and would rather entertain themselves with games, television or partying. However, authors Ray Bradbury and Stephen Vincent Benet would pity their indifference. In science fiction story, Fahrenheit 451, Bradbury tells the story of Guy Montag whose search for meaning and knowledge leads him to make difficult decisions throughout his journey. In “By the Waters of Babylon” a science fiction story, a boy, John, discovers the truth while on a journey to become a man. Both stories teach an important lesson about gaining knowledge, that it cannot be gained passively-it requires sacrifice.…
He does not see it yet until he meets the women on the bridge. Clamence is coming out of his regular bar when he walks passed a woman in a black dress. The black dress did not cross the mind of Clamence that if she might be in a state of depression. He hears the splashing of the water as the women jumps into the freezing water. If what Clamence does for a living, doing good deeds for the helpless then he would consider a way to save this woman. Instead, he proceeds walking away. “Yet La Chute makes it clear that Clamence’s judgement is selective.” (Holman 145) He is not a selfless man, but one who determines whether if it is worth his time or not. Maybe if it were in daylight and people were around to watch that would be more of motive to attempt to save her. Clamence begins to face the absurdity in his life, and it has cast him into the life he is living now. He passes the first question of absurdity and suicide, and continues on living, seeing that his life was still worth something. He moved from Paris, a place where he considered heaven into a hell in Amsterdam. He is to never leave the island he is on, because a bridge is needed to cross onto another one. He is contained in the absurd walls because the bridge represents the absurdity in his life. He knows that all those lives he helped in the orphans were meaningless, because he could not have the compassion to risk his own life for another. “Love Your Neighbor as Yourself: not that the sense of special self-love should be expanded to embrace just a brother, or a close friend, but that any fellow citizen, or even fellow human, should be shown the same degree of concern that one feels for oneself. Those who fail to expand their concern outward in this way have, it is often suggested, stumbled at a crucial stage of their moral development they are destined to become psychopaths, or at least sad cases or “arrested development.” (Cottingham 799-800).…
The novel Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury has a society of many uneducated and foolish people who do not know what is going on around them. They do not see that they are slaves to technology. The government in Fahrenheit 451 is making sure that they are not many intelligent people around. They are also making sure that there are not any people that know the truth about their society. Their government's main mission is to brainwash all the citizens so they think they are free, but…
People have a lasting effect on someone depending on how they treat them and what they do in their life. People can have a more meaningful impact having just met someone for a day rather then someone who has been present in their life for years. Montag, in Fahrenheit 451, was more impacted by Clarisse only knowing her for less then a week, rather than his wife, Mildred, of ten years. Clarisse was put in Montag’s life for less then a week, and fulfilled his life more then Mildred. Mildred and Montag have been married for ten years and they don’t have meaning in each other’s lives. Montag’s eyes were open to his true happiness when the author, Ray Bradbury, placed Clarisse in his life. Ray gives Clarisse and Mildred vastly different characteristics…
The novel Fahrenheit 451 stars the protagonist Guy Montag as he learns more about himself and the society he currently lives in. He goes from a close minded unhappy man to someone who's willing to take risks and educate himself about the world. There were a multitude of factors helped contribute Montag to change and grow as a person and a character. Big or small, all of these little things changed the way montag think. He started to question himself about unusal things that shouldn't be questioned and just kept alone. The major events and people that changed his life are Clarrise, the old lady and burning books, Beatty, and finally Faber. The group of these factors played a major role in altering Montag's life and the way he views the world.…
Now these two people are both everyday citizens in society however one’s knowledge supersedes the other. Bradbury uses these two people as substitutes for Clarisse and Montag when first meeting. Clarisse’s knowledge overshadows Montag’s with simple things such as dew on the grass. Clarisse addresses this when on a stroll with Montag when Montag starts being frustrated with such an observation “He suddenly couldn’t remember if he had known this or not and it made him quite irritable”(7). This shows how Clarisse’s knowledge is victorious to Montag’s ignorance, making him frustrated about such a simple aspect in everyday life. This is not the only time Clarisse has changed Montag with her knowledge, when finished with the walk Clarisse changes Montag’s whole perspective when asking him if he’s happy “Of course I’m happy. What does she think I’m not”(18)? This shows Clarisse’s knowledge now changing Montag in…
When Guy Montage meets Clarisse McCullen she destroys his entire world. She doesn’t use a physical fire to destroy it; she uses words as her fire. With one question, “ Are you happy?” (10) She burns every thing in his world; all his thoughts all his joys, and all his illusions of the world around him. Soon he comes to realize the truth, “He felt his smile slide away…He was not happy. He said the words to himself. He recognized this as the true state of affairs” (12). No longer could he believe the lies society had always happened; everything’s ok, you are happy, life is good. Suddenly those ideas and thoughts were gone and he needed to replace them with new ones that were all his own. This is why every one needs a Clarisse McCullen in their life. Someone to destroy everything in order create new ideas and learn new things that they never thought about before. In the book, she forces Montage to think about his life. After he is able to think and say what he wants and not just what society has trained him to think and say. This is important in the real world because without people breaking the mold of society and thinking new and different ideas, nothing would ever change. The world must change to progress but change is hard. When everything is gone, there is no choice but to…
Fahrenheit 451 is a novel written by Ray Bradbury exploring the effects of a simplistic society devoid of free thinking and reliant on cheap satisfactions. The story follows a fireman whose job is to burn books and put an end to the sharing of knowledge. The novel reveals the psyche of many of its characters, and also the author. Psychoanalytic theory was created by Sigmund Freud, a famous Austrian psychologist. It is a theory used to explain human behaviour. Psychoanalytic theory states that the id, the ego, and the superego make up the human personality. The id represents the instinctual drive for instant satisfactions. The job of the ego is to fulfill the demands of the id in a safe and socially acceptable way while also considering the ideals of the super ego. The super ego is comprised of the idealistic goals and ideal self one wishes to accomplish. It strives for perfection and morality. In addition, Freud used defence mechanisms such as repression to explain how people cope with difficult emotions. Sigmund Freud’s theories and ideologies can be used to analyse people and literature in order to uncover secrets about the psyche.…
Not knowing things is sometimes an award, but it can also be a curse. The same idea is applied to the book Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury where the government often hides the truth from the people. They do this to keep everyone happy since they think if you do not know about something, you do not have to worry about it. Some people can accept this standard of living, but others feel as if they are missing something like the main character Guy Montag felt as he learned more about books. Montag developed throughout the story to overcome the statement Ignorance is Bliss by the help of many characters but mainly Beatty, Clarisse, and Faber.…
In the beginning of Fahrenheit 451, Montag is introduced as a firefighter. Every firefighter wears a helmet with the number 451 on it which symbolizes the degree at which books burn. Montag had always enjoyed the pleasure of burning books. The second line of the book says, “It was a special pleasure to see things eaten, to see things blackened and changed.” The joy of burning books and houses never escaped him, even at night when he went to sleep.…