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1. Fahrenheit 451: A Depleting Society
The society in Fahrenheit 451 was very different than society today and may be looked at as completely imaginary. Actually, when today's society is compared with the societies both in Fahrenheit 451 and in the past, we are indeed headed that way. The society in Fahrenheit 451 seemed overall boring. No reading, no thinking, and no discussions. A few
2. Fahrenheit 451: Bradbury's Fears
In the book Fahrenheit 451 the author Ray Bradbury is concerned about many things and I think his fears are exaggerated. In the book he writes about a time in the future where firemen were paid to set books on fire. There are many fears that he has that are related to this. One of his fears is people all people being unhappy because there are no bo
3. Fahrenheit 451: A Censored And Structured World
Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451 forces us to envision a world that is so structured and censored fireman exist not to fight fires ,for all buildings are fireproof, but instead to burn books. Fahrenheit 451 is a horrific account of what could happen in an all too close future when society carries "political correctness" to its extreme. One of the prim
4. Fahrenheit 451: The Hope Of The Phoenix
The word phoenix had symbolize immortality, but for the people in Fahrenheit 451, their only hope was that the phoenix would be burn out, and be reborn again. The myth of the phoenix gave optimism to the life of Montag, to the books, and to the world of Fahrenheit 451. The world was now dying, and nobody seemed to care, because the government had b
5. Fahrenheit 451: Predictions
When reading Ray Bradburys description of the future in Fahrenheit 451, it would be very easy for many people to laugh at his predictions. Being written in the early 1950s it is very understandable that Bradburys vision of the future may have been very distorted. Fahrenheit 451 did prove to be a very influential book about social criticism and c