Judy Blume once said “Live by your own scripture don’t copy someone else's, don’t be what society wants you to be, be unique.” Why are quotes like these seen in in the world? Why are they necessary? We need these kind of quotes to stay grounded, to not fall into a world where everyone is equal and boring. We need these sorts of motivational quotes because there are those in our society who want us all to be the same, not only in mind but in personality. There are people in our world who want us to be copies of one another like in the novel Fahrenheit 451 where everyone was created to be the same and think the same. Where there were only a few, including Montag, who wanted to think for themselves and were courageous enough to stand up for what …show more content…
In the novel Fahrenheit 451 society is scared of standing up for their beliefs because of what the outcome might be. They don’t want to lose their home or die or go to jail so instead they conform with whatever everyone else is doing.Like Montag’s society our society is losing its voice because people are scared to say what they think becasue of fear and cowardness. Just like the people in Montag’s society the people in our society are frightened of the outcome of sharing their thoughts, they don’t want the outcome to be negative and they don’t want people to trash their ideas so instead of saying them they hide them and conform with what everyone else is doing. If more people become afraid of speaking their mind then our society, like Montag's, will lose their voice completely and we will be all the same with nothing to say, just obeying orders and being equal not in rights but in personality and …show more content…
In the novel Fahrenheit 451 firefighters instead of stopping fires they caused them by burning the houses of those who contained novels. For example, “While the books went up in sparkling whirls and blew away on a wind turned dark with burning.” This shows that books were being burned in Montag’s world because people judged them too quickly and they started believing they were bad for containing offensive ideas. Our world like Montag’s world is criticizing books too quickly because people are banning and censoring novels because they have profanity or because they are too explicit, but they don’t see what the book is really teaching because they don’t pay attention to the themes they just look at the words and automatically think it is offensive. For example if it contains something like “bitch” or “sex” they automatically ban it an censor it. In Montag’s world they would burn all books because they thought they were a bad influence on society and now they are doing the exact same thing, only we are not burning
Imagine a world in which ignorance is the only fulfillment you are able to have. This is the world in which Guy Montag resides. His job is to erase knowledge from the people’s minds by burning books until he discovers the true value of knowledge. In Fahrenheit 451, many of Montag’s actions, thoughts, and interactions with other characters construct the idea that knowledge supplies true fulfillment, while ignorance leads to conformity and destruction. Throughout part one of the novel, Montag not only demonstrates his own, destructive ignorance, but he also begins to show promise that he will seek out true knowledge.
Quote 2: “Between lay in a pool of water. In the water floated a few shards of ice. In the ice were a few long strands of hair” (Bradbury 53). Explanation: I didn’t really understand why ‘The most beautiful lady in the world’ was added to the book.
Bella Monts 4th block Coach Reece 03/05/24 Montag vs Mildred:The Battle Begins What would a world without knowledge be like? Would everyone be against each other? In the novel Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury, books are forbidden. However, Guy Montag goes against everything he believes in to try and change this. Author Ray Bradbury develops the theme of knowledge and individuality vs ignorance and conformity using the characters Montag and Mildred.
The reader should not feel sympathy for Mildred because Mildred is only interested in the parlor walls and she is very aware of her unhappiness; She also enjoys hitting things when she is driving. The reader should not feel sympathy for Mildred because she only cares about the parlor walls. In Ray Bradbury’s novel, Fahrenheit 451, Mildred says, “It’s only two thousand dollars,” she replied. ‘And I think you’d consider me sometimes.’ ”. This quote shows that Mildred only cares about the parlor walls, and not their financial situation.
This passage confuses me because he had never before referred to Clarisse as a friend, they had only know each other for a couple weeks at the most. Montag’s wife was also not dying in the book so that also didn’t make sense to me at all. The person that could have been his friend would likely never be his friend because where would they have never met if they weren’t already friends. Going along with the book it sounds like making new friends and talking a lot is abnormal so it would have drawn suspicion if they did talk and become friends. I find it abnormal that he would remember someone from a year ago and to trust the man he didn't know. Why would he do so? For all he could have known was that the old man was undercover and trying to trick him into something stupid. You shouldn’t trust someone like that when you’re only met once before.
Barton and Montag:Two men, one zeal Often times, when people set their mind to something, they will go as far as that cause brings them. Whether it be for better or for worse. In the stories, Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury and “Cold Equations” by Tom Godwin, both characters, Montag and Barton, are highly devoted to a cause. The similarities between Barton and Montag are pronounced and they deserve thorough investigation.
In Fahrenheit 451 censorship causes a loss of societal growth, individual thought and personal happiness. In the futuristic world Bradbury has created, firemen start fires rather than extinguishing them. People in this society do not think independently nor do they have meaningful
According to the novel, Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury, Rollo May’s quote “The opposite of courage in our society is not cowardice, it’s conformity” is inaccurate because for what these people in the society conformed to, is a coward act on it’s own. To go ahead and follow something you don’t have knowledge on with the stakes so high and then not give others a voice when they bring viewpoints that differ to what you originally conformed to, is known as a cowardly act. Conforming is just a cover up stuck in ignorance and stubbornness, an excuse for cowardice.
Quote one: “ He saw himself in her eyes, suspended in two shining drops of bright water, himself dark and tiny, in detail, the lines about his mouth, everything there as if her eyes were two miraculous bits of violet amber that might capture and hold him intact. Her face, turned to him now, was fragile milk crystal with a soft and constant light in it.” pg.5.
Conformity, known as working in unison with authorities serves an essential role in making the global community function through policies and set of laws that are regulated upon a vast population. John F. Kennedy, an American politician sheds a different light on conformity than what it is commonly understood as through his famous quote, "Conformity is the jailer of freedom and the enemy of growth." This quote reveals the increasing control conformity has taken on one's mind, promoting the importance of being accepted by others rather than accepting one's own individual personality and capabilities. In Fahrenheit 451, Ray Bradbury demonstrates conformity as a mask that hides one from the raw inner soul, abolishing one's freedom to think
Individuality and independence are valued differently by each world, but the majority of people in both communities are talentless and suppress the talented. In the futuristic American society, everything becomes so mundane and programmed that people eventually become the same. Beatty tells Montag, “[Everyone] must all be alike. Not everyone born free and equal, as the Constitution says, but everyone made equal. Each man the image of every other; then all are happy” (Bradbury 55). Everyone in Fahrenheit 451 has been conditioned to become identical and forced to be the same. The entire community has suppressed individuality, and people do not think for themselves. On the other hand, modern-day society allows free thought and expression, encouraging people to exercise their autonomy.
The use of censorship to examine and eliminate elements in media that are found to be unorthodox or radical has been prevalent in society for centuries. Through censorship, ideas found to be objectionable or offensive are repressed. In his prophetic novel, Fahrenheit 451, Ray Bradbury denotes the common practice of government censorship of books as a suppressive and marginalizing concept for humans because it strips them of the realities, truths, and meaning behind books and deprives them the freedom to deliberate and act on them. The protagonist, Guy Montag lives in a futuristic, American society and is a ‘firemen’; a group of men that deflect the old conventional purpose of stopping fires, to creating
Many people talk about how the world is slowly caving in as people are desensitized emotionally. Opposers suggest that it is technology’s fault for sucking a person’s mind into oblivion twenty four hours a day. However, it is the people themselves who are going to bring about their own destruction. In the book Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury, the actions of the public perfectly exemplifies a worst-case scenario of the future coming to mayhem. In this world, books not accepted by the law are burned by “firefighters” so that everyone is taught the same information. Nobody strays from the “truth”, and this way, everyone is treated equally. There is no nerd and there is no bully. The public is encouraged to listen to live streams of people talking in headphone devices called seashells. Yet for one man in particular, Guy Montag, he struggled between fitting in with the public or pursuing an “itch” he has always had. These feelings started when he had a short talk with his neighbor, Clarisse McClellan. In school, Clarisse has always been seen as an outcast, yet by Montag, her strange facts of realization intrigued him. She knew curious information that he did not, and this made him angry. It was not until she mysteriously disappeared that he really started to understand the depth to her words. She knew more about life, and he was determined to find the same information in the forbidden books. Ironically, Montag was a firefighter, but he
“We need not to be let alone.”(Bradbury 49) is one of many important lines in Fahrenheit 451, but yet, that is exactly what everyone in the city is. In the novel, Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury, many characters separation from the rest of their society is a prominent attribute throughout the book. Three minor characters who perfectly exemplify alienation in their society are Clarisse, Mildred, and Granger. Clarisse epitomizes the role of a “loner” of sorts by doing things like eschewing herself from her peers at lunch. The teachers at her school find her odd for her questions like “why.” On the other hand, Mildred is the average member of the utopian-like society in Fahrenheit 451. Her being the average member and still being “alone” in a sense
The book Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury is a science fiction novel placed in the future. The plot of the story is about a firefighter named Montag in a futuristic city where firefighters start fires instead of extinguishing them. He starts to read books although it is illegal and realizes many truths in the society. Montag kills his fire chief and meets intellectuals by the railroads. They watch as the city is destroyed and go back to rebuild society. Beatty is Montag’s fire chief and boss. He is invested in getting rid of books, although he himself reads. Faber is a former english professor who maintains a low profile and also reads books. He helps Montag understand them. In Fahrenheit 451