Guy Montag is a fireman who believes he is content with his occupation and life in an oppressive futuristic American society portrayed in the novel Fahrenheit 451. In Montag's society, firemen start fires instead of putting them out, burning books and belongings of book owners. In this futuristic society people don't read books, enjoy nature, think independently or have meaningful conversations. Instead, they drive very fast, watch excessive television, and waste unnecessary time on listening to radio. However, his displeasure, undisclosed to even himself, becomes apparent after meeting Clarisse McClellan, the new neighbor and 17 year old girl, who engages in peculiar acts. Through her naive and deep questions combined with her strange affection for people and nature opens Guy Montag's to the true reality of his life. Over the next couple of days, Montag experiences a sequence of odd/alarming events. First, Mildred, his wife attempts suicide by taking overdoses of sleeping pills. Next, when he and the Firemen Squad respond to the alarm of an old woman with books, the …show more content…
Captain Beatty also finds the "green bullet" and declares he will trace it to its source. Beatty also mocks and taunts Montag until Montag burns him. Montag knocks out the other firemen and runs. The Mechanical Hound, injects large doses of drugs in his leg but managed to destroy it with his flamethrower. Now, a criminal and the center of a nationally televised manhunt, Montag visits Faber where he drinks whiskey and gets some old clothes. Montag discovers that a new Mechanical Hound has been put on his trail along with numerous helicopters and a T.V. broadcasting crew. Montag tells Faber how to remove his scent/odor trail from the house and fives Faber one hundred dollars. Montag luckily manages to escape into the river in the nick of time and changes into the clothes Faber gave him to conceal his
The novel Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury presents a futuristic American city where books are banned and firemen burn any that are found. Guy Montag is featured in the opening lines of Fahrenheit 451, he is a firefighter who burns books simply because that it is his job and that a fireman's duty to destroy knowledge and encourage ignorance in order to equalize the population. In the first part of the novel Guy Montag is aligned with bad guys, but as the novel progresses Guy Montag transforms into a different person and at the end he attempts to reclaim lost pieces of the human civilization.
In Fahrenheit 451, the main character is Guy Montag. Montag is a “firefighter” who burns books.Yes, I was thinking the same thing of why he was making fires and not putting them out. In this futuristic society they don’t read books or write at all. Instead, they drive very fast and watch a lot of Tv and listen to the radio on “seashell sets”. One day Montag meets a girl named Clarisse McClellan and she opens his eyes up about things. She is full of happiness and has a lot of knowledge for her age. A lot of events happen to Montag, his wife tried to commit suicide, a woman decides to be burned alive with her books, and Clarisse gets killed by a speeding car. He starts to really question things when a lady decides to be burned alive with her
First let me tell everyone a little about Fahrenheit 451. Guy Montag is a firefighter whose
Montag loses confidence and trust in his job when he witnesses an old woman willing to be burned alive along with her books when the firemen approach her house. This complexity of the books leaves him overwhelmed. He begins to question the reason behind the
Unquestionably, all novels can convey multiple meanings depending on a variety of factors with the most important being the manner in which the audience interprets the author’s words. More importantly, to professionally draw conclusions concerning the message the author demonstrates throughout a text, it is essential to discuss and apply the five literary elements of literature to the text. In greater detail, when a work itself is criticized or evaluated, usually one literary element is focused on to prove an argument pertaining to a novel. To bring the topic into focus, Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451 possesses many points that could be argued in contradictory ways based upon factual
The first character in the novel Fahrenheit 451 who influences Guy Montag is seventeen year-old Clarisse McClellan. The first time Guy and Clarisse cross paths occurs when Guy is walking home from work close to midnight. They meet on an empty sidewalk and quickly begin conversation. As they continue talking, Guy notices that Clarisse is not an average teenager because of the deep questions and thoughts she has. Clarisse questions Guy’s contentment and makes him realize the absence of love and pleasure in his life. Clarisse acts as a goad to push Guy towards a much needed self-examination that later helps him overcome his fear of bringing out the books he has collected over the years and start to look for the meaning in them. Because of Clarisse, Guy is able to transform into a more self-aware man who can now decode his feelings and realize what he needs to have a flourishing life. The second character I chose who impacts Guy Montag is Professor Faber. Guy met Faber in a park a year before this novel takes place when Guy suspected Faber of having a book. When Guy finally builds up his interest in wanting to know more about his secret books, he calls Faber for aid. With Faber’s knowledge, Guy is able to understand viewpoints from different authors and eventually escape the city after he is reported for having books. Alongside Clarisse, Faber is able to help Montag from being completely molded into an average city citizen who is isolated from the knowledge that books are,
His curiosity is conspicuous after he asks Beatty, who ‘Master Ridley’ was, who was talked about by the woman who burned herself (40). He wonders about everything and is determined to learn new information that he was not aware of, since he feels he knows nothing. The books intrigue him and makes him want to gain knowledge of the world, “They read the long afternoon through…” (71). Montag goes off on Mrs. Bowles and reprimands her for not having feelings or guilt about what she has done (101). Montag now has a clear understanding of how his society is like, and wants others to realize how terrible the established system is.
Montag is constantly being set back by the obstacles that are constantly being thrown at him. After he handed the Bible to Beatty, the alarm spontaneously went off. Life seemed to presume back to normal after the amicable handoff. Everyone equipped their gear and rushed to the scene. Montag was then hit with the fact that he will be responsible for the destruction of his own home. His “beloved” wife ratted him out and now Guy has to face the consequences. Beatty orders him to set his house on fire, and soon after he will be arrested. As all this is happening, Beatty discovers the communicator with Faber and promises he will trace it. At this very moment Montag is left with a dilemma.
In this book Guy Montag is one of the fireman that goes into peoples and burns the books. He thought that he was happy and that he had a great life. Then he meets this girl named Clarissa Mclellan, she lived down the street from him. She would meet him and walk with him on his way to work and she would ask him questions that made his start to question his life. She was the one that made him open his eyes and see that he was not truly happy like he thought he was. She made his question his whole life, job, and the future. Her family was different than other families in the society. They knew how to be happy and how life could be. Over time Montag started to enjoy Clarissa and her talks but then one day she died and that’s when things started
Fahrenheit 451 depicts a dystopian society with mass media and firemen who burn books instead of put out fires. Guy Montag, a fireman, struggles with the idea of why he burns. He begins to steal and read books to find out the truth. He meets a girl, Clarisse, who was different than everyone he has met and its forces him to reflect on himself. Individuality is frowned upon and Montag finds himself separating from the normalcy of his society. Fahrenheit 451 highlights the dangers of censorship and how it negatively affects today’s society.
Guy Montag is the protagonist and central character of the book, Fahrenheit 451, by Ray Bradbury that transforms from a conformist in a totalitarian society to rebuilding a society that reads books. Montag fits the cliché description of a good-looking male with “black hair, black brows…fiery face, and…blue-steel shaved but unshaved look.” (Bradbury, 33) For the past eight years he has burned books. He is a 3rd generation firefighter, who in the beginning of the story, loves his job, which consists of burning the homes of people who perform criminal acts of reading and keeping books in their homes. By understanding Montag’s relationships, discontentment, and future, one can begin to understand the complexities of Guy Montag.
Guy Montag is a fireman who believes he is content with his occupation and life in an oppressive futuristic American society portrayed in the novel Fahrenheit 451. In Montag's society, firemen start fires instead of putting them out, burning books and belongings of book owners. In this futuristic society people don't read books, enjoy nature, think independently or have meaningful conversations. Instead, they drive very fast, watch excessive television, and waste unnecessary time on listening to radio. However, his displeasure, undisclosed to even himself, becomes apparent after meeting Clarisse McClellan, the new neighbor and 17 year old girl, who engages in peculiar acts. Through her naive and deep questions combined with her strange affection
The mechanical hound begins to growl at Montag. Now Montag begins to wonder if the Hound is catching on to his individualistic behavior.
Guy Montag is a fireman who is greatly influenced in Ray Bradbury's novel, Fahrenheit 451. The job of a fireman in this futuristic society is to burn down houses with books in them. Montag has always enjoyed his job, that is until Clarisse McClellan comes along. Clarisse is seventeen and crazy. At least, this is what her uncle, whom she gets many of her ideas about the world from, describes her as. Clarisse and Montag befriend each other quickly, and Clarisse's impact on Montag is enormous. Clarisse comes into Montag's life, and immediately begins to question his relationship with his wife, his career, and his happiness. Also, Clarisse shows Montag how to appreciate the simple things in life. She teaches him to care about other people and
In Ray Bradbury’s novel Fahrenheit 451, the character Guy Montag changes and shifts from an unhealthy mindset to a healthier one as a result of revelations and events that occur throughout. The mindset of Guy develops over time to become more mundane, which can be seen in the way in which he changes his opinion, acknowledges his true feelings, and provides insight on situations in society.