...We have everything to be happy but we’re not. We lack something more. In Fahrenheit 451, people aren’t happy, although they think they are. Ray Bradbury interprets happiness as knowledge. Knowledge being the key to happiness, is unfortunately censored in their society. In order for people to be truly happy they must have obtained quality information, leisure, and most importantly freedom. Quality of information in our society is the key to opening the doors to a happy life. Occasionally, society throws a web of lies at us. In Fahrenheit 451, the firemen are disposing of the knowledge, truth, and life by burning the books. Bradbury describes that quality information contains “texture”. Throughout the whole book, Montag is in search of finding quality information. Faber tells Montag that he isn’t interested in the books, he’s interested in the meaning, authenticity, and detail. The...
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...Happiness Happiness is an important and necessity in the lives of people around the world. Happiness has been ingrained in people's consciousness since before Thomas Jefferson voiced these famous words in the Declaration of Independence: “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness” (Jefferson). Therefore, people have been in pursuit to find happiness. These are unalienable rights, meaning that even if somebody wanted to give them up they couldn't. Although in the book Fahrenheit 451 the citizens of the society don’t have the unalienable rights. The problem that Ray Bradbury addresses in the Fahrenheit 451 is that happiness could eventually lead to the human race's demise. The protagonist...
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...Happiness in Fahrenheit 451 The book Fahrenheit 451 is a dark book. The people that live in the city are very awkward towards each other. This is a result of them not truly being happy. The society is very unsocial and spend most of their time watching their 3 wall tv’s. They rarely talk to each other even if they are married. True happiness is when two or more people show compassion for each other. These people can be married, siblings, cousins, family, and neighbors. In modern society true happiness is when a couple gets married or when a family has a reunion. True happiness, is an inner quality. It is a state of mind. If your mind is at peace, you are happy. If your mind is at peace, but you have nothing else, you can be happy. If you...
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...The View of Happiness in the Society of Fahrenheit 451 The dictionary states that Happiness in a state of well-being or contemptment. In our world we know happiness as a feeling when something good happens. Happiness is different for everyone. For example, to some it can be materialistic like getting new items. To others it could be just the ability to spend time with family and friends. Now how is happiness seen in Fahrenheit 451? At the beginning of the book after Clarisse and Montag meet, Clarisse asks if he is happy. He laughs if off but after a little starts rethinking it. On page 59, Captain Beatty says “People want to be happy, isn’t that right? Haven’t you heard it all your life? I want to be happy, people say. Well aren’t they? Don’t we keep them moving, don’t we give them fun? That’s all we live for isn’t it? For pleasure, for titillation? And you must admit our culture provides plenty of these.” In this quote Captain Beatty is stating that the way to make people happy is to provide them with pleasure and fun. What happens in society when the pleasurable and fun things end? No one knows because people are always being provided with the supplies to keep them happy or busy enough that they think...
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...Introduction How much do mirrors and faces really have in common? Fahrenheit 451, by Ray Bradbury. It’s a book about a world where books are illegal. If you are found with a book your house and all your books are burned. After your house is done being burned, you are sent to away. To sum up Fahrenheit 451. It is about a man named Guy Montag who is a fireman, and firemen burn books instead of reading them. He meets a 17 year old girl Clarisse McClellan changed the way he saw people, she made him see what was really on the inside. She also reflected Montag through herself so that he could see what he was really like on the inside Faces Have you ever thought of an island being covered in snow? “Her face was like a snow covered island” (11) it...
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...Statement of Intent: Independent Study Project: Fahrenheit 451 My tentative topic for this ISP will be Ray Bradbury’s use delusion of truth, the desire of ignorance and the fear of freeing oneself from propaganda to express society’s desire for perfect happiness- no matter the cost- in Fahrenheit 451. In this dystopian novel, Bradbury uses Clarisse and her odd family to foreshadow some of Guy Montag’s doubt in himself, his family and his daily life. Clarisse’s role in the novel is made clearer as Montag begins searching for the truth as she is seen as a guiding light to give Guy hope for a better future where he is happy. Given the government dictated culture they live in, the danger and fear of finding the knowledge that Montag is paid to destroy, there is no doubt that Bradbury is using the dystopian society’s unconscious desire to live a lie, the yearn to not know more and the consequences of finding out the truth in order to highlight society’s solution for happiness: delusion. In this Independent Study Project I will attempt to showcase that seeking out the truth in a government enforced web of lies is unwanted, fear inducing and dangerous. To prove this, I will connect the laws, crimes, those who commit and their consequences with those who ignore the truth and act content with their deluded lives. In doing so, I hope to demonstrate that as Guy Montag figures out the truth, he realizes how much the government dictates the culture he lives in In the paper, I will consider...
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...In Fahrenheit 451, the firefighter Captain Beatty states, “Each man the image of every other; then they are happy…” (Bradbury 55). This quote means that people won’t be happy unless they’re like each other. The book is set in the future when books are illegal, but more specifically being unique. Firefighters no long fight fires, they now burn books along with the houses that contain them. People who are unique are gotten rid of, usually by death. The author, Ray Bradbury, didn’t go to college. Instead he went to a library, which makes him different. In addition, the firefighter Captain Beatty expresses the opposite of what Bradbury means, in the form of satire. In Fahrenheit 451 happiness, according to Ray Bradbury, is being an individual....
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...Ashes of the Future Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury was written in 1950, however it takes place far into the future, even beyond 2014. In this future society, television and radio essentially control the world, and literature is virtually becoming extinct. Firefighters's jobs are to start fires, not put them out. Their mission is to burn all books and the houses they're found in. Guy Montag is one of these firefighters, who is numb to the effects of book burning. He finds joy in the fires and goes about his duties every day, burning books, coming home to his wife, Mildred, who is addicted to her television "family" and sleeping pills. His world is loud and busy, but essentially empty. Eventually, Montag meets his neighbor Clarisse, who is unlike everyone else in that she notices the details in life and the nature all around her, and values the old way of life, including books. Once Montag starts talking to her, he starts to see the flaws in this modern society and wonders what books really contain. This curiosity is heightened even more when he witnesses an old woman die with her books in her house fire because she refused to leave them. Montag begins to collect and read books, which ultimately...
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...O’Riyan L. 4th period April 13, 2016 Limitations to Happiness Fahrenheit 451 does society have true happiness? Society goes through different experiences to achieve happiness. Montag starts to question different aspects of life by what is deemed as unusual. Ray Bradbury shows that happiness is trying to be achieved through the banning and burning of books. The concept of technology and conformity shows how happiness can or cannot be achieved. Bradbury uses figurative language and symbolism to express the theme of technology. In the “Hearth of the Salamander” Montag expresses that there were “two machines really. One of them slid down into her stomach like a black cobra, an echoing well looking for all the old water and old time gathered there”...
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...English Finals Essay: Fahrenheit 451 Within the dystopian world of Fahrenheit 451, books, knowledge, and literature were all banned or destroyed. This lead to the result of happiness of most of the community but, not to all of the people. One of those people that was against the idea of banning and destroying literature was Faber, an old retired english professor. In a discussion with Guy Montag the protagonist, he explains that there are 3 key things that was missing from the community of Fahrenheit of 451. Those 3 things are “quality information”, “leisure to digest it” and, “the right to carry out actions based on what we learn from the interaction of the first two”.These key “things” are extremely similar in importance toward both our...
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...Dystopian world’s are interesting since they create a world parallel to our own to attack some part of society indirectly. In Fahrenheit 451, Ray Bradbury shows us how people’s hunger for happiness can completely turn our world over so that our values no longer exist, leaving only our selfish need of technology. Another author, Jack London, conveys through his book the social injustice of their society on the working class because of the money hungry upper class that takes place in the past. Then there’s Robocop that takes place in the present of the past, if that makes sence, and it shows how corrupt the government is, as well as… Fahrenheit 451: A society is made up of people living together in a circle. However, that sense of community is non-existent in Montag’s world....
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...Bradbury's novel, Fahrenheit 451, was written at the onset of the fifties as a call to the American people to reflect on how the dominant social values of their times were effecting both the lives of individual Americans and their government. Fahrenheit 451 attacks utopian government and focuses on society's foolishness of always being politically correct. (Mogen 113). According to Mogen, Fahrenheit 451 depicts a world in which the American Dream has turned into a nightmare because it has been superficially understood. (Mogen 107) In order to understand Bradley's social critique, it is essential to realize that he wrote Fahrenheit 451 in the wake of World War II and the early days of the Cold War, in a political climate that was increasingly favoring security over the civil liberties of individuals (Mogen 124, 114). Due to the Cold War, Americans continuously felt threatened by the idea of communism and the idea of hostility from communist countries (Mogen 115). Any association with communism would immediately ostracize an American politician (Mogen 115). In Fahrenheit 451, Bradbury displays a futuristic utopian society where "the people did not read books, enjoy nature, spend time by themselves, think independently, or have meaningful conversations." (Mogen 111). About sixty years later, some would argue that our society has been guilty of similar downfalls. (Book Rags) The government in Fahrenheit 451 bans books because they do not appreciate the thoughts books created peoples...
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...In the books Anthem and Fahrenheit 451 by Ayn Rand and Ray Bradbury, both of the main characters live in societies much different than ours. In Fahrenheit 451, the main character, Guy Montag, lives in a society where reading is considered sin and books are considered illegal. In Anthem, the main character, Equality 7-2521, lives in a society where everyone's lives are decided for them. In this dystopian society, there is also a lack of knowledge due to how Equality 7-2521’s government is. Equality 7-2521’s council basically considers it a sin to learn anything their teachers have not taught them. It is also practically considered sin to ask questions and to be curious. Both of these societies face different problems such as a corrupt and oppressive government, inner conflict, and rebellion. In both books, the oppressive governments restrict learning and keep their society dystopian. In Anthem, Equality 7-2521’s...
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...Books, envelopes of information that come in many different styles, forms, and languages, have been a significant source of knowledge and learning for centuries. In her essay “Happy Objects,” Sarah Ahmed explains how “happiness functions as a promise that directs us toward certain objects, which then circulate as social goods” (Ahmed 29). These social goods, in this case books, preserve the connection between ideas, values, and the objects that develop the attributes of our culture. Ahmed’s description of this connection as being “sticky” provides meaning to the positive or negative effects that objects acquire over time. In his novel Fahrenheit 451, Ray Bradbury uses a dystopian society deprived of books and literature to critique the hypocritical mass media transition and conformist...
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...Society today uses technology so often that some people are even more invested in the latest television saga or celebrity scandal than they are in their own personal affairs. It is almost like society is reaching closer to the reality of Ray Bradbury's book, Fahrenheit 451, where people are so wrapped up in being around their new electronics that they’ve grown ignorant and compliant to their own terribly controlling government. Ray Bradbury has implied several recurring themes in this book in relation to our own world, such as how happiness does not depend on the newest type of expensive technology and how it can be good to exercise freedom to question the motives of a deceitful authority. Happiness can not be purchased. Television...
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