Critical Essay On Fahrenheit 451

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I read Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury. In this book, thinking and knowledge are replaced by loud tv walls in the “parlor” and false happiness. The people in this society don’t realize that all these things that make them feel good aren’t genuine. They think they’re happy, and they have pretty easy lives. They sit and watch TV all day, they’re not forced to do anything disagreeable, or much at all. Except people are still not happy but they don’t admit it. Millie attempted suicide. Beatty is aware of the situation and seems to be satisfied but as Guy went towards him with the flame gun he just stood there. Later on, Guy realized “Beatty wanted to die”(122) Sometimes for us in the real world, it feels like we’re happy because we might have just received a …show more content…

Guy doesn’t seem to have a close relationship with his wife, and almost everyday the “family” in the parlor are on. The people next door are so much different. They talk to each other, they observe, they don’t fly through life like the rest of the town going over 100 miles an hour in their cars. They laugh, and this family has so much to say, to talk about, and to think about- things that are absent in the rest of everyone else’s lives. The girl, Charisse, and people like her, are regarded as strange and not “normal”. Charisse affected Guy especially. He only knew her for a few days, but when she was killed he couldn’t get over it. As she walked with him to the corner on his way to work, she opened his eyes to feelings and observation. Charisse had so much knowledge to share, and all of a sudden Guy was thinking. There was no identity, no personal life where people shared stories and loved each other. As kids in school you learned how to think from your teachers and mentors, and personal thoughts are practically prohibited. Montag himself never really thought for his own. He sometimes felt like Charisse was speaking through him and Faber was in his

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