Fahrenheit 451 Literary Analysis Essay

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Fahrenheit 451: Literary Analysis Ray Bradbury’s novel, Fahrenheit 451, is about a future society where books are burned and looked at as evil. Everyone has TVs and fancy cars, and, at the time, a war was taking place. The government decided to ban books to keep people from getting too smart and keep them distracted from the war. This book was written post World War 2. Bradbury thought that people would become the same, in order to lead more comfortable lives. The protagonist of the story, Guy Montag, becomes curious as to why everything is like this and decides to stand out. Through Guy Montag, Ray Bradbury illustrates how people are discriminated against for being different from others or from how they are expected to be. Guy Montag is a firefighter in this story that always just seems. However, in this story, rather than extinguishing fires the firefighters burn things, books in particular. Montag performs this job every day, yet he doesn’t know why. Eventually, he begins to wonder why books are really being burnt and begins to wonder what they could hold that is so evil. In one situation, Montag and the rest …show more content…

Montag is very surprised at this and rather than being punished for hoarding books, he decides to attack the fire captain and make a run for it. The text reads, “‘Why,’ said Montag slowly, ‘we’ve stopped in front of my house’” (Bradbury 110). It also says, “He [Montag] twitched the safety catch on the flamethrower.… And then he [the fire captain] was a shrieking blaze, a jumping, sprawling gibbering manikin, no longer human or known, all writhing flame on the lawn as Montag shot one continuous pulse of liquid fire over him” (Bradbury 119). This shows that Montag is willing to fight for his cause, brutally even, because that’s how much he believes in it even though it is different and he may be mistreated because of

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