Harry Potter Burning In Fahrenheit 451

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Within the novel Fahrenheit 451 Guy Montag, the protagonist, experiences a mental paradigm shift when Clarisse reveals to him the hidden working of their world. As a result, Guy Montag is introduced to the secrets behind the burning of books. This dystopian society, therefore, is based on whoever is burning the books and not a legitimate democratic government. Lack of knowledge is prominent in the novel because society takes away the only source for it. Paper burns at a temperature of 451, hence the title of the novel and significance of burning a source of knowledge. By removing books, Guy Montag's community is left ignorant and therefore unable to rebel or use their voice for social purposes. People also burned Harry Potter books to insinuate their hate for what the novel portrayed.
Predominantly, in part one of Fahrenheit 451, Guy Montag tries to talk to Mildred about why he feels so ill after the old woman's library being burned; in the novel it …show more content…

In the novel Fahrenheit 451 books are so the government in the society may obtain total control over the people and their way of thinking. Guy Montag is starting to become really affected by the book burning because at the end of The Hearth and the Salamander it is discovered he has hidden books in the ventilator making him very curious as to why someone would die with them like the old lady. It is the same case in the Harry Potter book burnings because of the fact that a certain religion wanted to free themselves and take away a certain genre from the up and coming children. This impacted all the young children growing up because it takes them away from another dimension fictional to most and does not expand their ideas, maintaining them in a box. Therefore, these two scenarios have taken a toll on the lives of the people living in the society, not having a clue what their life is like without that piece of textual

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