Knowledge In Fahrenheit 451

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“Knowledge is power. Information is power. The secreting or hoarding of knowledge or information may be an act of tyranny camouflaged as humility” (Robin Morgan).
Keeping knowledge from people and restricting what they know is, as Robin Morgan stated, an act of tyranny. In society, people may not always realize their knowledge has been limited, which adds to how wrong it is to control what people learn and find out. The society in the book Fahrenheit 451 has been restricted from gaining knowledge. Books are burned by firemen and they have limited freedoms to help keep them from acquiring information. Ray Bradbury warns society about the importance of knowledge in Fahrenheit 451. Based on Human Rights Watch’s article “World Report: North Korea”, …show more content…

In Fahrenheit 451, books are burned to control what people learn and gain knowledge about. Montag is a main character in the story and he eventually learns how important books actually are. Faber, a man Montag met at a park, informs him books are hated because they have quality and “They show the pores in the face of life” (Bradbury 83). Books are outlawed in the story because they tell the truth of what goes on in the world. The people in control of this society do not want their people knowing anything more than what they want to tell them, in order to keep power, so books are burned. In our current world, similar types of censorship occur. The country of North Korea is an example of control over knowledge. Kim Jong Un is in control of everything including the government, “All media and publications are state-controlled, and unauthorized access to non-state radio or TV broadcasts is punished. Internet and phone calls are limited within the country and are heavily censored. North Koreans are punished if found with mobile media such as computer flash drives or DVDs containing unauthorized videos of foreign films or TV dramas.” (Human Rights Watch). Everyone in Korea is restricted to only knowing what Kim Jong Un and his government tell them. Outside sources are blocked and illegal to those inside his area of power. He does not want people in his country to have knowledge because that could lead to them …show more content…

In the book, society is under strict rules to keep them conforming. Clarisse, while talking to Montag, states, “If you showed a driver a green blur, Oh yes! he’d say, that’s grass! A pink blur! That’s a rose garden!...My uncle drove slowly on a highway once. He drove forty miles an hour and they jailed him for two days” (Bradbury 9). The government of this society did not allow their people to drive slowly on the highway in order to keep them from finding out what grass, roses, and other things actually look like. Keeping knowledge of certain things from people is what allowed this society to function the way it did. In present society, North Korea has similar regulations. North Koreans are tracked by authorities that “seek to catch and punish, persons using Chinese mobile phones to make unauthorized calls to people outside North Korea” (Human Rights Watch). Strict rules do not allow Koreans to talk to outside populations. Kim Jong Un wants to make sure his people are fully under his control and he does this by having strict laws and regulations over them. Koreans are also “systematically denied freedom of association and the right to organize and collectively bargain. The only authorized trade union organization, the General Federation of Trade Unions of Korea, is controlled by the government” (Human Rights Watch). The government of North Korea has complete control over everything and has denied

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