Fahrenheit 451 Essay

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Everyone has memories. Memories may be recollections as well as fragments of moments or occurrences. Be it good or be it bad, a memory can have an everlasting effect on the everyday lives of an entirety of people, or even on that of an average person; some memories may contain the power to create fears or even spark anxieties, while other memories may help to inspire or to encourage those to do things that he or she might not find themselves partake in otherwise. Here, there will be shown several ways by the means in which memories can be of both positive and negative effects when it comes to the impacts they create on the lives and actions of people who remember. Two literary works that will be used throughout this paper are Ray Bradbury’s …show more content…

The information that Laura is given about Jim O’Connor joining them for supper and that he will be her first gentleman caller has made her nervous and angry at the fact that her mother hadn’t consulted her first. In Fahrenheit 451, Beatty is interrogating Guy Montag, using quotes “Montag’s head swirled sickeningly . . . He wanted to yell, ‘No! shut up, you’re confusing things, stop it!’ Beatty’s graceful fingers trust out to seize his wrists. ‘God, what a pulse! I’ve got you going, have I Montag?’” (Bradbury 103). The hearing of all these names and quotes has gotten Guy worked up because he knows them, and in Fahrenheit 451, it is prohibited to read or own literary works, and in order for Guy to know the authors and quotes Beatty is using, he must have had to read them somewhere. This causes Montag to become thoroughly worked up because if he slips his tongue or speaks up, it could cost him his job, his home, or even his life. These reasons – equally in Fahrenheit 451 and The Glass Menagerie – are illustrations of why memories can be negative in …show more content…

One final example from The Glass Menagerie is when Laura explains to Jim how loud and obnoxious her clumping was, but Jim follows up with “’I never heard any clumping.’ Laura [wincing at the recollection]: ‘It sounded like – thunder!’ ‘Well, well, well, I never even noticed.’” (Williams 75). Because Jim remembers that there was no clumping noise, he tries to reassure Laura by telling her that there was no noise. This is memory has a positive effect because it makes Laura realize that there was no noise and that it was all in her head. In Fahrenheit 451, Clarisse McClellan encouraged Montag to steak and read books by asking and telling him what her uncle had told her. “’Is it true that long ago firemen put fires out instead of going to start them?’ ‘No. Houses have always been fireproof, take my word for it.’ ‘Strange. I heard once that a long time ago houses used to burn by accident and they needed firemen to stop the flames.’” (Fahrenheit 6). This is really the first conversation Guy and Clarisse had together, and it could as well be the same conversation that sparked his curiosity of the past and books both. Without this conversation, or Clarisse for that matter, Guy would have never showed interest in books. These two quotes show how, even though the characters disagreed, the outcome still had a positive

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