The Negative Effects Of Technology In Fahrenheit 451 By Ray Bradbury

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Guy Montag is a fireman but instead of putting out fires, he lights them. Ray Bradbury wrote Fahrenheit 451 following WWII when he saw technology becoming a part of daily life and getting faster at an exponential rate. Bradbury wanted to show that technology wasn’t always good, and in some cases could even be bad. Fahrenheit 451is set in a dystopian future that is viewed as a utopian one, void of knowledge and full of false fulfillment, where people have replaced experiences with entertainment. Ray Bradbury uses the book’s society to illustrate the negative effects of technology in everyday life. Technology has effected the speed of life in Fahrenheit’s society. As technology got faster, so did people’s lifestyle. They lived lives of surface-value happiness, not fulfillment, This reminds me of Steven Ford in Indian education who “Sniffed rubber cement from a paper bag” (Alexie 175) much like the people in Fahrenheit’s society he lives only to escape real life. In the story everyone is rushing from one place to another, using high-speed cars to get around and feel a rush. Clarisse once said to Montag “I sometimes think drivers don’t know what grass is, or flowers, because they never see them slowly. If you showed a driver a green blur, Oh yes! he’d say, that’s …show more content…

You don’t have to think deeply in Fahrenheit’s society, this is touched on in the book on page 84 where Montag Questions his wife by asking “time to think? If you 're not driving a hundred miles an hour, at a clip where you can 't think of anything else but the danger, then you 're playing some game or sitting in some room where you can 't argue with the four wall TV parlor. Why? The TV parlor is ‘real.’ It is immediate, it has dimension. It tells you what to think and blasts it in. It must be, right. It seems so right. It rushes you on so quickly to its own conclusions your mind hasn 't time to protest, ‘What nonsense!” (Bradbury

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