Montag’s Gradual Change in the Book Farenheit 451

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In the book , Farenheit 451, by Ray Bradbury, there are a lot of symbols present. But, the most omnipresent symbol is the fire symbol. The plot of this book depends solely on this symbol. The reason for this symbol’s importance is that Montag’s changing attitudes reflect the differing meanings of the fire symbol. If one examines the way Bradbury uses the fire symbol to reveal Montag’s attitude towards life and his society, one recognizes that everything has good and bad qualities. It is in also in one’s best interest to take only the good. At the beginning of the book, the fire symbol represents destruction and reveals Montag’s unquestioning correspondence with society. This can be proven when, the firemen, with 451 (the temperature at which books burn) on their helmets, burn and whole houses and whatever is inside. Corresponding to the other firemen (repetition), Montag thinks it is pleasurable to “bring down the tatters and charcoal ruins of history”(7). He apparently gets an adrenaline rush from burning and is totally ignorant of whatever he is burning. Also, he seems t...

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