The Transformation of Guy Montag in Fahrenheit 451, by Ray Bradbury

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Bradbury’s novel Fahrenheit 451 is a extraordinary piece science fiction. Science fiction is a genre of book that are similar to fantasy, but are not quite the same. While fantasy and science fiction both are not real, science fiction is with futuristic ideas; such as technology that does not exist. In Fahrenheit 451. Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451 is a piece of science fiction, as it is set in the future with a society that is very different in all aspects. They have futuristic technology such as the green bullets, which are radios that they put in their ears. The society also functions very differently; the people do not really have much thought about anything. The government will not let them read books, because it will make them knowledgeable, so firemen burn the books to ensure they will not be read. In the society of Fahrenheit 451 knowledge is feared by people, and they call people who have knowledge “crazy”. Montag is a character that in the beginning acts like the rest of the society, but throughout the novel changes his viewpoint. Montag that changes drastically throughout the novel, he begins to see that he is not happy, starts to read books, and kills beatty.

Montag begins to notice how the society is not all what they think it is when his wife tries to kill herself. When this happens he calls the doctor and they have a machine that is specifically made to pump peoples stomach from pills. He start to realize how unhappy the society is if they have to have machines like this. He also realizes that he himself is not happy. “He felt his smile slide away, melt, fold over, and down on itself like a tallow skin, like the stuff of a fantastic candle burning too long and now collapsing and now blown

out. Darkn...

... middle of paper ...

... like the rest of society. Shortly after the city was bombed. Granger, a guy that Montag said that it was like a phoenix. The city was killed, and a new one will be born. At the end of the story, they are walking to the city start it new, how he wants it to.

Montag that changes drastically throughout the novel, he begins to see that he is not happy, starts to read books, and kills beatty. Throughout the novel, he realizes that he is not happy though the help of Clarisse. He steals books, and reads them, to see for himself what they are really like. He also kills the fire chief that used to be his friend. Montag is ultimately a dynamic character that changes drastically in the novel Fahrenheit 451.

Works Cited

Bradbury, Ray. Fahrenheit 451: Fahrenheit 451 -- the Temperature at Which Book Paper Catches Fire, and Burns ... New York: Ballentine, 1982. Print.

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