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Analysis Of Bradbury 's ' Fahrenheit 451 '

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Vanessa Aguilar
English II HP/Period 4
Vandervort
November 14 2014
Bradbury’s Prediction
Worldwide, one in five people are illiterate. Even in the United States where one receives a free education, fifty percent of American adults are not able to read at an eighth grade level (Reading Statistics, 1). This is the complete opposite scenario in the novel Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury, where he describes a world where people are no longer allowed to certain literature and are limited in expanding their knowledge. The protagonist, Montag, works as a fireman who instead of putting out fires, sets books on fire. And throughout the story tries to find the true reason for his unhappiness through the banned books. Meanwhile, his wife projects as the basic representation of their society in where she doesn’t think for herself and follows blindly. Bradbury foresees a future world where people are censored in what they can think about. Books, which allow them to explore their imagination, are out of public’s reach. The people are easily distracted and do not find a reason for being alive. Bradbury 's prediction of society 's state of ignorance and mental laziness has become true due to the fact that the United States’ population in relation to technology, irrationality, and violence has made us have more in common with Mildred’s mindless behavior.
Nowadays, technology is everywhere. It is a symbol of how we have progressed as a society over the years. Technology has not only provided

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