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Compare And Contrast The Fahrenheit 451 And The Hunger Games

Decent Essays

The Fahrenheit 451 is a novel published in 1953 by a writer known as Ray Bradbury. The book is regarded as one of the writer’s best works as a novelist. In the book, the writer presents a future American society where there is no freedom or democracy. This is shown through an act where books are outlawed and in a case where they are found they are to be burnt by ‘firemen’. The society is obsessed with the mass media and driving fast cars. The main characters in the book are Guy Montag, Clarisse McClellan, and Beatty. The genre of the book is based on science fiction.
In the book, the main character Guy Montag is used to introduce the reader to the modern world. In this futuristic setting, the reader is shown how the world has taken a drastic …show more content…

The hunger games also are based in a futuristic society as applies to the book the Fahrenheit 451. The setting in the novel is one of complete disarray in the order of the society as is the case in the novel the Fahrenheit 451. The Hunger Games is a dystopian novel, but its content is far more political than any other novels written in the twenty-first century. The novel revolves around a young female teenager who is engaged in a young triangle with other two young men. The young men are Peeta Mellark and her best friend, Gale. The main idea, however, is the task that the young teenager, who happens to be the main character is faced with. Katniss Everdeen as is the name of the girl, is faced with the task of uniting her Falk in an uprising against the cruel system of administration which happens to be taking advantage of the other population (Dubrofsky …show more content…

In both the novels, this is the notion that is brought out by the two novelists. In the book the Fahrenheit 451, the main character Guy Montag decides to defy his orders as a fireman. He initially was supposed to destroy the books by torching them. After his encounter with the girl he embarks on an adventure that brings about the end of the cruel regime and together with an outlawed group of intellectuals they set out to rebuild civilization and reintroduce the act of book reading (Curwood, 2013). This is also the case in the book the Hunger Games the defiance of the lead character, Katniss, defies the Capitol’s order to kill the tribute from the same district as herself. Initially, the capital views this as defiance and direct rebellion to its decisions but then that act is what comes to save her life. To the other people, this act is what earns Katniss respect and the other subjects now view her as their savior from the oppression of the cruel

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