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Examples Of Epiphany In Fahrenheit 451

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According to the online Merriam-Webster dictionary and thesaurus, a definition for the word “epiphany” is a revealing scene or moment. Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451 can easily be summarized as a man having multiple epiphanies about his life, society, the government, the importance of intellectual literature, and human nature. During the events of the book, a Fireman named Guy Montag (here I must make note of how firemen are now professional arsonists) is walking home from work when he meets a young girl, setting off a chain of epiphanies and permanently removing most of the effects the corrupt society has had on him.
In Fahrenheit 451, Bradbury depicts a future where people have given up intellectual media for mainstream entertainment and advertisement, causing a domino effect in which anything that would force people to think logically is banned, and historic records have been altered accordingly (e.g., religious deities have been transformed into daytime television characters.) Throughout the …show more content…

Beatty is essentially an anti-Clarisse. Beatty represents the unseen force that drags people into conformity, giving Montag a sugarcoated explanation of how books came to be banned. Throughout most of the book, Beatty is trying to undo the effect of Clarisse. However, all this does is lead Montag to antagonize Beatty, so Beatty confronts Montag about the books. After going home, Montag’s wife has friends come over and Montag gets frustrated and forces the women to read with him. The next day, Mildred’s (Montag’s wife) friends report Montag’s books to the firemen, which Beatty “let ride.”Later, Mildred reports it and Beatty decides to take action, realizing that re-corrupting Montag is futile. Beatty forces Montag to burn his own house down. After this, Montag burns Beatty alive with the flamethrower he used to burn the house, knocking the other two firemen unconscious

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