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Fahrenheit 451 Government Control Analysis

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Under the Government's Control Fahrenheit 451 is a polemic novel, written by Ray Bradbury, which comments on the priorities of people in the 21st century. Guy Montag, a fireman, begins to question the declared truths that he has been told throughout his life when he meets a young girl named Clarisse McClellan, who does not conform to the average mindset of the others in her era. Afterwards, Montag becomes curious about the books he burns, and wonders what makes the novels unique enough to be thought of as such an immense threat to society. Ultimately, he learns that it is the ideas the books contain that make them such a menace to the government, and that the government fears the opinions that society may form from reading the novels. The government, over time, has trained its citizens to stray from diversity and confrontation, and intimidates the nation to never depart from the permitted mindset through a level of fear achieved by burning books along with people and their homes. The society in Fahrenheit 451 despises …show more content…

If one person stands out from the crowd, they are destroyed, not dealt with, but rather scorched out of existence; one may not sit and talk without their means being questioned, or walk in the garden absent of others' judgments, one's television room is where they live, where they converse, and where they die. There is no need for cognitive stimulation because the “family” is all one needs, the hollow conversation and the endless hum of irrelevant news is more than enough thought than one under-developed mind can handle. Captain Beatty says, “A problem gets too burdensome, then into the furnace with it” (Bradbury 109). This quote states that the people have no need to question the means of someone's action, for there is a more convenient solution which requires no

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