Montags Character Development
As human beings, our identity develops over time naturally. Occasionally, events or people come into our lives that force us to view the world differently. For Guy Montag, he’s stuck in a reality where nobody thinks for themselves and their minds are controlled by the toxic propaganda force fed by the government. In Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451, the protagonist, Montag changed drastically from blissfully ignorant to painfully aware, initiated by Clarisse’s fascinating stories and ideas, and fueled by Faber’s reality checks and knowledge about literature.
In the beginning, it’s obvious Montag loves being a fireman. We can see this when he gets an orange glimmer in his eyes as he burns the books, “...and his
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“Montag felt the hidden book pound like a heart against his chest.” (Bradbury 39). Clarisse inspired him and made him want to read books, so when a person's home library went up in intentional flames, Montag grabbed a book and hid it. At first he couldn’t understand why he did it, and felt guilty. In need of a literary mentor, Montag seeks out a man he met at a park a few years back. Faber. Faber used to be a college professor until reading books became illegal and he was out of a job. Montag and Faber catch up and become good friends. Faber also helps Guy realize that true literature is what brings quality to the world (Bradbury 83). What Faber means by that, is books can show the good and bad about life and if people can see both side then they’re going to form their own opinions. And opinions make people diverse, which according to this society is bad, but to Faber, Clarisse, and Montag, diverse ways of thinking are good. Which brings us back to Montag's internal conflict, is it better to be blissfully ignorant or painfully aware?
By the end of the story, Montag is a completely different person. Now, he can think for himself and make decisions. A very big decision Guy made, that he could not have made before, was killing Beatty. “And then he was a shrieking blaze, a jumping, sprawling gibbering mannikin, no longer human or known, all writhing flame on the lawn as Montag shot one
His personality is different from other firefighters. He isn’t intimidating and doesn’t necessarily think that burning books is good. I do like Montag, but I’m waiting for him to make up his mind about whose side he’s on.
Near the end of the book, Montag was caught with books and was forced to burn down his own house, to continue living in fear, but something changes. “And then he was a shrieking smile blaze, a jumping, sprawling gibbering mannikin, no longer human or known, all writhing flame on the lawn as Montag shot one continuous pulse of liquid fire on him”(113). Montag had burned Beatty, causing a chain of events to occur. He knew that he was being deceived and decided to do this to eliminate his fear. Lastly, Montag met a group of fellow rebels, stating, “‘We all made the right kind of mistakes, or we wouldn’t be here…
Beatty supports this by saying since he has read some himself, he can affirm that they are worthless and contradictory. Through this experience, Montag has a new understanding of his profession. Although he is still skeptical, he knows more than he did before, and most importantly, Beatty has started to get Montag’s mind thinking. An important quote from this conversation is, “We must all be alike. Not everyone born free and equal, as the constitution says, but everyone made equal. . . . A book is a loaded gun in the house next door. Burn it.” This is when Beatty is ‘confiding’ in Montag, making him finally piece together what he has been doing all of these years as a fireman. He finally can begin to comprehend the society he is in, and what measures the government has taken to subdue the population. Later on in the book, Beatty and Montag face each other once more. After Montag is brought to his own house and told to burn it down, and facing no escape due to the hound, he burns it down. After burning down his own home, Beatty tells him he is under arrest, and begins to provoke him. As Beatty clearly intended, Montag kills him, turning him into a charred corpse. The fact that he died by fire, and knowingly chose to die by the flamethrower is interesting. Nevertheless, this is the point of no return for Montag, knowing that he did what he had to do, and that he was now an enemy of the state. At this point, Guy
People’s actions and their individual perceptions can influence and develop change in another person’s character. In Fahrenheit 451, by Ray Bradbury, the main character, Guy Montag, makes a complete metamorphosis with the help from his neighbor Clarisse, his wife Mildred, and his boss Beatty. In the beginning of the novel, he despised the whole idea of reading, had no thoughts or questions about his life, and was just going through the motions of life. He changes from a stolid character, incognizant of the activities of his surroundings, to a conscious person of. So enlightened, by the new world he is exposed to, he comes to the realization that there is more
Montag does not only find justice in thinking freely, he finds it in killing Beatty. “And then he was a shrieking blaze, a jumping, sprawling, gibbering mannikin, no longer human or known, all writhing flame on the lawn as Montag shot one continuous pulse of liquid fire on him... Beatty flopped over and over and over, and at last twisted in on himself like a charred wax doll and lay silent” (55). Previously, before murdering Beatty, Montag is forced by Beatty to burn his own home to the ground with all of his belongings and books that he has stashed. When Montag murders Beatty it is just one of the successes along Montag’s journey.
Mahatma Gandhi once declared, “You must be the change you wish to see in the world.” Change happens throughout the lives of everyone, and, like Ghandi, anyone can change the world by fighting for what you believe in and standing up for what is right. Similarly, in Fahrenheit 451, by Ray Bradbury, the protagonist, Guy Montag, continues to change as he faces more problems in his society and new ideas. Montag, originally a fireman, burned books for a living, but when he meets an eighteen year-old girl named Clarisse who fills him in on what society used to be. Clarisse further questions Montag by asking if he is really happy in this society, and at first Montag is confused why she asked this. However, when Montag thinks about the question, he feels questioning of society coming upon him naturally. Montag, the protagonist, changes as a result of three main conflicts with his dystopian society, that teach him curiosity, confidence, and courage.
In the book’s introduction, Montag is described as a stolid man that enjoys his work as a fireman. He is portrayed as having
Have you ever read a book you enjoyed a lot? Well if not read Fahrenheit 451. The author of the book is Ray Bradbury. There are many characters, but one of the main, main ones is Montag. Montag is a person who changes quite a bit throughout the story. Montag goes from being conservative to being a rebel.
In the beginning of Fahrenheit 451, Montag loves being a fireman, he loved seeing the books go up in flame. “It was a pleasure to burn” (p.1) he said and would grin a “fierce grin” (p.2) that would stay there for as long as he could remember the burning books. He seemed happy, like he didn’t want anything more, but he soon realizes just how unhappy he is with the job and his life. Montag didn’t
Montag, as the main protagonist of Fahrenheit 451, is a highly dynamic character.His new found want to learn, understand the world and fix the issues, he himself was blind to for years, makes him a relatable characterization for human curiosity. His society views “free thought” as a menace to the collective good despite seeing the signs that the entire system is failing. Mass suicides, endorphine powered joy rides, and murder have replaced human thought and compassion. His ability to break against the grain gifts him with both disadvantages and advantages as he faces new obstacles throughout the novel.
In my opinion, Montag went through a more mental than physical change. These changes in his mind mostly occurred because of the influence of individuals such as Clarisse. I think that the situation with the burning woman also influenced Montag’s change of mentality. Later in the novel after these people and situations came into play, Montag’s mind and reasoning were operating reverse of what they had in the beginning of the novel. I believe the biggest reason that Montag and his mind changed was because of Clarisse.
Ray Bradbury’s, Fahrenheit 451, is an alarming science fiction classic novel and a powerful commentary on humankind’s urge to suppress what it doesn’t understand. In this dystopian fictional world books are illegal; they are burned to a crisp when found. Books are very powerful. They come with knowledge, and knowledge can bring fear. Fear many times is something one cannot understand. To understand, one must know why one fears. Guy Montag in Fahrenheit 451 realizes this importance of the knowledge in books when he meets a young woman; Clarisse McClellan. Clarisse is an outsider, a very different type of girl. When she meets Montag, Clarisse sparks a change in him. Her curiosity and questioning is so unique that Montag is struck by her. He
As Montag continued on his journey to a new him, different people changed him in very different ways. Without the help of those three individuals who knows where Montag would have ended up. Montag is now aware of who he really is and what he is supposed to do through this series of internal changes. First, the old lady gives Montag sympathy, compassion, and guilt. Then Faber helps him find the true meaning in books. Last, Clarisse makes Montag find his true self and lets that person come through. Reflecting on
Montag is a conformist in the totalitarian society in which he lives. He, in the beginning of the story, loves his job. However, he is manipulated repeatedly by his nemesis, Captain Beatty. Captain Beatty is a manipulator who is expert in being able to aggravate Montag into a verbal duel that is basically one-sided. Montag and Captain Beatty seem to have a relationship where the boss is always trying to pin an untruth onto one of his employees. Montag becomes discontented at work. He becomes complacent by going through the motions by not really concentrating on the job at hand.
This change is dangerous for Montag, because being a fireman got him closer to books. Books were illegal, possessing them, reading them, even remembering them made other people think they were crazy. The closer he got to books, the more curious he became of them. Two things pushed him over the edge, deaths, the death of Clarisse and a random old woman who burned in her home with her books. This strengthened his curiosity and he started to steal books from the houses he burned.