“You can avoid reality, but you can not avoid the consequences of avoiding the reality” (Ayn Rand, 1905-1982). In Moth Smoke by Mohsin Hamid, the air-conditioning is one of the most significant details in the novel that represents some of the themes that Hamid wants to emphasize. Besides jewelry, enormous house, and high-priced car air-conditioner is one of the elements that distinguish wealth from poverty. More than that, one of the reasons why Mumtaz falls in love with Daru relates to the air-conditioner. That air conditioner not only produces cool air but also generates the hot air is compelling because it represents some dualities that exist in the novel. Also, despite making people feel more comfortable during hot weather, air …show more content…
Without an air-conditioner, Daru sweats like crazily when he is “killing the moths” that is attracted by the candle in the house. At that very moment, when Daru is “sweating in the heat” and his body is “lightly powdered with moth dust”, Mumtaz came. They made love on the roof. If there was air-conditioner, the house would not be too hot and Mumtaz and Daru could have stayed inside. Perhaps, they would not make love if they weren’t on the roof. This feelingless object splits Mumtaz and her husband far away because of their opposite views: Mumtaz fears of air-conditioner because she had pneumonia because of it and that she hate the excessive use of upper-class people with air-conditioner. At the same time, this amazing object push Mumtaz to be with Daru, the guy whose house’s electricity has been cut: “Mumtaz would later wonder whether Darashikoh’s lack of air-conditioning played a role in attracting her to him.” When seeing Dazu sweating, Mumtaz arouses the sexual desire. When
Conformity- behavior in accordance with socially accepted conventions or standards. When does conformity go too far? In Anthem by Ayn Rand people conformed out of fear. Everyone in there society has to be the same skill level, same intelligent and same physical attributes. People are given numbers at birth. People are also assigned jobs that they can not reject. Equality who is the main character does not follow the rules and is rubellus. He meets a girl that is just like him who he calls the Golden One. He make electricity and shows it to the highest people in there world, and they think it is evil. He gets sent to prison ,but he escapes because there were no locks on the doors. He goes to the forbidden forest. The Golden One finds him ,and they find a house in the mountains. They find all new things that they don't know what it is. But Equality plans to get his friends from the town and start his own society with his rules. Social conformity goes too far when the people do not have a choice for anything.
Alongside with witnessing the death of his father and wrath of the SS officers, Wiesel also experienced the evil of other prisoners. Within the community of the concentration camps, stealing was not uncommon. For example, after it was revealed that he had a golden tooth, Wiesel’s foreman at Buna, Franek, made many attempts to steal it. “'Let me have your crown, kid.' I answered that I could not because without that crown I could no longer eat.... 'If you don't give me your crown, it will cost you much more!' All of a sudden, this pleasant and intelligent young man had changed. His eyes were shining with greed” (“Night” 55). This quote reveals the time Wiesel had first-hand encountered the greed of others. Franek could care less if Wiesel could not eat; he wanted to
Fahrenheit 451 is a book by Ray Bradbury, written after World War II and it examines the corruption of technology in a dystopian society. This book explains how a dystopian society works and how people are so attached to television and cars and do not enjoy the natural world. People in a dystopian society are full of fear and sadness. They do not have equality or freedom, they are all so soaked up in technology that it is illegal for them to do simple stuff, such as, reading books. The book, Fahrenheit 451 explains how firefighters start fires rather than stopping them. A firefighter’s job is do burn books, since books are illegal to have because they go against the power of technology and modernization. In a dystopian society, people should be unhappy, unequal, violent, and brutalized and that is what is exactly being seen throughout this book. As Ray Bradbury captures the attention of many readers, he captures our attention on how the future could be if technology would become so extreme. Bradbury’s novel, Fahrenheit 451 is not about control, but it is a novel about how television destroys curiosity in reading literature.
In the future, the job of firemen morphs from putting fires out to burning books. The story Fahrenheit 451 revolves around this issue of book burning, but there is a deeper meaning to the book. Bradbury is warning that the monopolizing effect of social media will transform generations to come into a society with no genuine connections, no distinctive thoughts, and excessive reliance on technology. This book was written in 1951, and today, the propositions are no longer fiction, but are becoming a reality.
In Fahrenheit 451 ,written by Ray Bradbury, the motif of fire, sparks an interest in the reader which pulls them into the life of Guy Montag. In the daily life of Montag, Bradbury portrays the importance of fire in the censored society. From Montag's standpoint the reader gains a clear perspective of the symbolism and importance of fire. Throughout the story fire is used to represent a different emotion or characteristic. At the start of the book fire symbolizes destruction; towards the middle of the book fire is used to represent change and discovering ones identity; and finally at the conclusion of the story fire symbolizes renewal and rebirth.
Mankind has been utilizing fire for millennia; it has been used to make food safe, to provide warmth, to illuminate the dark and unknown, and to protect from savage beasts. It is also practical for torturing, killing, intimidating, and destroying. It only takes one glance for someone to see how fire -- as it dances, spearing the sky for but a moment before it is gone, only to be replaced by another flame -- is far too chaotic to be controlled. In the world of Fahrenheit 451, it seems, superficially, that man has conquered fire at last; the home, man’s refuge from everything undesirable in the world, is fireproof. Why, then, are things still burning in this gilded utopia? In this futuristic society where there is no such thing as an uncontrolled fire, fire has been reduced to a mere tool to be wielded by mankind. As such, fire, in Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451, is a reflection of the true nature of each character in the novel. In the hands of the society and especially the fireman, fire is a tool wielded for fractious and destructive intent. For Clarisse, who is compared to a candle, fire is friendly and inspiring of thought. And for Montag and the other literates hiding outside of the city, fire is a warm gathering place that fosters kinship and the proper ideals to feed a revolution.
Ray Bradbury’s novel Fahrenheit 451 presents readers with multiple themes. In the fictional society of Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury, books are banned and firemen create fires instead of putting them out. Bradbury portrays the society as dystopian. Bradbury crafted the novel to be interpreted intellectually. The characters claim to be happy. However, the reader can conclude otherwise. Bradbury creates a question for the reader to answer: Is ignorance bliss or does the ability to think for oneself create happiness? Bradbury shows the importance of self-reflection, happiness and the ability to think for oneself as well as isolation due to technology, and the importance of nature and animals. In Fahrenheit 451, Ray Bradbury conveys the stories’ themes through characterization and symbols.
Fahrenheit 451 has been called an ingenious and life changing work of literature. It could not have had this effect on people, however, without the incredibly pivotal part 3 of the novel. This part is what shows the inherent hopeful nature of the writing. Ray Bradbury’s intent when writing Part 3 of Fahrenheit 451 was to show how even a dark and dystopian world like the one in the novel can be reborn into a new and better society, and that even the most hopeless of situations can be fixed. He demonstrates this intent through an analogy about the seasons, similes involving wax dolls, and finally the overarching metaphor of the phoenix.
Fire is an ever-present concept in Fahrenheit 451. In the society of the dystopian world the fire is a negative force that destroys the houses and banned books of the offender. The name of the book is derived from the temperature at which books burn. The burning books become a metaphor for the anti-intellectual violence of the novel. It eradicates every cultural article in which are books. It is used as a pressure of the government to form the citizens the way the government wants the world constructed. "The core of the novel rests in the readers ability to share Guy 's slow struggle toward consciousness, to move from
In life, you are born into societies where various ideas or things are thought to be normal and the customs are already established. The novel Anthem by Ayn Rand has many themes, but what I believe the theme of the novel is, to think for yourself. To think for yourself means to make your own decisions and opinions, without depending on other people. I also think that if you are going to think for yourself you can’t worry about what other people will think of what you believe in. Whether you believe that you should only have school a few days a week or you believe in a certain god, no person should feel ashamed for what they believe in. In today’s society and in the society of Anthem, people don’t think for themselves and they just follow people blindly. In the media, today we see what celebrities are saying, who they like, who they dislike, what they use, what they endorse, and we follow them because we want to be like them. Sometimes you don’t realize that you’re not thinking for yourself, but not being able to think for yourself can make you miserable and that is what Equality 7-2521 realized in Anthem.
Fahrenheit 451 is a book written by Ray Bradbury about true knowledge and the importance of information. In this book we float around in the mind of a fireman by the name of Guy Montag. Guy is a man much like everyone else on the outside. He goes to work, comes home to his wife and goes to bed. Not much in this dystopian world stands out to be exciting, except for this device Montag’s wife Mildred calls “The Parlor”. This is a television screen that covers the entirety of the room. Montag is no ordinary fireman that we have come to know in our day and age. Firemen in Bradbury’s novel are government hounds who are alerted by anonymous tips that someone has been in possession of a book, which are now illegal due to too much thinking. The arts are a set of skills and or things that people use to create music, poetry, and art. Processes that require one to use creativity, thinking outside the box as they would say. The arts are a way that people can express themselves in an unorthodox way. Because of this, if used correctly, they can be a great tool for society. The arts have been used over hundreds of years to affect people's emotions by using major and minor to change moods, music therapy, and used to effect social perspective.
We sit on the subways and we ride on the busses, we drown the outside world with our headphones and our television sets, and we walk on the sidewalks brushing past one another just enough to avoid physical contact so that we can continue on our "merry" way towards our next destination. As a society, we beeline our way through life, weaving between moments of rendezvous and accidental concurrence, and we surround ourselves with instruments of interference in an attempt to pull ourselves out of the day-to-day life. As they say, art imitates life, and in a very sadistic way Fahrenheit 451 imitates what we are, and what we could become. Fahrenheit depicts a future where the common people surround themselves
Imagine a society that is engulfed in a false reality. Some may never be able to see such a thing in our present day society. But in the book Fahrenheit 451, this unorthodox way of life becomes reality. The book Fahrenheit 451 is about a society where censorship is at its fullest. All books are banned from along with intuition and free thinking as an individual.
Before reading the book and by simply looking at the cover, I knew this book was going to be something out of the ordinary. Seeing matches come out of the textbook and having it titled Fahrenheit, I had a feeling that it was going to be about fire. But the way that the author used fire in this book, simply took me by surprise to say the least.
In the Spoon River Anthology the two poems that connect to the quote, “Fear always springs from ignorance”,by Ralph Waldo Emerson, are “Mrs. Selby” and “Calvin Campbell”. Mrs.Selby feared her own life and tried hiding her life from her husband, through secrets. These ignorant thoughts that she could constantly keep her life secret caused her to develop a fear of being found out, and a belief that her secret should be hidden “ Under a mound that you shall never find”(19). Because her ignorance takes over her, she develops this fear of the truth in trying to hide her own truths. This connects to the quote because it emphasizes how one person's ignorance can cause their demise.