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“It was a pleasure to burn.
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It was a special pleasure
to see things eaten,
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to see things blackened and changed.”
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Fahrenheit 451 opens in a blissful blaze
- and before long,
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we learn what’s going up in flames.
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Ray Bradbury’s novel imagines a world
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where books are banned
from all areas of life -
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and possessing, let alone
reading them, is forbidden.
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The protagonist, Montag, is a fireman
responsible for destroying what remains.
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But as his pleasure gives way to doubt,
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the story raises critical questions
of how to preserve one’s mind in a society
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where free will, self-expression,
and curiosity are under fire.
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In Montag’s world, mass media
has a monopoly on information,
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erasing almost all ability
for independent thought.
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On the subway, ads blast out of the walls.
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At home, Montag’s wife Mildred listens to
the radio around the clock,
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and three of their parlor walls
are plastered with screens.
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At work, the smell of kerosene
hangs over Montag’s colleagues,
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who smoke and set their mechanical
hound after rats to pass the time.
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When the alarm sounds they surge
out in salamander-shaped vehicles,
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sometimes to burn whole
libraries to the ground.
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But as he sets tomes ablaze day
after day like “black butterflies,”
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Montag’s mind occasionally wanders to the
contraband that lies hidden in his home.
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Gradually, he begins to question
the basis of his work.
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Montag realizes he’s always felt uneasy -
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but has lacked the descriptive words
to express his feelings in a society
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where even uttering the phrase
“once upon a time” can be fatal.
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Fahrenheit 451 depicts a world governed by
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surveillance, robotics,
and virtual reality-
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a vision that proved remarkably prescient,
but also spoke to the concerns of the time.
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The novel was published in 1953,
at the height of the Cold War.
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This era kindled widespread
paranoia and fear
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throughout Bradbury’s home
country of the United States,
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amplified by the suppression of information
and brutal government investigations.
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In particular, this witch hunt mentality
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targeted artists and writers who
were suspected of Communist sympathies.
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Bradbury was alarmed at
this cultural crackdown.
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He believed it set a dangerous
precedent for further censorship,
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and was reminded of the destruction of
the Library of Alexandria
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and the book-burning of Fascist regimes.
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He explored these chilling
connections in Fahrenheit 451,
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titled after the temperature
at which paper burns.
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The accuracy of that temperature
has been called into question,
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but that doesn’t diminish the novel’s
standing
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as a masterpiece of dystopian fiction.
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Dystopian fiction as a genre amplifies
troubling features of the world around us
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and imagines the consequences
of taking them to an extreme.
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In many dystopian stories,
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the government imposes constrictions
onto unwilling subjects.
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But in Fahrenheit 451,
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Montag learns that it was
the apathy of the masses
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that gave rise to the current regime.
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The government merely capitalized on
short attention spans and
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the appetite for mindless entertainment,
reducing the circulation of ideas to ash.
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As culture disappears,
imagination and self-expression follow.
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Even the way people talk
is short-circuited
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- such as when Montag’s boss Captain Beatty
describes the acceleration of mass culture:
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"Speed up the film, Montag, quick.
Click? Pic? Look, Eye, Now, Flick, Here,
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There, Swift, Pace, Up, Down, In, Out,
Why, How, Who, What, Where, Eh? Uh!
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Bang! Smack! Wallop, Bing, Bong, Boom!
Digest-digests, digest-digest-digests.
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Politics? One column, two sentences, a
headline! Then, in mid-air, all vanishes!
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In this barren world, Montag learns
how difficult it is to resist when there’s
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nothing left to hold on to.
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Altogether, Fahrenheit 451 is a portrait
of independent thought on the brink
of extinction -
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and a parable about a
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society which is complicit
in its own combustion.