A complex analysis of Fahrenheit 451's themes
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.58445/rars.2519Keywords:
Fahrenheit 451, Authoritarianism, Happiness, Ignorance , Technology, Ray Bradbury, Censorship, Clarisse McClellan, Mildred Montag, Montag, Book burning, Humanity, Dystopian literatureAbstract
Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451 critiques a dystopian society where the government’s use of technology and censorship threatens humanity by creating an illusion of happiness while stripping people of genuine emotional fulfillment. This paper explores how the novel follows the themes of happiness and technology through the glorification of ignorance. The paper discusses contrasting perspectives on happiness as presented by characters Clarisse McClellan and Mildred Montag, the protagonist’s wife. Clarisse is promoted as someone who values human connection and views happiness as a result of true interaction, while Mildred represents government-induced complacency through the ideal definition of happiness as a result of technology. Moreover, Captain Beatty’s ignorance-based justification for censorship is also highlighted. By analyzing such elements, this paper argues that Bradbury uses his novel to depict people losing touch with their humanity and happiness as a result of technological control and hidden censorship in order to warn against blind obedience to technological influence.
References
Atasoy, Emrah. Impediment to Knowledge and Imagination in Ray Bradbury’s Dystopian Novel, Fahrenheit 451, ResearchGate, Jan. 2015, www.researchgate.net/publication/282410643_Impediment_to_Knowledge_and_Imagination_in_Ray_Bradbury’s_Dystopian_Novel_Fahrenheit_451.
Bradbury, Ray. Fahrenheit 451. G.K. Hall, 1997.
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