Thursday, March 14, 2019
Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury :: Ray Bradburys Fahrenheit 451
Shortage of Books      Ive invariably tell poetry and tears, poetry and ego-annihilation and crying and awful feelings, poetry and sickness all that mush exclaimed Mrs. Bowles to Montag in Ray Bradburys book Fahrenheit 451 (103). Mrs. Bowles thinks written words posterior break an individual cloakually gloomy and disconsolate. Because the goal of this society is to always be satisfied, and to stay satisfied plurality watch TV, made up stories, which never makes them think or wonder, that is why Mrs. Bowles is convinced that poems argon nasty. How does outlaw of books affect a whole community? Does the human civilization really differ without them? According to Fahrenheit 451, Bradbury assembles a civilization that is affected in three ways from having a lack of books more brutality is among quite a little, nonnatural relationships cultivate, and intelligent capabilities decrease.     First, cognitive ability degenerated because of the banning of books. Visiting Faber, he said to Montag That was the year I came to class at the start of the new semester and plant only one student to sign up for Drama from Aeschylus to ONeill (91). Faber told Montag a memory of how books were like a beautiful statue of ice, melting in the sun. He later realized that books had no intend to peck because people stopped thinking. If the lack of books has caused people to stop thinking, then people act on impulse, rather than taking the time to consider the effect of what they are doing. Therefore, the decrease of knowledge obviously caused ignorance which in turn leads to the unawareness of ones self being taken advantage of or enslaved. In greater meaning if an individual deprives a society of individual rights or slowly outlaws educational sources (such as books in this case) and do not let people make their own choices for themselves, then they begin to lose interest in things they enthrall and "fall into the crowd" b ecoming (though unaware) toys of the leaders of that society, who lead that crowd of people like a flock of lambs, and thus controlling everyone.     In supplement to unawareness, abnormal relationships develop in the society because without books one couple may struggle in communication. After Beattys visit Mildred concluded Montags question My family is people. They tell me things I laugh, they laugh And the colors(75). Mildred feels her family is just people as if she thought people were just objects roaming around the earth.
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