Theme Of Dehumanization In Fahrenheit 451

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Imagine a world, where kids brutally kill one another for fun; where the word “family” is irrelevant. Where the government monitors your every move, and where information is censored. Fortunately, the only society as dehumanizing as the one described is within the dystopian novel, Fahrenheit 451. In this novel, the main character, Guy Montag, is a fireman that burns books. This unique dystopian novel tells the exhilarating story of him slowly coming to the realization that his “perfect” civilization is not so flawless anymore. He first realizes that he’s not so happy with his life when he meets Clarisse, his neighbor, as she questions the norms of the society. He then begins to study his wife, Mildred Montag, and realizes she isn’t happy either although she doesn’t admit so. This slow, but decisive process results in Montag …show more content…

He eventually makes a run to escape an increasingly sickening civilization successfully and ends up meeting Granger and his friends. They had all escaped. Throughout this magnificent novel, symbols such as books, the parlor walls, and mirrors play significant roles. In Fahrenheit 451, Ray Bradbury utilizes these symbols to create a looking glass, revealing the nightmares within a community seeking perfection.
To begin, Bradbury uses books, an illegal object in Fahrenheit 451, to show the faults of the society. Captain Beatty and Montag were talking about the cause of censorship of books in general, when Montag asked if firemen were created by the government. Beatty then responded by ranting on about if he remembered that smart boy in class, who would always answer questions right while the others hated him. He then profoundly declared, “‘We must all be alike. Not

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