Fahrenheit 451 Controversy

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When Ray Bradbury published Fahrenheit 451, it was met with much controversy. In the novel, Bradbury depicts a dystopian society where books are outlawed and burned while televisions are ubiquitously stationed. Perhaps, most fascinating and ironic about Bradbury’s novel is how prophetic it appears. That sixty-two years later, we would live in a society where flat-screen TVs, smartphones, and computers have become integral to our day-to-day survival while the demise of books looms on the horizon is deeply troubling. Yet despite society’s ardent belief that books are outdated in the same fashion as VHS and cassette tapes, there is a charm about literature that cannot be imitated by technology—the human touch. There is no doubt, that literature has taken a back seat in the digital age. In a 2013 article for the Wall Street Journal, a top store executive for Barnes and Nobles revealed that the company expects to close twenty stores a year over the next decade. But Barnes and Nobles isn’t alone. Bookstore chains across the country are suffering the same losses. Consumers are choosing online book retailers like Amazon or opting out of reading altogether. These recent [trends?] are evident of a startling reality: people don’t read anymore. …show more content…

After all, at the swipe of a finger or the click of a mouse, information can be communicated to a user before a page of a book can even be flipped. No need for imagination. Where literature once immersed readers, prompting discussion to the degree that at various instances throughout history, books were burned out of fear of their ability to empower and enlighten; the media has dictated the way society votes, prays and interacts with one

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