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    On Dystopian Societies

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    On Dystopian Societies A Report on our future world By Jeffrey Clemmons The girl scrambled for food through the thick wall of trash‚ the smell of mildew crossing her nose. She wore a tattered leather jacket and a pair of old jeans with shoes that people once called Chuck Taylors. She cursed when she didn’t find anything and turned back to her brother who was in the shopping cart looking hopefully at her. She sighed‚ “Nothing.” Her little brother sighs as well and she begins to push him in

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    published Fahrenheit 45‚ which has a perspective on fire being not just destruction but also warmth in a of world censorship that has gone out of touch with its human counterparts through its use of technology. Bradbury originally wrote this novel‚ Fahrenheit 451‚ as a short story called" The Firemen" in 1950 in galaxy science fiction; he later published it as a novel in 1953. A well renowned author‚ Ray Bradbury wrote one of his premier pieces Fahrenheit 451‚ a novel that puts a focus on a society where

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    Dystopian societies

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    future. This analysis will be made through the use of two dystopian texts‚ George Orwell’s novel Nineteen Eighty-Four and the film Minority Report directed by Steven Spielberg. It takes the responder’s interest on current events‚ cultural assumptions‚ values‚ attitudes and beliefs of the time as well as the composer’s perspective to influence the responder’s views of a fearful future. The fears the composer has portrayed in the dystopian text is unable to exist without the responder’s fear in the

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    Fahrenheit 451 Essay

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    Fahrenheit 451 In Fahrenheit 451‚ by Ray Bradbury‚ the main character Guy Montag makes a complete metamorphosis. He goes from hating books to liking them. He changes from a stolid character‚ incognizant of the activities in his surroundings‚ to a person conscious of everything‚ enlightened by the new world he is exposed to. There are many events that take place in this change in Montag. Montag’s first awakening was when he meets Clarisse‚ a 17 year old outcast in his society. She asks him if he

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    Dystopian Society

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    Dystopian Society The books Anthem by Ayn Rand and Animal Farm by George Orwell are both written about dystopian society‚ and the most imperfect and dismal society. Both authors write about humans –or animals- failing to create a utopia or perfect society. Though both authors use different points of view‚ language style‚ and voice the same theme is expressed: a perfect society where everyone is equal cannot exist. Anthem is from Equality 7-2521 view point he who has a curse

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    Fahrenheit 451: Happiness? Fahrenheit 451 is a novel of little happiness. Society as a whole has become content with watching television and wasting away their lives‚ while a few individuals ponder the true meaning of life and happiness. Bradbury throughout the book depicts what our world could become‚ and almost sends a warning to the reader on how to avoid this unfriendly fate. The society that is portrayed during this novel is neither happy nor sad. The citizens are glued to their "walls"

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    Fahrenheit 451 Predictions

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    day‚ or playing records on a record player to dance to music. Compared to the fifties‚ the people of the world today are more consumed with entertainment than they are with knowledge‚ which fulfills a prediction Bradbury made in the novel. In Fahrenheit 451‚ the use of television walls was to show how it can take control of a person’s well-being. Mildred was so consumed with the entertainment the television walls or the parlor brought to her life that watching the walls became more of a necessity

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    Fahrenheit 451 - Symbolism

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    Symbolism in Fahrenheit 451 Ray Bradbury‚ perhaps one of the best-known science fiction‚ wrote the amazing novel Fahrenheit 451. The novel is about Guy Montag‚ a ‘fireman’ who produces fires instead of eliminating them in order to burn books (Watt 2). One night while he is walking home from work he meets a young girl who stirs up his thoughts and curiosities like no one has before. She tells him of a world where fireman put out fires instead of starting them and where people read books and think

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    wound and damage mankind than any conceivable economic or political system¨ (McCarthy 1). Both Fahrenheit 451 and Senator Joseph R. McCarthy´s speech ¨Enemies from Within¨ take place between 1950-1951. The 1950´s was a time of the Cold War when people feared communists‚ which inspired Fahrenheit 451 to be set in 2053 to predict what the future would look like. Bradbury created a visual for what society could turn out to be like if Communism took over and everyone was the same‚ controlled by government

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    Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451 staunchly contrasts these other writings; rather than presenting some omniscient tale admonishing its audience of the dangers of government hierarchy‚ Bradbury uses satire to criticize primarily emerging trends in society‚ providing an account that deems them equally as harrowing and dangerous as some authoritarian government‚ although he does include a limited number of strands involving an anti-government theme. This unique aspect of Fahrenheit 451 has earned the attention

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