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Fahrenheit 451
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Fahrenheit 451. The World Changes Very Quickly Look At How Quickly Innovation Occurs.

Dec 28, 2015

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Page 1: Fahrenheit 451. The World Changes Very Quickly Look At How Quickly Innovation Occurs.

Fahrenheit 451

Page 2: Fahrenheit 451. The World Changes Very Quickly Look At How Quickly Innovation Occurs.

The World Changes Very Quickly

Look At How Quickly Innovation Occurs

Page 3: Fahrenheit 451. The World Changes Very Quickly Look At How Quickly Innovation Occurs.

Space Invaders – Atari - 1978

Page 4: Fahrenheit 451. The World Changes Very Quickly Look At How Quickly Innovation Occurs.

Super Mario Bros. 1 – NES - 1985

Page 5: Fahrenheit 451. The World Changes Very Quickly Look At How Quickly Innovation Occurs.

Mortal Kombat – Sega Genesis - 1993

Page 6: Fahrenheit 451. The World Changes Very Quickly Look At How Quickly Innovation Occurs.

Goldeneye – N64 - 1997

Page 7: Fahrenheit 451. The World Changes Very Quickly Look At How Quickly Innovation Occurs.

Heavy Rain – PS3 - 2010

Page 8: Fahrenheit 451. The World Changes Very Quickly Look At How Quickly Innovation Occurs.

Cell Phones!

Page 9: Fahrenheit 451. The World Changes Very Quickly Look At How Quickly Innovation Occurs.

Cars!

Page 10: Fahrenheit 451. The World Changes Very Quickly Look At How Quickly Innovation Occurs.

Computers!

Page 11: Fahrenheit 451. The World Changes Very Quickly Look At How Quickly Innovation Occurs.

Clothing

Page 12: Fahrenheit 451. The World Changes Very Quickly Look At How Quickly Innovation Occurs.

Books!

Page 13: Fahrenheit 451. The World Changes Very Quickly Look At How Quickly Innovation Occurs.

What Will The Future Look Like? Clothing in the Year 2000!

Kitchen of the Year 2000

Computer of the Future!

Page 14: Fahrenheit 451. The World Changes Very Quickly Look At How Quickly Innovation Occurs.

What DOES the Future Look Like?

The Future Is Now!

Page 15: Fahrenheit 451. The World Changes Very Quickly Look At How Quickly Innovation Occurs.

I. Utopia vs. DystopiaA. Utopia

1. First example is in Plato’s Republic (300 B.C.)

a. Ideal world led by “philosopher king” who sees things for as they truly are

b. No private goods, no families, militaristic government

2. Has since become a broader term for an ideal or perfect type of society.

3. The word “utopia” has two contradictory meanings, depending on translation.

a. “Good Place”

b. “No Place” Why is this ironically

appropriate?

Page 16: Fahrenheit 451. The World Changes Very Quickly Look At How Quickly Innovation Occurs.

I. Utopia vs. Dystopia (cont.)

B. Dystopia

1. Translates to “bad” or “difficult” place

2. A type of paradox – dystopias are worlds that in their efforts to become utopian become corrupt or evil

3. Dystopian literature has grown into a popular literary genre, usually science fiction or fantasy

Page 17: Fahrenheit 451. The World Changes Very Quickly Look At How Quickly Innovation Occurs.

Dystopian Art

Page 18: Fahrenheit 451. The World Changes Very Quickly Look At How Quickly Innovation Occurs.

And, of course…

Page 19: Fahrenheit 451. The World Changes Very Quickly Look At How Quickly Innovation Occurs.

II. Ray Bradbury

A. 1920 – Today

B. Modernist Luddite – fears technology and its effects on society

1. On Technology, he said: “We have too many cell phones. We’ve got too many Internets. We have got to get rid of those machines. We have too many machines now.”

C. Self-titled “Christian Positivist Buddhist” – believes in a God and a morality based around love.

1. On his religion, he said: “I love you and I forgive you. I am like you and you are like me. I love all people. I love the world. I love creating. ... Everything in our life should be based on love.”

Page 20: Fahrenheit 451. The World Changes Very Quickly Look At How Quickly Innovation Occurs.

II. Ray Bradbury (cont.)

D. Bibliophile: lover of books.

1. On literature: “Without libraries, what have we? We have no past and we have no future…You don’t have to burn books to destroy a culture. Just get people to stop reading them.”

E. A type of prophet – Bradbury correctly predicted many technological and cultural changes in America decades before they happened.

1. On his ability to predict the future: “I don’t try to describe the future. I try to prevent it.”

Page 21: Fahrenheit 451. The World Changes Very Quickly Look At How Quickly Innovation Occurs.

A Few More Quotations: Every morning I jump out of bed and step on a landmine.

The landmine is me. After the explosion, I spent the rest of the day putting the pieces together.

We are cups, constantly and quietly being filled. The trick is, knowing how to tip ourselves over and let the beautiful stuff out.

We are the miracle of force and matter making itself over into imagination and will. Incredible. The Life Force experimenting with forms. You for one. Me for another. The Universe has shouted itself alive. We are one of the shouts.

Page 22: Fahrenheit 451. The World Changes Very Quickly Look At How Quickly Innovation Occurs.

III. Themes in Fahrenheit 451

A. The dangers of censorship1. Written in 1953, Bradbury reflects on the book burning of the nazi

regime

2. As a bibliophile, Bradbury fears a world where knowledge can be banned

3. Ironically, Fahrenheit 451 was once re-released in a censored version for schools; Bradbury demanded it be restored, which it has been since 1980.

Page 23: Fahrenheit 451. The World Changes Very Quickly Look At How Quickly Innovation Occurs.

III. Themes (cont.)B. Over-abundance of technology causes alienation and

depression

1. Characters made unaware of their own unhappiness

2. Media saturation (the “parlor,” the “seashells”) numbs characters to their own feelings, ambitions, and families

How do characters reveal their

unhappiness, and how does the

dystopian society make them feel

“better?”

Page 24: Fahrenheit 451. The World Changes Very Quickly Look At How Quickly Innovation Occurs.

IV. ClarisseA. The catalyst for Guy’s conversion – a mysterious,

dreamlike figure

B. Character linked to images of nature – a contrast to images of machinery and technology

C. Her question, “Are you happy?” Most important question of novel.

For Bradbury,

what does it mean to be “Happy?”

Page 25: Fahrenheit 451. The World Changes Very Quickly Look At How Quickly Innovation Occurs.

V. BeattyA. Foil to Guy

B. Character built on paradox – he mandates the burning of books, yet is very knowledgeable about them

C. He is the book’s clear villain, yet in his speech at the end of part I articulates much of Bradbury’s message

Re-read Beatty’s speech at the

end of Part I. In What Ways Is He

Right?

Page 26: Fahrenheit 451. The World Changes Very Quickly Look At How Quickly Innovation Occurs.

VI. Novel’s Major Symbols All Are Paradoxical

A. Salamander: In mythology, live in fire without being consumed by it.

B. Phoenix: Renewal and rebirth come via destruction

C. “The Family”: provide comfort, companionship, yet replaces real comfort and companionship

D. Mechanical Hound: Representation of nature that symbolizes society’s mechanized cruelty

Page 27: Fahrenheit 451. The World Changes Very Quickly Look At How Quickly Innovation Occurs.

VII. Modernist Literature

A. Portrays an individual in conflict with society who is made to look heroic through his suffering

B. Bradbury uses direct language that is entrenched in deeper meaning

C. The book is built upon irony, contradiction, and paradox

D. Meta-Fiction – it is a book about the importance of books.

Page 28: Fahrenheit 451. The World Changes Very Quickly Look At How Quickly Innovation Occurs.

Bradbury’s Point Life in the modern era, like literature, is full of contradiction,

challenge, and paradox. We suffer by ignoring this.

He portrays a nightmarish future in order to warn against consequences of current social evils

The author challenges the reader to ask important questions, reflect on the world around them, and be strong enough to act when you know what’s right.