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Title: By Ray Bradbury


1
Fahrenheit 451
  • By Ray Bradbury

2
"You don't have to burn books to destroy a
culture. Just get people to stop reading
them.Ray BRADBURY
3
Fahrenheit 451
  • The temperature at which book paper catches fire
    and burns

4
Ray Bradbury Who?
  • Born in Waukegan, Illinois, on August 22, 1920.
  • His family moved frequently when he was young,
    but they finally settled in Los Angeles (1934).
  • As a young boy, Bradbury was interested in magic
    and had aspirations of becoming a magician. This
    interest in magic later turned into a love for
    writing.
  • Began writing stories at age eleven. He received
    no formal education beyond high school (1938).

5
His Work
  • Weird Tales, a famous pulp science fiction
    (1940).
  • The Martian Chronicles, launched his writing
    career (1950).
  • Most famous to date is Fahrenheit 451 (1953)
  • Pub. over 500 short stories, novels, plays, and
    poems in his career

6
His Work
  • wrote for Alfred Hitchcock Presents The
    Twilight Zone, the screenplay for John Hustons
    Moby Dick
  • helped design Spaceship Earth ride for Disney
    Worlds EPCOT Center

7
Bradburys Writing Style
  • science fiction writer
  • fiction based on scientific discoveries, space
    travel, time travel, alien existence or great
    environmental changes
  • often deals with the future lives of humans and
    events that did not happen or have not happened
    yet.
  • often takes into consideration how these events
    may have consequences on the human race

8
The Beginning
  • It began as story about a fireman, GUY MONTAG in
    a short story The Fireman
  • 1953 expanded into the novel
  • Classified as science fiction
  • But it is SO MUCH MORE

9
A criticism
  • Personal
  • Public

10
Personal Criticism
  • To protest what Bradbury believed to be the
    invasiveness of editors
  • Editors had strict control of books printed
  • Bradbury felt it impaired originality and
    creativity of writers

11
  • Creativity is inventing, experimenting, growing,
    taking risks, breaking rules, making mistakes,
    and having fun.
  • Mary Lou Cook

12
Social Criticism
  • Warns against the danger of suppressing thought
    through censorship
  • Oppressive government, left unchecked, can do
    irreparable damage to a society by limiting
    creativity of its people
  • dystopia order and harmony at the expense of
    individual rights

13
  • If they give you ruled paper, write the other
    way.Juan Ramon Jimenez

14
Themes
  • Themes are the fundamental and often universal
    ideas explored in a literary work

15

Fahrenheit 451 Themes
  • Knowledge versus Ignorance
  • Destroy knowledge to promote ignorance
  • Search for knowledge destroys ignorance
  • Conformity versus Individuality
  • Conforming to the norms of our society
  • What are the norms of our society?
  • Does it endanger societys well-being?
  • Does it help our society?
  • Censorship

16
Censorship
  • A person authorized to examine books, films, or
    other material to remove or suppress what is
    considered morally, politically, or otherwise
    objectionable.
  • An official, as in the armed forces, who examines
    personal mail and official dispatches to remove
    information considered secret or a risk to
    security.
  • One that condemns or censures.

17
Time of the novelcensorship
  • Fahrenheit 451 released in 1953
  • Senator Joseph McCarthy
  • Leading witch hunt to find suspected Communist
    sympathizers in govt, writers, moviemakers, and
    performers
  • Most findings unfounded
  • Ruined careers of many people because of link
    with Communism
  • The Crucible by Arthur Miller

18
McCarthyism
  • Red Channels A 1950 publication documenting
    "Communist influence in radio and television"

19
  • Herblock coined the term "McCarthyism" in this
    cartoon in the March 29, 1950 Washington Post

20
A Few of the Accused
  • Leonard Bernstein, composer conductor
  • Charlie Chaplin, actor
  • Bartley Crum, attorney
  • W.E.B. DuBois, civil rights activist author
  • Langston Hughes, author
  • Arthur Miller, playwright and essayist
  • Clifford Odets, author
  • J. Robert Oppenheimer, physicist, "father of the
    atomic bomb

21
More Accused
  • Paul Robeson, actor, athlete, singer, author,
    political civil rights activist
  • Edward G. Robinson, actor
  • Waldo Salt, author
  • Pete Seeger, folk singer
  • Artie Shaw, jazz musician
  • Howard Da Silva, actor
  • Paul Sweezy, economist founder-editor of
    Monthly Review
  • Tsien Hsue-shen, physicist
  • Orson Welles, actor, author director

22
Let us Travel back in historyto censorship
23
  • The great eventful Present hides the
  • Past
  • but through the din of its loud life,
  • hints and echoes from the life behind,
  • steal in.
  • John Greenleaf Whittier

24
  • People are trapped in history, and history is
    trapped in them. 
  • James Baldwin, Notes of a Native Son

25
  • In "The Book of Abraham", "written by Himself",
    published in Boston - for the purchaser- in 1846,
    the following woodcut is used as a frontispiece

26
Europe had a solution for the menacing spread of
knowledge as depicted in the engravings below .
. A 16th century wood block by Jost Amman
27
Burned at the stakeRidley Latimer October 16,
1555
  • Latimer, who lived and died unmarried, eased out
    of this world. But it was not so with his friend
    Nicholas Ridley. The wood being piled too high,
    he screamed for his bystanders to pull off some
    of the wood. Misunderstanding him, his
    brother-in-law, added more sticks to the fire.
    The fire "burned clean all his nether parts,
    before it once touched the upper and that made
    him often desire them to let the fire come unto
    him". He exclaimed, I cannot burn!. When he
    turned to his watchers, they saw a ghastly sight.
    "After his legs were consumed he showed that side
    towards us clean, shirt and all untouched with
    flame". Finally, a bystander pulled the wood
    from the fire, and the fire flamed to his face,
    igniting the gunpowder. And he stirred no more.
    And as hundreds of bystanders looked on at these
    two motionless bodies, all that could be heard
    was weeping.

28
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29
NEW YORKv.JOHN PETER ZENGER(1735)
  • the freshest advises, foreign and domestic
  • 1st pub. 1733
  • Zenger criticized the government
  • Related news about the colonies

The New York Weekly Journal
30
"The greater the truth, the greater the libel."
  • John Peter Zenger was arrested and charged with
    seditious libel -- an English law prohibiting the
    publishing of statements intended to bring into
    contempt or excite dissatisfaction against the
    government.
  • Any published criticism of the government, even
    if true
  • The problem confronting Zenger was that the truth
    was no defense to libel at that time
  • Andrew Hamilton was Peters lawyer

31
Hamilton said to the court
  • Men who injure and oppress the people under
    their administration provoke them to cry out and
    complain and then make that very complaint the
    foundation for new oppressions and prosecutions.

32
  • by an impartial and uncorrupt verdict, have laid
    a noble foundation for securing to ourselves, our
    posterity, and our neighbors that to which nature
    and the laws of our country have given us a right
    -- and liberty -- both of exposing and opposing
    arbitrary power ... by speaking and writing
    truth....

33
  • Despite clear instructions from the judge to the
    contrary, the jury found Zenger innocent of all
    charges.
  • This case was instrumental in establishing the
    framework for the American concept, Freedom of
    the Press.

34
An 18th century frontispiece for a French
religious work 
35
An 18th century French etching
36
Nazi Book Burning
  • May 10, 1933

37
Nazi Germany and the book burning
38
  • One way the Nazis cleansed the country of
    "un-German" thoughts was through censorship. A
    "brown shirt" (member of the SA) throws some more
    fuel--"un-German" books-- into a roaring fire on
    the Opernplatz in Berlin. May 10, 1933.

39
In Berlin
  • 20,000 books were burned during a student rally
  • The suppression of free speech and ideas was a
    tactic of Joseph Goebbels' Ministry of
    Propaganda.
  • Target this time was anti-Nazi, Jewish-authored,
    and so-called "degenerate" books, but it would
    escalate

40
  • "Where they have burned books,they will end in
    burning human beings."Heinrich Heine

41
  • Someone must read a book to say that it is
    dangerousyes?

42
  • Where do we see censorship in our own lives?

43
Back to Fahrenheit 451
Let us refresh our memory on the themes before we
progress to motifs
44
Themes
  • Themes are the fundamental and often universal
    ideas explored in a literary work

45

Fahrenheit 451 Themes
  • Knowledge versus Ignorance
  • Destroy knowledge to promote ignorance
  • Search for knowledge destroys ignorance
  • Conformity versus Individuality
  • Conforming to the norms of our society
  • What are the norms of our society?
  • Does it endanger societys well-being?
  • Does it help our society?
  • Censorship

46
Motifs
  • Recurring structures, contrasts, or literary
    devises that can help to develop and add to the
    texts major themes

47
Fahrenheit 451 Motifs
  • Paradoxes
  • For ex I am not really here to be physically
    in a space, but, emotionally you are somewhere
    else
  • For ex to be living, but, at the same time, be
    spiritually dead
  • Animal and Nature Imagery
  • Nature force of innocence and truth
  • Animal ironic (society ignores nature, but
    perpetuates devises modeled after animals)

48
Motifs continued
  • Religion
  • Enameled faces of statues compared to permanent
    smiles of firemen
  • Christian value of forgiveness
  • Ref miracle of Canaa Christ turned water into
    wine (one of miracles to try and prove his
    identity)
  • Fire (Christian beliefs) pagan, divine
    presence
  • In 451 starts out as the vehicle of a
    restrictive society
  • Then it is turned on the oppressor

49
Symbols
  • Objects, characters, figures, or colors used to
    represent abstract ideas or concept

50
Fahrenheit 451 Symbols
  • Blood
  • Symbol of human beings repressed soul or primal,
    instinctive self
  • The snake machine
  • The Hearth and the Salamander
  • Hearth (fireplace, heats the home) symbolizes
    home
  • Salamander (official symbol of firemen)
  • Ancient beliefs that it lives in fire is
    unaffected by flames
  • fire

51
Symbols continued
  • The Sieve and the Sand (recollection of a
    memory as a child at the beach)
  • Sand tangible truth Montag seeks
  • Sieve human mind seeking truth that remains
    allusive (not able to grasp in any permanent way)
  • The Phoenix (rebirth)
  • Mankind burns itself up then rises out of the
    ashes again again
  • Cyclical nature of history
  • Montags spiritual resurrection

52
Symbols continued
  • Mirrors
  • Self-understanding
  • Seeing oneself clearly

53
The Characters
  • Guy Montag protagonist, 30 yrs old fireman who
    makes his living by burning books the houses
    where the books are kept illegally.
  • Experiences a drastic change in the novel
  • Mildred Montag married to Montag for 10 yrs,
    epitomizes shallowness and complacentness of
    society
  • Clarrise McClellan 17 yr. old girl Montag is
    drawn to her, opposite of Millie embodies what
    is positive about the human spirit

54
More Characters
  • Captain Beatty antagonist head of the Fire
    Dpt. whose sole purpose is to destroy books big
    brother character
  • Professor Faber aging intellectual in a world
    where seems no place for him, disapproves of
    society but lacks courage gives Montag
    inspiration
  • Granger intellectual former author leader of
    group of hobos takes Montag under his wing.

55
More Characters
  • Mechanical Hound terrible triumph of modern
    technology programmed to track down and destroy
    any victim that his sensors are set to
  • Mrs.Phelps Mrs.Bowles Millies friends just
    as ignorant and silly as she is

56
Fahrenheit 451
  • By Ray Bradbury

The adventure begins!
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