"Julius caesar and fahrenheit 451" Essays and Research Papers

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    Books provide one with knowledge‚ creativity‚ imagination‚ and awareness. Burning books eliminates all of these factors. The destruction of books will lead to chaos and ignorance. In Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury book burning is accepted in society. Citizens who have books hidden in their homes are faced with consequence of having their home burned down‚ and of course the books. One reads this and can not believe that something like this happens and is accepted‚ but fail to realize that events such

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    Do you think that living in a technical world would destroy society? Well‚ in Bradbury’s novel‚ Fahrenheit 451‚ technology is very advanced and seems to get people’s attention. "You’re not important. You’re not anything" (Bradbury 163). Fahrenheit 451 is explained as a dystopian literature. Such literature portrays an imaginary world where misguided attempts to create a utopia‚ or a socially and politically perfect place‚ results in “large scale human misery." (Critique by Michael M. Levy) This quote

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    Individuality sets people apart from other people‚ but some people want to be the same as everyone else. In Fahrenheit 451 the author shows characters in different proportions to let the readers understand the characters better. In the science fiction‚ Fahrenheit 451 ‚ the author‚ Ray Bradbury uses characterization to express individuality and sameness. In Fahrenheit 451 one of the characters that displays eccentricity is Clarisse. Clarisse is a female that does things that other people do not do

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    positive? Is our society close to that now or is our society much different from that description? In the novel Fahrenheit 451‚ the citizens don’t have rights we have today. The people try to hide their feelings and only care about themselves. This describes our society a little because people are still fighting for rights and there is crime wherever you go. The dystopian society in Fahrenheit 451 is much like and different from our society today. In the novel‚ the people act dull and in unison. Even

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    “It’s not the books you need‚ it’s some of the things that once were in books” (78). Fahrenheit 451 ‚ written by Ray Bradbury is a science fiction book that is set in the future. Guy Montag‚ a fireman‚ has never once questioned his job of destroying printed books‚ along with the houses‚ until he has to run for his life for having them. Destroying information‚ creating mechanical hounds‚ and killing people are three acts that occurred in Fahrenheit’s society‚ that could also occur in ours. In our

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    "Et tu‚ Brute?" The final words spoken by Julius Caesar before his closest friend‚ and confidant‚ drove the final sword through his chest and watched him fall to the ground. When Caesar fell‚ democracy fell‚ and left Rome in a very unsettled state. There are many thoughts and ideas that could be drawn from the very simplistic white and black halves of my mask. Light and dark‚ good and evil‚ night and day‚ happiness and sadness‚ and the list goes on. The light half of my mask represents the democracy

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    discretion” (Oxford Dictionaries). As the world becomes more technical and the government continues to grow in power‚ the less free will the people will have. This idea is what books like Fahrenheit 451: The Graphic Novel‚ by Tim Hamilton‚ and “Minority Report‚” by Philip K. Dick‚ represent. In both Fahrenheit 451: The Graphic Novel and “Minority Report‚” predictions made about the future and the lack of freedom are presented when the stories discuss the dangers of technology‚ government control‚

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    throughout the twentieth century. Philosophical optimism of a bright future held by humanity in general was taken advantage of by the promise of a better life through sacrifice of individuality to the state. In the books Brave New World‚ 1984‚ and Fahrenheit 451 clear opposition to these subtle entrapments was voiced in similarly convincing ways. They first all established‚ to varying degrees of balance‚ the atmosphere and seductiveness of the "utopia" and the fear of the consequences of acting in the

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    it may sound crazy‚ but a world full of book burning is the basis of Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451. Bradbury writes a spectacular story about a firefighter(named ironically‚ given they start fires instead of putting them out) that wants to enjoy his life by reading. The story offers the idea that it’s main protagonist‚ the bored-with-life Montag‚ dares to break an ill placed law. The protagonist of Fahrenheit 451 is Montag‚ a man who carries out the law at his job where he burns books. Despite the

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    Fahrenheit 451: The Hope of the Phoenix The word phoenix had symbolize immortality‚ but for the people in Fahrenheit 451‚ their only hope was that the phoenix would be burn out‚ and be reborn again. The myth of the phoenix gave optimism to the life of Montag‚ to the books‚ and to the world of Fahrenheit 451. The world was now dying‚ and nobody seemed to care‚ because the government had brainwashed the people. It was a situation‚ where not only the brave‚ but the ones who can think for themselves

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