RAY BRADBURY (1920– 2012)

Ray Bradbury began writing when he was seven years old. He was born in Waukegan, Illinois, and lived, he says, immersed in a world of fantasy and illusion— the world of the comic strip characters Buck Rogers and Flash Gordon. In high school, he founded and edited a magazine called Futuria Fantasia, which he ran off on a mimeograph. After graduating from high school, Bradbury wrote stories that didn’t sell and supported himself by selling newspapers in downtown Los Angeles. At the age of twenty-three, he became a full time writer.

Bradbury explains that his hatred of thought investigation and thought control of any kind arises from the fact that his ancestor, Mary Bradbury, was tried as a witch in Salem, Massachusetts, during the seventeenth century. According to Bradbury, “Science fiction is a wonderful hammer; I intend to use it when and if necessary to bark a few shins or knock a few heads, in order to make people leave people alone.” Adapted from: “Independent Reading: A Guide to Fahrenheit 451.” Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc. Web. 21 May 2012. <http://eolit.hrw.com/hlla/novelguides/hs/Mini-Guide.Bradbury.pdf>.

THE NOVEL

The story of fireman Guy Montag first appeared in “The Fireman”, a short story by Ray Bradbury published in Galaxy Science Fiction in 1951. Montag’s story was expanded two years later, in 1953, and was published as Fahrenheit 451. While the novel is most often classified as a work of science fiction, it is first and foremost a social criticism warning against the danger of censorship. Fahrenheit 451 uses the genre of science fiction, which enjoyed immense popularity at the time of the book’s publication, as a vehicle for his message that unchecked oppressive government irreparably damages society by limiting the creativity and freedom of its people. In particular, the “dystopia” motif popular in science fiction – a futuristic technocratic and totalitarian society that demands order and harmony at the expense of individual rights – serves the novel well.

Developed in the years following World War II, Fahrenheit 451 condemns not only the anti-intellectualism of the defeated Nazi party in Germany, but more immediately the intellectually oppressive political climate of the early 1950’s – the heyday of McCarthyism. That such influential fictional social criticisms such as Orwell’s Animal Farm and 1984 and Skinner’s Walden Two were published just a few short years prior to Fahrenheit 451 is not coincidental. These works reveal a very real apprehension of the danger of the US evolving into an oppressive, authoritarian society in the post-WWII period.

On a more personal level, Bradbury used Fahrenheit 451 as a vehicle through which to protest what he believed to be the invasiveness of editors who, through their strict control of the books they printed, impair writers’ originality and creativity. Ironically, Fahrenheit 451, itself a vehicle of protest against censorship, has often been edited for foul language.

Fahrenheit 451, Ray Bradbury’s most popular novel, has been reprinted scores of times since initially published in 1953. The lessons of this American classic, the dangers of censorship and government control, have become increasingly important and the novel is as relevant today as it was when first written. Fahrenheit 451 Background.” Study Guides & Essay Editing. Web. 21 May 2012. Available at: <http://www.gradesaver.com/fahrenheit-451/study-guide/about/>.

Consider the following as you read. Answer the following questions in your notes: Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
  1. What is the significance of each of the major characters in the novel? Characterize Guy Montag, Millie, Clarisse, Faber, and Beatty.  What purpose does each character serve in the novel?
  1. Science fiction is literature that explores technological and societal change.  Science fiction is often based on scientific principles and technology.  It may make predictions about life in the future or comment on important issues in society. What elements make Fahrenheit 451 a science fiction novel?
  2. A dystopia is a repressive society characterized by misery, often disguised as a utopia (perfect society).  How does the society in Fahrenheit 451 represent a dystopia?

 

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