Thursday, January 31, 2019

Images, Symbols and Symbolism in Fahrenheit 451 :: Fahrenheit 451 Essays

Symbols and Images in Fahrenheit(postnominal) 451   Fahrenheit 451, by Ray Bradbury is a futuristic novel, taking the reader to a time where books and thinking argon outlawed. In a time fearsome FOR those who want to better themselves by thinking, and by reading, BECAUSE READING IS OUTLAWED. Books and suppositions are burned, books are burned physically, where as ideas are burned from the mind. Bradbury uses literary devices( I yet SEE ONE DEVICE) such as symbolism, but it is the idea (WHAT IDEA?) he wants to convey that makes this novel so devastating. Bradbury warns us of what may happen if we stop expressing our ideas, and let people take away our books, and conceits. Bradbury notices what has been firing on in the world, with regards to censorship THROUGH book burning in Germany and McCarthyism in America.               Bradbury is also a WRITER WHO incorporates symbolism into his book. Bradburys use of symbolism throug hout the novel makes the book moving and powerful by employ symbolism to reinforce the ideas of anti-censorship. (WHAT DO YOU MEAN BY THIS?) The Hearth and the Salamander, the name of part one, is the first example of symbolism. The title suggests two things having to do with fire, the house is a source of warmth and goodness, showing the positive, non-destructive side of fire. Whereas a poker game is a small lizard- corresponding amphibian, WHICH in mythology is known to endure fire without get burnED by it.               Perhaps the salamander is symbolic of Guy Montag who is draw as a ONE because he works with fire, endurING ITS DANGER.  only HE CONTINUES TO call ups that he can escape the fire and survive, much like a salamander does. On the other hand, it is ironic that Guy, and the other firemen believe themselves to be salamanders because both CAPTAIN Beattys and Montags destruction comes from the all mighty flame, f rom which they thought they were invincible.   The symbol of a Phoenix is used throughout the novel. This quote accurately describes the Phoenix,               It is known to be a mythical multi-colored bird of Arabia, with a wide history of artistic and  literary symbolism, the Phoenix is one of a kind. At the end of its five-hundred-year existence, it perches on its nest of spices and sings until sunlight ignites the masses. After the body is consumed in flames, a worm emerges and develops into the next Phoenix.

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