Creativity In Fahrenheit 451 Essay

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Have you ever wondered how creative you are, or about the urgency in independent thinking, or even about the fact that everyone’s own humanity revolves around it? Hands sometimes do things on their own in defense of creativity, or sometimes because of the lack of it. Hands must be put to creative use, and the human hand can’t be merged with technology, as that will kill creativity. Fire is primarily used to promote the burning of knowledge and thinking, and it achieves that by burning books. On the flip side, when used in the right place and when created by hand, fire can be warming and comforting. Ray Bradbury uses hands and fire as major symbolic elements to convey the message and theme of creativity in the novel Fahrenheit 451.
In Fahrenheit 451, there are
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After he’s awake to the fact that there are people who use their hands for creative purposes, he’s noticing interesting things about them. “He almost thought he could hear the motion of her hands as she walked” (Bradbury 3). However, Montag himself isn’t aware of what it all means yet, because his society is still fogging up his thought. In Fahrenheit 451, society isn’t creative and doesn’t use their hands the way they were created to be used, however; when Montag instinctively picks up the book, it’s showing that he’s doing it out of creativity, which differs his humanity from the rest of his society. The usage of hands occurs multiple times. “[Montag’s] hands tore the flyleaf and then the first and then the second page” (Bradbury 84). Yes, “his hands, by themselves, like two men working together, began to rip pages from the book” (Bradbury 84). Then, “Montag’s hands picked up the Bible. He saw what his hands had done and looked surprised” (Bradbury 84). These two instances reflect creativity because Montag used to burn books and leave no trace of thinking and curiosity. Now, he’s doing things in defense of creativity, such as utilizing books and thinking, which connects to how he’s

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