François Boucher

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    Winston and Montag From the two books, Fahrenheit 451 and 1984, there are many parallels that can be drawn. One of those are the characters within the stories, Winston from 1984 and Montag from Fahrenheit 451. These characters are portrayed similarly in both stories as the curious citizen that has too many internal questions. The main character trait that they show is the passion to know the unknown without getting caught. Though, these two also have few differences considering their…

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    The Holocaust inspired many works of art such as the memoir Night and the poem “Mercy and Grace,” which both show how faith and religion declined with the Jewish people, with the more suffering, and torture they endured. For example, in the memoir Night, by Elie Wiesel, a Jewish citizen of Sighet, and a Holocaust survivor, is watching the world slowly drip into chaos. Often times in his society, people are being dragged to concentration camps, and their families are separated. Then, as Wiesel…

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    What if books were illegal to the point where people would be arrested for having them? In Fahrenheit 451, the firemen burned books because they believed they weren't good to have which made them illegal. The firemen are different in the book then they are in real life today, they were the ones who burned the books. Once caught, like Montag, they would arrest the person unless they ran away. Since Montag was caught, he ran which made the government pretend his death. If that were life today, it…

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    To begin with, in the novel 1984, thought police are a group of individuals who work for the government. “Thoughtcrime does not entail death: thoughtcrime IS death.”(Orwell 36). The organization has complete control over citizens in Oceania. They fear the severe punishment they bring if someone decides bad-mouth the party. Censorship made a huge influence on how people act, as a result they act like machines; just saying and thinking what the organization instructed them to say if they somehow…

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    In F ahrenheit 451, Ray Bradbury creates a dystopian world where censorship is used as a means to control and repress free thought, through the burning of books, distractions and pleasure, and removal from society of those who rebel. And the citizens of this very world, are absolutely clueless, except for a few individuals who have “opened their eyes.” “M ore sports for everyone, group spirit, fun, and you don't have to think, eh?...More cartoons in books. More pictures. The mind drinks less and…

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    Milkweed “Until Then I Only Read About These Things in Books” and “The Guard” are about children experiencing life during the holocaust. After reading these three exerts its obvious that these have a few similarities and differences Two similarities are that they were scared and They were all with family or someone important. Both “The Guard” and “Until Then I Only Read About These Things in Books” showed that the characters were scared. From “The Guard” it says “... because the guard is…

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    Fahrenheit 451, written by Ray Bradbury, takes place in a future America where books are forbidden and firemen burn down the houses that contain them. Guy Montag, once a fireman and under the influence of censorship, rebels when he discovers the magnificent power of books and the effect they have upon him. By ridding society of a resource for knowledge that is no longer deemed valuable, Bradbury warns that censorship shapes individuals who cannot think for themselves and leaves society as a…

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    The French New Wave

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    “truth” within their films, “they simply felt that this was not necessarily reflective of their lives and did not speak to them with the same relevance that they thought they could achieve with their own films” (Price). A perfect example of this is François Truffaut’s The 400 Blows (1959), which follows a misunderstood adolescent and his rebellious behavior toward conformism. The film’s theme not only parallels the French New Wave itself, but also, the personal experiences of Truffaut’s…

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    Fahrenheit 451 is a novel inanimate object that serves important purposes that tie into the theme of the book. Fire is one of many inanimate objects in this novel. Fire in Fahrenheit 451 is an inanimate objects with many purposes that change as the story goes on that also tie into the story. At the beginning fire is used to burn the books inside of house that weren't supposed to be there in the first place. They haven't only burned the books, but they also burnt all of the items…

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    In Ray Bradbury’s dystopian novel Fahrenheit 451, it focuses on a society of distractions. These distractions can range from subtle mechanisms such as television walls, to more forceful means of interaction such as the burning of books to prevent the spread of knowledge. All of these minor mechanisms of control have to stem from somewhere: a corrupted government. Because the government cannot control society by themselves, they use the most important mechanism of control they have: the…

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