prepare for your section 1 quiz over f451 pen or pencil is all you need

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Prepare for your Section 1 Quiz over F451 Pen or pencil is all you need

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Page 1: Prepare for your Section 1 Quiz over F451 Pen or pencil is all you need

Prepare for your Section 1 Quiz over F451

Pen or pencil is all you need

Page 2: Prepare for your Section 1 Quiz over F451 Pen or pencil is all you need

Journal

Write about a book that opened new doors for you. If a book had

a profound impact on you, explain why.

Page 3: Prepare for your Section 1 Quiz over F451 Pen or pencil is all you need

The authorThe author’s life can inform & expand the reader’s understanding of

a

Novel because authors often integrate their personal experience into a

story. Fahrenheit 451 is, in some ways, the author’s tribute to the role that

books and libraries have played in his life. After all, Bradbury wrote

hundreds of works (novels, stories, screenplays, essays, and poems) with

only a high school education and a worn out library card. However, while

we more fully understand the book as we learn about the author, the

artistry of the novel does not succeed or fail based on the author’s life.

Page 4: Prepare for your Section 1 Quiz over F451 Pen or pencil is all you need

Further readings

Extra reading to learn more about “Ray Bradbury, Fahrenheit 451 and Censorship, Bradbury and His Other Works, and The Fifties” are posted on my website.

Interview-

http://www.raybradbury.com/images/video/about_freeDOM.html

Page 5: Prepare for your Section 1 Quiz over F451 Pen or pencil is all you need

Setting the time Fahrenheit 451 is a science fiction novella set in a future version of

the United States.

It was first published in 1953, a time of great prosperity for a large group of Americans.

World War II had brought the country out of the Depression. Manufacturing and production increased.

Two things that were produced in large numbers, and that changed the face of America, were the television and the automobile.

By 1954 (the year after the release of Fahrenheit 451),55% of United States households had televisions.

By 1962, television sets could be found in 90% of United States homes.

Page 6: Prepare for your Section 1 Quiz over F451 Pen or pencil is all you need

Setting the time Television changed the way people interacted. Rather than talking to

neighbors as a form of entertainment, people began to stay in their homes and watch their favorite television programs.

The 1950s were also a time in which the automobile became extremely important to America.

In 1947, still in the aftermath of World War II and industry’s retooling for peacetime, 3,300,000 automobiles were produced in the United States.

By 1953 (the year of Fahrenheit 451’s release), production had more than doubled.

The year 1949 also witnessed the introduction of the high-compression V8 engine, allowing for faster and more powerful automobiles, and setting off America’s decades-long love affair with speed and power.

Page 7: Prepare for your Section 1 Quiz over F451 Pen or pencil is all you need

Bradbury’s Concerns Ray Bradbury, already a noted science fiction author,

became concerned about the dangers he felt television and automobiles presented to a stable society.

Fahrenheit 451 is the book that came out of Bradbury’s vision of the future.

In Fahrenheit 451, Bradbury speculates that things intended to make life easier and more pleasant—cars, mass media—may actually rob people of the ability to think and relate to one another.

Page 8: Prepare for your Section 1 Quiz over F451 Pen or pencil is all you need

F451 Themes Censorship: Why are books banned in the future?

Two Groups Factors that lead to a general lack of interest in reading. Popularity

of competing forms of entertainment (tv, radio)- to much stimulation now with fast cars, loud music and advertisement that disallows for concentration. Condensed books.

Factors that make people actively hostile towards books. ENVY. People don’t like to feel inferior to those who have read more than they have.

Knowledge vs Ignorance: The fireman’s duty is to destroy knowledge and promote sameness. Who makes Montag doubt this so far?

Page 9: Prepare for your Section 1 Quiz over F451 Pen or pencil is all you need

MotifsMotif- Recurring structures, contrasts, or lit devices that can help to develop and inform the text’s major themes

Animal and Nature Imagery This imagery pervades the novel Animal- ironic- although this society is obsessed with

technology and ignores nature, many frightening mechanical devices are modeled after or named after animals- electric-eyed snake, Mechanical Hound

Nature- presented as a force of innocence and truth- Clarisse’s love (taste the rain)

Page 10: Prepare for your Section 1 Quiz over F451 Pen or pencil is all you need

Symbols Blood- symbolic of a human being’s repressed soul

Montag “feels” his thoughts circulating in his blood Mildred- whose soul has been lost- remains unchanged when

her poisoned blood is replaced with fresh, mechanically administered blood

“The Hearth and the Salamander” Hearth- fireplace- traditional symbol of home Salamander is one of the official symbols of the fireman

(firetruck name) Both have to do with fire (hearth because heats home;

salamander bc of ancient beliefs that it lives in fire and is unaffected by flames

(2 more towards the end): The Phoenix and Mirrors

Page 11: Prepare for your Section 1 Quiz over F451 Pen or pencil is all you need

Discussion

The novel begins:“[I]t was a pleasure to burn.”

Why does Bradbury start the novel in this way?

Why might it be more pleasurable to burn books rather

than read them?

Page 12: Prepare for your Section 1 Quiz over F451 Pen or pencil is all you need

Discussion

What are the differences between Montag’s life and Clarisse’s life.

Page 13: Prepare for your Section 1 Quiz over F451 Pen or pencil is all you need

Arts and Culture

Fahrenheit 451 was published in 1953, the year the Korean War ended.

The Cold War, meanwhile, had hardened into a standoff. In 1952 the U.S. tested a hydrogen bomb, and the U.S.S.R. followed suit a year later.

Page 14: Prepare for your Section 1 Quiz over F451 Pen or pencil is all you need

Arts and Culture discussion

Montag’s television includes headphones called “seashells.” The “wall to wall circuit” allows

Mildred to enter the “play” and, therefore, the television programming.

How does the technology within the novel compare to our current technology?

In the first pages of the novel, does technology improve the quality of life for Montag and his

wife, Mildred? Why or why not?

Page 15: Prepare for your Section 1 Quiz over F451 Pen or pencil is all you need

Narrative and Point of View

First-person narration wraps the reader into the perspective of the main character, as this person tells us, first-hand, about her or his experiences.

This voice uses the first-person “I” to recount her or his adventures and is almost always personally invested in how the drama unfolds.

Bradbury employs a third-person narrator in Fahrenheit 451. Third-person narration uses “he” or “she” to tell the story and establishes a greater distance between narrator and audience, as an outside observer relates events.

Third-person narration may or may not be omniscient. An omniscient third-person narrator knows the thoughts and movements of every character.

Page 16: Prepare for your Section 1 Quiz over F451 Pen or pencil is all you need

Narrative and Point of View

Fahrenheit 451 is not strictly omniscient; we know only Montag’s movements and thoughts. The narration follows Montag like a camera, and the reader is never allowed into the lives of other characters, except for what they say to him. This inevitably increases our sympathy for Montag.

Page 17: Prepare for your Section 1 Quiz over F451 Pen or pencil is all you need

Now, you… Class discussion…

Ask questions, pose thoughts, whatever you want about section 1

Section 2 due 8/19 for a quiz and discussion