Fahrenheit 451 Society Analysis

Words: 428
Pages: 2

In Fahrenheit 451, Ray Bradbury, paints a picture of society norms through the usage of diction. Bradbury displays a society that no longer values life along with true happiness. A society that has been established that values destruction over everything else. The society that valued true music, art, and entertainment has been obliterated. His usage of words like blackened, changed, and distorted displays that society, like the books, has been destroyed and reconstructed in a new way. Within the first sentences of the book, Bradbury says “It was a special pleasure to burn to see things blackened and changed (Bradbury 3).” Destruction had become an exceptional pleasure to witness in this society. Montag, and all of the other firefighters, have no second thoughts as to whether they are truly doing what is morally …show more content…
Society believes that destruction is truly beautiful to witness. Instead of nature and family, watching the destruction of books is beautiful to observe.
Society, despite being in an unhappy state, has been displayed as carefree and happy. “It never went away, that smile it never went away as long as he remembered (Bradbury 4).” Everything has become so fake that the predominant part of society is destroying for enjoyment. The society comparable to the books, has been destroyed while being watched by the residents of each community. There is so little happiness in society that there is not even dissension. The society displayed takes trivial problems, such as being offended by what is in books, and makes them something to be purged. Society became indifferent to what is happening around them and, like books, society, and what it stood for, was