Technology In Ray Bradbury's 'Fahrenheit 451'

Words: 480
Pages: 2

Noe Borjon

Mrs. Rocheleau

English 2H

January 15, 2016

Technology Hurts Society

Ray Bradbury the author of “Fahrenheit 451”uses Diction, Satire and Irony to clearly convey why an unhealthy relationship with technology hurts societies education, human emotion, and life itself. “Fahrenheit 451” is about a dystopian world in which knowledge is no longer power so it is burned. The main protagonist Guy Montag, is looking for answers to why the society is the way it is. Technology has made it so that people wouldn’t need to read anymore. So the only way to get answers is through reading books, but books are not allowed and will be burned. by using literary devices like diction, satire and irony Bradbury is able to express his thoughts through fahrenheit. Bradbury is persuading people to stop using
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When the book was written, these highways were still new; the idea of high-speeds was considered dangerous. In the future, the cars drive over one hundred miles per hour, and since human life is considered expendable, there seem to be no consequences for traffic accidents. “Or go out in the cars and race on the streets, trying to see how close you can get to lamp posts, playing 'chicken...' Six of my friends have been shot in the last year alone. Ten of them died in car wrecks”().This satirizes both the tendency for people to desire more speed in getting to their destinations, and what Bradbury saw as the slow movement towards devaluing of human life. Nobody thinks anything strange of children killed in road accidents; it is not even prosecuted or criminalized, but simply an aftereffect of the efficient, high-speed cars. With this concept, the modern push to increase highway speeds seems less reasonable and more contemptuous of human