Introduction to Fahrenheit 451 By Ray Bradbury Adapted from the Fahrenheit 451 Teacher’s Guide.
Themes, Motifs, and Symbols in Bradburys Fahrenheit 451.
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Transcript of Themes, Motifs, and Symbols in Bradburys Fahrenheit 451.
Themes, Motifs, and Symbolsin Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451
Theme: Censorship
Why books banned?
1. People just aren’t interested– TV– Radio– Fast cars
• people aren’t used to slowing down, concentrating, thinking
2. Books/ideas are bad– Why make people who aren’t well-read
feel bad just because others have? (wide-spread ignorance levels the playing field)
– Objections of special-interest groups that what is being said in books is offensive (political correctness)
Motif:
Motif – as a literary element, an idea or image that is repeated or carried through an individual work
• A motif differs from a theme in that it can be expressed as a single word or fragmentary phrase, while a theme usually must be expressed as a complete sentence.– Blood is an important motif in A Tale of
Two Cities, appearing numerous times throughout the novel.
Motif: Paradox• Paradox -- Where a situation is created
which cannot possibly exist, because different elements of it cancel each other out.– In 1984, “doublethink” refers to the
paradox where history is changed, and then claimed to have never been changed.
– A Tale of Two Cities opens with the famous paradox, “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times.”
Motif: Paradox
Examples in °F 451:
Things, or people are . . . – Dead and alive– There and not there– Seeing but not seeing
• Shells of people, not thinking, not mentally present although they are physically present; empty; grotesque
• What other examples from the text?
Motif: Paradox
In the sense of the book itself:– Is this an example of art imitating life
or life imitating art? Both?
In American society today:– Freedom is what makes America
strong, yet it makes us susceptible to people who would take that away from us.
Motif: Nature
• Elements of the natural world are real, pure, and represent truth and innocence
• Clarisse• Dandelions• rain
– Presented as authentic, simple yet profound, beautiful
• Mechanical devices modeled after nature• Snake• Hound
– Presented as skewed, warped, grotesque
Symbolism:
Symbolism -- The use of specific objects or images to represent abstract ideas.
• A symbol must be something tangible or visible, while the idea it symbolizes must be something abstract or universal.
Symbol: The Hearth and the Salamander
• Hearth symbolizes home• Salamander symbolizes the firehouse,
the firemen, and their trucks
• Both deal with fire– Hearth heats the home– Ancient beliefs that the salamander lives
in fire and is not burnt by flames
Symbol: The Sieve and the Sand
• Sand symbolizes tangible truth• Sieve symbolizes the human mind
• Together = the human mind trying to obtain elusive truths
Symbol: Phoenix
• In ancient Egyptian mythology and in myths derived from it, a mythical sacred firebird
• The phoenix is a male bird with beautiful gold and red plumage.
• At the end of its life-cycle the phoenix builds itself a nest of cinnamon twigs that it then ignites; both nest and bird burn fiercely and are reduced to ashes, from which a new, young phoenix arises.
• The bird was also said to regenerate when hurt or wounded by a foe, thus being almost immortal and invincible — a symbol of fire and divinity.
Symbol: Phoenix
• After bombing, mankind is a Phoenix that burns itself up and rises out of the ashes
• Refers to the cyclical nature of history• Collective rebirth of mankind• Resurrection of Montag
Symbol: Mirror
• Symbolizes self understanding or awareness through deep reflection
• Clarisse• Granger says they should build a
mirror factory