Montag in Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451 Many minor characters influence the character Guy Montag. All these characters give Montag a new perspective on society and people. This is what helps shape Montag into who he wants to be. Montag’s eyes are opened throughout the book as he begins to see what people are actually like. In Fahrenheit 451, Ray Bradbury uses Mildred, Mrs. Blake, and Faber to influence Montag’s character. First of all, Mildred influences Montag by being an example of what is wrong in society. This helps open Montag’s eyes to the truth/reality. Montag asks Mildred, “When did we meet? And where?” Montag and Mildred could not remember where they had met,so Mildred finally decides, “It doesn’t matter” (Bradbury 42-43). This causes Montag to realize that he knows little about Mildred. He also realizes that Mildred cares more about …show more content…
Blake, and Faber. These characters help show Montag what the society he lives in is actually like, (Mildred), and how to fix it (Faber and Mrs. Blake). Montag changes in such a monumental way throughout the book. His beliefs change as well as his emotions. Montag learns what real love is and learns to stand up for what he believes in. Montag’s eyes are opened to all the problems of the society he lives in due to other characters either being a problem or pointing them out to him. Ray Bradbury uses characters in his book to show the different kinds of people in the world: the emotionless, the bitter, the cowardice, to brave, and the curious. They all show up in the book in some type of character to inspire Montag. Just like Ray Bradbury explains, books are important because they emphasize the mistakes and “pores” in society. This is exactly what Fahrenheit 451 does. The characters are like a mirror image of people in society today. What kind of characters are people, cowardice or brave, motionless or
Montag questions his love for Mildred, and hers in return. He realizes that if Mildred were to die, he would not even be sad. All she seems to care about is her ‘family.’ When they try to remember when, where, and how they met [and realize they can’t remember], Montag starts to realize that he is in a loveless marriage.
In the book Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury, the main character, Montag, is not responsible for the carelessness he displays in his actions and words. After Montag finally informs Mildred of the books he has been stealing/reading, he casually states “‘we’re in this together’” to the shocked, petrified woman (63). Unfortunately, he puts pressure on Mildred to keep and hide his dirty, little secret which puts this innocent person in danger and goes against her beliefs. When he takes the book from the attic, he is not thinking about the way it would negatively affect anybody else, his mind only focuses on trying to figure out the government's classified information. While Montag is laughing at Clarisse’s comment on how firemen were once used to
At the very beginning of Fahrenheit 451, it is evident that Montag has some very quiet doubts about the structure of his society, but he was not convinced enough to take any defiant action yet. His passivity first notably changes after he sees an act of commitment to knowledge by the woman with her books who let herself be burned rather than surrendering to authority making his doubts increase with internal curiosity. As he tries to recount what he saw to Mildred in an attempt to get her to see his perspective, he finally lets his true thoughts slip: “‘There must be something in books, things we can’t imagine, to make a woman stay in a burning house; there must be something there’” (48). He tries to use the extremely powerful image of a woman wanting to “stay in a burning house” to try to communicate the importance of the event, but of course, she doesn’t understand. His eyewitness experience made him also start questioning the topic even further.
In Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451, Montag, the protagonist and book burner, battles between the light and dark sides of society, first with Beatty, his boss, and the government and then with Clarisse, a neighbor girl and Faber, an English professor. Montag is stuck in the dark burning books and is ignorant to the world around him. He moves towards greater awareness when he meets Clarisse and is awakened to the wonders of deep thought and books. Finally, he risks his life by trying to save the books.
Montag was never really happy with Mildred, his happiness was a mask he didn't know about. The mask had been taken off when Montag's true colors were shown. Mildred wasn't much of a wife, or friend, to Montag. Mildred was only an acquaintance to Montag, as Montag didn't feel devastated for long. ¨Mildred, leaning anxiously nervously, as if to plunge, drop, fall into that swarming immensity of color to drown in its bright happiness.¨ (Bradbury 152)
Guy Montag a firefighter but instead he starts the fires. In the book Fahrenheit 451, Montag Mildred, and Beatty are impacted by the alienation. By looking at Montag, one can see he is lost which is important because he has to go to other people for help. Everyone around him was alienated from the real world and believe everything they hear.
Fahrenheit 451 shows how people’s rights to free speech and media are essential to a free thinking society. Guy Montag, the main character, is a firefighter, which in his futuristic society means he burns books for the government because they are illegal due to the potentially controversial ideas they contain. Montag meets a girl named Clarisse, who helps him realize he’s not really content in how he’s living his life and in his relationships, which begins to change his viewpoint on the society’s standards. His wife Mildred, as well as the rest of society, are highly materialistic and shallow in their daily activities and interactions. Montag eventually steals a book during the fireman’s raid on a house, which leads him to seek out a man named Faber, who is an educated man, and helps encourage Montag to take steps to action.
All that Montag wants is to make the community realize why books are important. How books can help us. Also, how books can make us feel some type of emotion. In the novel Fahrenheit 451 states how Montag read a poem to Mrs. Phelps which she is one of Mildred’s vapid friends. As Montag was reading her that poem Mrs. Phelps began to cry.
Mildred in the novel is Montag’s wife. She is the perfect example of a conformed person in this society because she is brainwashed by the tv that the government has set in place. Proof of such is when she said, " 'Books aren't people. You read and I look all around, but there isn't anybody!' ".
Regards to the book, Mildred, Montag’s wife, represents ignorance which is the result of censorship in the novel, while Montag was mainly objecting technology and book burning, since they both tend to make people ignorant. He struggles to find the truth about book burning which led to the expansion of technology, but he later on finds out that its an act of censorship from the government. All in all, Ray Bradbury’s novel was successful since it combines all aspects of depending highly on technology and easily being influenced by stronger powers which might lead to a future just like the one in Fahrenheit 451.In addition, he effectively exposes the themes of the novel through showing readers the struggle of being clever in a dystopian society, and the effects of being ignorant and acolyte. Moreover, the real act of book burning was historical since it might have changed the world forever and shaped it into the dystopian society Montag was living
Firstly, Montag stole a book to try and discover what he is missing not reading them. Clarisse at random asked Montag if he was happy, and it had never came across to Montag if he was happy. People in their society really didn't feel at all. The old woman that had rather die with her books than give them up, began to make Montag curious on why they were so special. He began to question every aspect in his life, when he does, Mildred tells Montag he should have thought before becoming a fireman.
When Montag reveals his hidden books to Mildred, she does not take time to understand them. “‘It doesn’t mean anything!’” (Bradbury 65). She, instead, worries about how it might affect her image if they are found out. “He could hear her breathing rapidly and her face paled out and her eyes were fastened wide” (Bradbury 63).
In society, some people have conflicts with things and people around them. In Fahrenheit 451, the main character, Montag, has to burn books for a living. Montag’s life began to change when he has a decision to steal, hide, and read the books, or turn the books in and act like everyone else. Ray Bradbury shows Montag’s conflict with his wife, a friend, and technology in Fahrenheit 451. Bradbury uses Mildred, Montag’s wife, to show how everyone there is like robots.
Fahrenheit 451, by Ray Bradbury, is a classic novel that challenges authority through self-discovery and growth. The main character Guy Montag is a dedicated fireman. He enjoys his job, watching pages of books become nothing more than burnt ash. He has never questioned anything before, nor has he had a reason to. That is, until he encounters three important individuals that seem to influence a change in Montag and ultimately change his world.
The first line of dialogue that Montag says is “it was a pleasure to burn”(pg. 1), which elucidates that he is just like the rest of the society. Bradbury introduces both of these characters as ignorant so the reader is able to draw a similarity between the way Montag is illustrated in the first page and how Mildred is characterized throughout the novel. This aids in tracing Montag’s coming of age journey because as he gets enlightened, the reader is able to distinguish how his mindset starts to diverge further away from Mildred’s. At the very end of the second chapter leading into the beginning of the third chapter, Beatty orders Montag to burn his own house, and as Beatty is speaking to Montag, Mildred runs past them “with her body stiff”(pg. 108). Through the employment of body language, Bradbury implies that Mildred is the one that turned Montag in to