"Fahrenheit 451", by Robert Frost.
Date Submitted: 05/13/2002 12:25:06
Fahrenheit 451
Utopia is an ideal and perfect place or state, where everyone lives in harmony and everything is for the best (Utopia). In Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451, the world that Guy Montag lives in is an anti-utopian or a seemingly perfect place (Anti- utopian). Ray Bradbury tells of a society is run by the government, books are illegal, and people are brainwashed from television and other technologies. Firemen set fires to books, instead of help putting
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not as maternal as most mothers are. Mrs. Bowles says," I've had two children from Caesarian section. No use going through all that agony for a baby" (Bradbury 96). Mothers would rather caesarean sections, instead of sharing the bonds of natural child birth. Loss of family life could affect the children and families in many ways such as leading them to suicide because they feel alone in the world or other dangerous paths to self- destruction.
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