tzikeh: (question - inquiry - bafflement)
[personal profile] tzikeh

We've been using Fahrenheit 451 as our "prop" book in my Teaching Literature to Adolescents class. I'm assuming most of you know the basic story--it's The Future, a fireman's job is now to burn books, not put out fires, the written word had been eradicated from society years and years before (sometime after the nuclear wars in the 1990s. *g*). Everything is communicated now through the spoken word, or through pictures (e.g., a salamander and a phoenix mark the uniforms for firemen). Montag (a fireman) has been slowly stealing books during fire-settings, and hiding them in his home. Later in the book, he chooses to read them, which is a serious crime, which leads to the rest of the story.

So--

How does Montag know how to read?

Is this going to be one of those "Nobody heard Kane say 'Rosebud'" things that fucks up the work forever?

Date: 2009-10-16 01:56 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bentleywg.livejournal.com
I haven't read it in many many years, but I remember getting an impression of training manuals. (I've seen the movie even longer ago than I've read the book, so I might be conflating impressions.)

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