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OpenStudy (anonymous):

PLEASE HELP ME I WILL GIVE YOU A MEDAL & I WILL BECOME A FAN C: Describe a second major decision made by the main character(protagonist) and outcome/consequence of that decision in the novel Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

What was the question before this one ....

OpenStudy (anonymous):

it was the same thing but it was the first decision instead of the second decision. can u please help me with this though c:

OpenStudy (anonymous):

It makes absoultly no sense ... Are you home schooled ?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Who is the main character ?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

No, it makes perfect sense... I just have not read the story so... It makes it rather hard to give a accurate answer. This seems like a rather easy question though... I would recomend just finding a decision and just writting about it instead of waiting for someone who has read this story to reply.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

i haven't read the story . i am missing 63 assignments and i am trying to get caught up before the new semester , i have 4 more days to finish all these assignments . so i can pass

OpenStudy (anonymous):

The book American writer is not a literary masterpiece, do not admire the style or psychologically deep characters, the plot is also fairly simple, but maybe that's what makes it so realistic and impressive. Her tone is even stronger that the reader realizes how much of what in 1953 seemed like a pipe dream, has come true. In this short story the author shows us the world possessed by the band, pointless television programs, without which most of the world's population is unable to function. A world where not allowed to have even less to read books under the threat of losing the entire property, even life. A world where being different is a sin against the rest of humanity. And if the reader has the impression that people feel oppressed by a regime, Bradbury quickly brings him to an error - that people stopped reading, stopped to talk, get to know, because it was easier for them to endure everyday. A grim symbol of the transformation writer has made one of the most honorable and respected professions in the world - a fireman. In the world of Bradbury's firemen, instead of extinguish fires and rescue people and their possessions against destructive elements, they stir up a fire to burn the book. This is certainly one of the most used paradoxes in the literature. However, despite all these depressing and dark aspects of the human personality, vision Bradbury is not quite fatalistic. The main character, Guy Montag, a fireman Salamanders, seems suddenly realized that life in apathy, not enough for him that he is not happy. Lever in his life becomes friends with a young neighbor, Clarisse McClellan, who considered most of the mentally ill, their insights and questions raised in Montagu doubt. It was only thanks to her man begins to see, emptiness in which lives for years. The tragic events that occur later, make it decides to rebel, to fight against the system, which until recently was a part of. One gets the impression that it is not too late to save the world, that if someone like Montag, was able to regain consciousness and go against everything he believed in what used, these changes may also occur in the other. Montag behavior provoked in me one more reflection. We, the people of countries "most civilized", we are now in a time of peace. The wars in the world does not seem to apply to us, do not directly affect our lives. I had the impression at least that long ago. Of course, I realize that what happens one thousand kilometers away from me, has an impact, as evidenced by the even higher prices of food, financial crises, higher fuel prices and so on. After all, I feel safe. Just as the hero of "Fahrenheit 451." And his sudden awakening and the decision to withdraw against the ruling arrangement made me wonder what I would do in a similar situation. Would I be able to fight for something more than just his own life, or should I dare to sacrifice them for the sake of the idea that victory is not certain? Have you ever I get to that conclusion, that "when you have nothing to lose, you can not afford any risk"? I do not know and will never know it unless I face a similar choice, but the attitude of Guy Montag aroused in me a fighting spirit, a kind of literary patriotism, to the extent to which I have influence. I'm proud that I read the book and decided, although it would not sound lofty, spreading awareness of the literary in its own environment. Perhaps in this way, even in a small part, I will make the vision of Ray Bradbury, however, fail to perform.

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