The Hearth and the Salamander The hearth, or fireplace, is a traditional symbol of the home, which the firemen burn the salamander is one of the official.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Themes, Motifs, and Symbols
Advertisements

Fahrenheit 451 Themes.
Connections Between Fahrenheit 451 and Measure for Measure
Fahrenheit 451 Themes Theme Chart Notes. Theme Topic: Knowledge vs Ignorance Firemen destroy knowledge (books) Firemen destroy knowledge (books) Government.
“The Hearth and the Salamander” Questions
Kristen, Karina, Erica, Liz
Essay Writing Outline. I. Introduction Elements needed in introduction: Hook/Grabber Sentence General Background information on topic Thesis statement.
Get out your book! And any writing utensils, post-its, etc!
Fahrenheit 451 A novel by Ray Bradbury
Fahrenheit 451 Themes Theme Chart Notes. Theme Topic: Knowledge vs Ignorance Firemen destroy knowledge (books) Firemen destroy knowledge (books) Government.
Fahrenheit 451: Test Review Is it hot in here?. Basic 451 information Authored by Ray Bradbury in 1950 Written mostly in UCLA library Science fiction.
Fahrenheit 451 Burning Bright Review.
 Holden is very lonely, and most of the novel shows him attempting to find company or dwelling on the fact that he is lonely- “practically the whole.
Fahrenheit 451 Themes Theme Chart Notes.
$200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $100 “Go Figurative” Language Who’s.
2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2pt 3 pt 4pt 5 pt 1pt 2pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4pt 5 pt 1pt Main Characters Plot Who said It?
The ABCs of Fahrenheit 451 By. Jason Nagel.
The rules are simple  There are two teams  Each team will have one member compete at a time, (ONLY ONE!) so keep yur traps shut!  If you are caught.
CharactersTrue or False?Quotes MORE Characters Literary Terms
Fahrenheit 451 Symbols.
Ray Bradbury’s FAHRENHEIT 451 What? Where? When? Who? Why?
Notes – Part Two The Sieve and the Sand
Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury The temperature in which paper burns.
The Symbolism of the Firemen Fahrenheit 451. Main Characters in Fahrenheit 451 Guy Montag Clarisse McClelland Mildred (Millie) Montag Captain Beatty Granger.
Clarisse Dear Diary, I met my neighbor Clarisse who is a very strange girl. She notices small details in everyday life that I never even realized was.
Symbols CharactersPlot Montag’s Thoughts Objects.
Before we continue with our F451 discussion, get out your SOAPSTone notes and the last SOAPSTone chart that you completed…
IS FOR… Atomic is for the war going on. People don’t really care of the war. It’s been declared so many times that the people don’t seem to care.
The ABC s of Fahrenheit 451 Brandon means. is for Ablaze Guy Montag Sets the antagonist of the novel Beatty Ablaze when he threatens to track the green.
by: Sara, Mariah, Stephanie & Jamie!
Fahrenheit 451 Themes Theme Chart Notes.
Fahrenheit 451 Ray Bradbury The temperature at which book paper catches fire, and burns… Part Two: The Sieve and the Sand.
Science Fiction Describes things that are plausible based upon the technology at the time Often considers the effect of technology on society Bradbury.
Fahrenheit 451 Cycle 3, Day 1. Agenda Reading Goal: – Identify a problem and how it is solved. Today’s Big Question: – How can poetry produce an emotional.
Fahrenheit 451 METAPHOR ANALYSIS. Salamander The Salamander insignia represents the firemen of Bradbury's brave new world. Bradbury uses the Salamander.
Fahrenheit 451 Jeopardy.
Prelim Notes Choose a poem which deals with an issue with great sensitivity. Show how the poet creates the idea of sensitivity to convey theme.
Study Guide Questions for Fahrenheit 451
Books How would life be different if there were no books? Would things be better or worse? Why? Would life be easier or harder? Why? Would your life change?
Fahrenheit 451 Part Three-Burning Bright Section Two.
Characters Plot  Period 6  Gurgen. Guy Montag Conflicts  Internal Conflict:Montag is supposed to burn books, but instead he steals them to try and.
Why your daughter(s) should be looking up to them.
Part II: The Sieve and the Sand Analytical Page Comb & Annotation Clean-up.
Monday, February 24 What do you find most helpful about the Wiki? Is there anything else you’d like me to post on it? Explain.
Symbols Hearth/ Salamander Sieve/Sand Burning Bright Figurative Language
Exposition “The Hearth and the Salamander” focuses on Montag’s job as a fireman and his home life. The hearth, or fireplace, is a traditional symbol of.
Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury Published in 1953
Jeopardy Choose a category.
Faber.
Fahrenheit 451: Test Review
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray Bradbury.
Fahrenheit 451 Characters
Symbols Characters Plot Meet Guy Montag! Objects
You will be given the answer. You must give the correct question.
Fahrenheit 451 Section 3 Burning Bright.
Fahrenheit 451: Test Review
Section 2 The Sieve & The Sand
Then, follow the instructions
English B50 Fahrenheit Exam Prep.
English I Lesson Plans Second Nine Weeks Fahrenheit 451 Guidebook Unit
Fahrenheit 451: Test Review
Symbolism: Match the correct symbol to what it “represents”
Fahrenheit 451 Pages
Character Questions Heroic – saves books, fights against Beatty, frames firemen, values knowledge Confrontational relationship – Beatty (contrasting views.
Montag read “Granger Beach” to Millie’s friends.
Fahrenheit 451 Symbols.
Fahrenheit 451 Learning intentions
Fahrenheit 451 Themes Theme Chart Notes.
Presentation transcript:

The Hearth and the Salamander The hearth, or fireplace, is a traditional symbol of the home, which the firemen burn the salamander is one of the official symbols of the firemen, as well as the name they give to their trucks. The salamander is associated with ancient beliefs that it can live in fire and is unaffected by flames Rebirth, growth, regeneration

SPORTS: topic of sports, which allow for the organization and therefore subjugation of the country’s citizens. The biggest problem with books: everyone is so obsessed with political correctness and not offending any minorities that the materials were over-censored. all that was allowed to remain was comic books and porn. “Intellectual” became a swear word, because everyone has to be equal, no one smart allowed to rise above the rest. Happiness: people want to be happy everyone is a minority of something (whether race, sexual orientation, or occupation), everyone was offended by something all books are offensive, and all books should be burned

Montag asks how it is possible that someone like Clarisse exists. The odd duck happens now and then, says Beatty, which is why they try to take the children off to school at the earliest possible age – to indoctrinate them, to stamp out individuality. SCHOOL FORMULA: 1) stuff the children full of facts, but eliminate the possibility of argument or disagreement. 2) If they can’t disagree, they can’t possibly be unhappy. And happiness is the point of living. 3) Books, says Beatty, don’t say anything. They are fiction, philosophy, argument, but nothing tangible or real. They make you feel lost.

if a fireman accidentally takes a book home. Beatty responds that the fireman can keep it for a day, but that then they will come to burn it. Montag continues to think aloud regarding his personal crisis. He wants to smash things, he’s unhappy, he doesn’t know if he’ll ever work again – he might even start reading books. He wants to do something big, but he doesn’t know what.He tells his wife he wants to show her something – something behind the ventilator grill. The something turns out to be an entire collection of books that Guy has squirreled away, one at a time, over the last year He tells Mildred that they’re in this together now; Mildred responds by shrieking and taking one of the books to the kitchen incinerator Guy stops her and pleads desperately with his wife.

Montag is not the same man he was…he questions. He wants to read the books just once, to see what’s in them. If there’s nothing there, he’ll burn them. But people like Clarisse made him curious, and he wants to know why men like Beatty are afraid of her. Montag insists they ignore the visitor and start reading the books. He opens one and, after a dozen pages, comes to this line: “It is computed that eleven thousand persons have at several times suffered death rather than submit to break their eggs at the smaller end.” (FYI: This is from Gulliver’s Travels.) Mildred doesn’t know what this means, and concludes that it means nothing – that Beatty was right. Montag says they should start over, at the beginning.

The Sieve and the Sand Metaphor taken from Montag’s childhood memory of trying to fill a sieve with sand on the beach to get a dime from a mischievous cousin and crying at the futility of the task. He compares this memory to his attempt to read the whole Bible as quickly as possible on the subway in the hope that, if he reads fast enough, some of the material will stay in his memory.

The Sieve and the Sand Montag's frustration at not being able to immediately grasp what is true in the world Millie and others like her are sieves as well unable and unwilling to grasp information even when it is made readily available to them

The Sieve and the Sand Faber  First meeting in the park: p.75 “I don’t talk things, sir, I talk the meaning of things. I sit here and know I’m alive.”  represents knowledge  educated and realizes that book banning and book burning has made people less enlightened imagery associated with Faber incorporates the color white pg.80

Faber coward for not having stood up in protest back when they were beginning to ban books. Faber explains getting rid of books is not entirely to blame for society's superficiality. it is the quality of introspection, mystery and wonder found in books that society lacks. Faber asserts that books are feared because they "show the pores in the face of life" and make people uncomfortable. world needs quality of information found in books, the leisure to analyze and understand it, and the right to act on that understanding. P. 83

What do we do??? Concoct a plan. P.85 Faber’s reaction? p88 Revised plan? p89

Seashell radio p90 Mobilizing for war back at the homestead…..

Montag encounters Mildred and her friends. What are the topics of conversation? Montag reads a poem to Mildred and her friends. Explain their strange reaction to this reading.

Mrs. Bowles and Mrs. Phelps arrive to watch television with Millie. Mrs. Phelps --third husband, who has gone to fight, and the women quickly turn to TV Montag persists, questioning the women about their children. Mrs. Phelps has none, and Mrs. Bowles has two, for whom she obviously feels no affinity. The conversation turns to politics - voting

Montag then retrieves a book of poetry, the presence of which a shocked Millie explains by saying that every fireman is allowed to bring home one book a year to see how silly they are. At Faber's prompting, Montag agrees that this is true, and proceeds to read a poem, “Dover Beach”, to the three uncomfortable women.

When he is finished, Mrs. Phelps is crying, though she cannot explain why, and Mrs. Bowles is angry with Montag for bringing about trouble. Mildred tries to calm the group, but the women are quite shaken and leave. Montag criticizes them as they go, telling them to think about the quality of their lives. Mildred goes to the bathroom to take some sleeping pills and Montag removes the radio from his ear as Faber begs him to stop, sure that he has gotten himself in trouble.

Theme: --disdain for society ---lack of love --caring, compassion --including loss of faith --the need to care and be cared for --the destruction of war Dover Beach poem: In addition, a "beach" conveys images of sand and water, two symbols also alluded to throughout the novel

Montag encounters Beatty back at the Station Frantic tone: --Faber vs Beatty --Good vs Evil --Competing for attention, sympathy All this going on in Montag’s mind Does he have an identity of his own?

The arrival at Montag’s house:

Theme vs Motif Video LinkVideo Link Themes are the fundamental and often universal ideas explored in a literary work the message that the author is trying to get across, usually about life, society or human nature. They are usually implied rather than specifically stated. -An example of a theme in a simple book such as "Green Eggs and Ham" could be to keep an open mind. Motifs are recurring structures, patterns, contrasts, or literary devices that can help to develop and inform the text’s major themes.-These are images that basically are seen throughout the literature that are used to represent or symbolizes that idea-An example of this could be the use of mirrors. If mirrors are seen throughout a book, it could be to represent understanding (or difficulty understanding) oneself.