Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Applied Modernism

           Modernism is a style or movement in the arts that aims to break with classical and traditional forms. The book Farenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury is a modernist novel because of the conflict with inner-self, the bleak vision of the future and the stream of consciousness.

           Montag was constantly having conflict with his inner self just like most modernist writers. He was never sure if the man he was, was the person he wanted to be. When Clarisse McClellan came into his life and opened his eyes to the world around him, he wanted to make a different life than the one he was living. Since he was living in an industrial society, he started small and began reading the books from his hidden vent. Modernism is all about your inner self and how an industrial society is what we live in that causes modernist to break free from tradition.

            Farenheit 451 is also a story for a bleak vision of the future. The novel consists of several hints of how the future will forever be doomed with nothing new and exciting. Like the novel, some modernist novels include this particular idea of a bleak vision of the future as well. You can also tell this novel is considered Modernism because the book was written in the early 1900's to 1965.

            Having a stream of consciousness refers to your individual awareness of your unique thoughts, memories, feelings, sensations, and environment. This is also an example of Modernism and Montag has a great stream of consciousness, by the way he expresses himself. Montag strays from traditon and begins to think for himself despite what everyone else is doing. Modernist do exactly that, where they write differently than what everyone else thinks and veer from the status quo.

            The novel Farenheit 451 is completely a Modernist book for several reasons. It includes inner self ideas, a bleak vision of the future and the stream of consciousness that most modenists have.

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