In Module 3 you will be reading the classic novel, Fahrenheit 451, by Ray Bradbury. This novel explores the theme of censorship and how ignorance can be our worst enemy in our pursuit of happiness. The author, Ray Bradbury, believed we should see conformity as dangerous and wanted people to learn to think for themselves in order to avoid being duped. Here's an article relating his thoughts:
Read Fahrenheit 451 Part I: The Hearth and the Salamander. Compare the ideas of book burning in the novel to this poem by William Stafford. The following poem gives great insight to book burning and thoughtlessness.
Protecting each other, right in the center
a few pages glow a long time.
The cover goes first, then outer leaves
curling away, then spine and a scattering.
Truth, brittle and faint, burns easily,
its fire as hot as the fire lies make---
flame doesn't care. You can usually find
a few charred words in the ashes.
And some books ought to burn, trying
for character
but just faking it. More disturbing
than book ashes are whole libraries that
no one
got around to writing----desolate
towns, miles of unthought in cities,
and the terrorized countryside where
wild dogs
own anything that moves. If a book
isn't written, no one needs to burn it----
ignorance can dance in the absence of fire.
So I've burned books. And there are many
I haven't even written, and nobody has.