1answer.
Ask question
Login Signup
Ask question
All categories
  • English
  • Mathematics
  • Social Studies
  • Business
  • History
  • Health
  • Geography
  • Biology
  • Physics
  • Chemistry
  • Computers and Technology
  • Arts
  • World Languages
  • Spanish
  • French
  • German
  • Advanced Placement (AP)
  • SAT
  • Medicine
  • Law
  • Engineering
zhuklara [117]
3 years ago
8

What does Beatty claim to have started all the problems in this society?

History
1 answer:
Vsevolod [243]3 years ago
4 0

Answer: Captain Beatty comes by to check on Montag, saying that he guessed Montag would be calling in sick that day. He tells Montag that every fireman runs into the “problem” he has been experiencing sooner or later, and he relates to him the history of their profession. Beatty’s monologue borders on the hysterical, and his tendency to jump from one thing to another without explaining the connection makes his history very hard to follow. Part of the story is that photography, film, and television made it possible to present information in a quickly digestible, visual form, which made the slower, more reflective practice of reading books less popular. Another strand of his argument is that the spread of literacy, and the gigantic increase in the amount of published materials, created pressure for books to be more like one another and easier to read (like Reader’s Digest condensed books). Finally, Beatty says that “minorities” and special-interest groups found so many things in books objectionable that people finally abandoned debate and started burning books.Mildred’s attention falters while Beatty is talking, and she gets up and begins absentmindedly straightening the room. Beatty pretends not to notice and goes on talking. Beatty explains that after all houses were fireproofed, the firemen’s job changed from its old purpose of preventing fires to its new mission of burning the books that could allow one person to excel intellectually, spiritually, and practically over others and so make everyone else feel inferior. Montag asks how someone like Clarisse could exist, and Beatty says the firemen have been keeping an eye on her family because they worked against the schools’ system of homogenization. Beatty reveals that he has had a file on the McClellans’ odd behaviors for years and says that Clarisse is better off dead. He tells him that every fireman sooner or later becomes curious about books; because he has read some himself, he can assert that they are useless and contradictory. Montag asks what would happen if a fireman accidentally took a book home with him, and Beatty says that he would be allowed to keep it for twenty-four or forty-eight hours, but that the other firemen would then come to burn it if he had not already done so himself. Beatty gets up to leave and asks if Montag will come in to work later. Montag tells him that he may, but he secretly resolves never to go again. After Beatty leaves, Montag tells Mildred that he no longer wants to work at the fire station and shows her a secret stock of about twenty books he has been hiding in the ventilator. In a panic, she tries to burn them, but he stops her. He wants to look at them at least once, and he needs her help. Mildred is frightened of them, but Montag is determined to involve her in his search, and he asks for forty-eight hours of support from her to look through the books in hopes of finding something valuable that they can share with others. Someone comes to the door, but they do not answer and he goes away. (Later it is revealed that the Mechanical Hound was the second visitor.) Mon-tag picks up a copy of Gulliver’s Travels and begins reading. In his explication of the history of book burning, Beatty equates deep thought with sadness, which he rejects as categorically evil. The immediacy of pleasure in this book less society eliminates thought and, with it, the ability to express sadness, which is why people like Mildred carry around vast amounts of suppressed pain. According to Beatty, mass censorship began with various special-interest groups and minorities clamoring against material they considered offensive, as well as a shrinking attention span in the general populace. As a result, books and ideas were condensed further and further until they were little more than a series of sound bites; they were ultimately eliminated altogether in favor of other, more superficial, sensory-stimulating media. Mass production called for uniformity and effectively eliminated the variance once found in books.The startling point of Beatty’s explanation is that censorship started with the people, not the government (although the government stepped in later in accordance with the people’s wishes). Most people stopped reading books long before they were ever burned. It is important to note that Beatty’s entire description of the history of the firemen has an oddly ambivalent tone. His speech is filled with irony and sarcasm, and his description of reading strikes the reader as passionate and nostalgic. His championing of book burning, on the other hand, has a perfunctory, insincere tone. In the world of shallow hedonists in which Beatty and Montag live, everyone strives to be the same and “intellectual” is a dirty word. Superior minds are persecuted until they fall in line with everyone else.   This society idolizes fire, which represents the easy cleanliness of destruction. As Beatty explains, “Fire is bright and fire is clean.”

You might be interested in
Why did people think it was ok to have slaves?
choli [55]
Because they really do be rascist doe
7 0
3 years ago
After the communist victory in its civil war, china embraced an economy wherein private property and private ownership of capita
scoundrel [369]
All of the statements are examples of collective ownership in the socialist countries.
Collective ownership, at it's core, represents ownership of something, most commonly land and industrial assets, from all members of a group for the mutual benefit of all. This was implemented in most of the socialistic countries, but still the main and dominant owner was usually the government itself, while the people had shares in most of the industries and land.
4 0
3 years ago
By the rule of James II conflicts between English monarchs and Parliament had worsened so much that Parliament’s solution was to
Lelu [443]
The answer is either a or b. by dissolving the monarchy they would get a new type of ruling
6 0
2 years ago
Read 2 more answers
During the English Commonwealth period, the Levellers demanded that… all Christians should have religious freedom. the Anglican
IRISSAK [1]
During the English Commonwealth period, the Levellers demanded that all citizens should have a voice in the government.
3 0
3 years ago
At the beginning of 1994, Congress enacted a 10% increase in the federal minimum wage. At that time, Charlesville Hotdog and Bee
Reika [66]

Answer:

The answer is D. The company's customer base is made up primarily of families that rely on minimum wage incomes.

Explanation:

The increase in minimum wage increased the operating expenses of Charlesville Co. but the company reported record profits at the end of 1994. Hence, the company's recorded revenue at the end of 1994 must have increased. Among the choices, only D gives an indication for the revenue growth. If true, because the company's customer base got a higher income though a increase in minimum wage, they spent more money on Charlesville Co.'s products.

8 0
3 years ago
Other questions:
  • How did building New England towns and cities around a common help colonies develop a diverse economy?
    7·1 answer
  • Which of these states was created as a result of the Northwest Ordinance?
    15·2 answers
  • What does the 9th amendment protect?
    13·1 answer
  • Which of the following causes is not considered a political disruption to food distribution?
    11·1 answer
  • How did the “island-hopping” strategy save american lives in world war ii? us forces did not attack japanese-held islands with n
    14·2 answers
  • What should you look for in internet research sources? a. Reliability c. Authority b. Accuracy d. All of the Above.
    6·2 answers
  • Which statement best describes Kennedy’s response to the building of the Berlin Wall?
    15·2 answers
  • Can someone help me with this ...plz
    13·1 answer
  • How was the creation of the Constitution sort of a trick?
    11·1 answer
  • Which of these BEST describes the Mongol "Yam?
    13·1 answer
Add answer
Login
Not registered? Fast signup
Signup
Login Signup
Ask question!