Ascending from the Ashes: Images of Plato in Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451

Philosophy and Literature 38 (2):528-548 (2014)
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Abstract

The pleasure of burning books consumed Montag, consumed him until the day the books burned back, their possibilities enflaming his curiosity to the point of existential immolation. Yet from these ashes, he rises. Fahrenheit 451 is a novel of ascent, an ascent to freedom that can be found only in knowledge. Superficially, the relationship between freedom and knowledge seems antagonistic; however, examining Bradbury’s novel in Plato’s light—particularly focusing on the images of the Cave and Line—can provide piercing insights into the inherent harmony uniting knowledge and freedom, rendering this antagonism illusory.

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