Fahrenheit 451 Group

Topic: Who would you compare and Contrast Faber, from Fahrenheit 451 with? It has to be a real person. And why would you compare/contrast that person to him?

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mikaylanoel17

Who would you compare and Contrast Faber, from Fahrenheit 451 with? It has to be a real person. And why would you compare/contrast that person to him?

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I would not contrast Faber with any one individual. I would contrast him to the general population of apathetic people who dislike what they see, but do not do anything to stop what they see happening.  Faber calls himself a coward.  He tells Montag that he saw what was happening and he did nothing to stop it.  He says that he made a few grunts, then quit.  He could have done much more; made much more noise, but he didn't out of fear of reprisal.  When he and Montag develop their plan to plant books in the firemen's homes, and then, later, when Montag as a fugitive turns to Faber again for help, then Faber says he finally feels alive.  Bradbury has created the character of Faber to represent so many people who gripe and complain about an issue or an official but do nothing more than that.  Bradbury wanted people to see that sometimes vocal and continuous efforts are needed to change things.  He didn't want people to sit back, clucking their tongues, but unwilling to do anything.  By being apathetic, Faber says, society became the cold, unfeeling, non-reading, government-controlled society of the book.

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