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Allegory

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Allusion Number One Volkswagen Beetle Historical Background First sold in 1938 by a German company called Volkswagen. ... Answer Questions With your group, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Allegory


1
Allegory Allusion
  • Mrs. Groomer
  • English I

2
Allusion
  • a figure of speech that makes a reference to
    people, places, events, or other things either
    directly or by implication
  • a reference to or mention of something meant to
    be understood by the reader, listener, or viewer

3
Fahrenheit 451
  • Allusion
  • Volkswagen Beetle
  • Magna Carta
  • References to these are made throughout the
    story.

4
Allusion Number One
  • Volkswagen Beetle

References to the Beetle are made several times
throughout the book.
5
Historical Background
  • First sold in 1938 by a German company called
    Volkswagen.
  • In 1933, Adolf Hitler gave orders to a man named
    Ferdinand Porsche to create a car that would hold
    two adults and three children, and travel up to a
    speed of 100 mph.
  • The cars were created to be as simple as
    possible, so there would be less to go wrong.
  • They were designed to help the typical European
    family.

6
Connections to Fahrenheit 451 Beetles were made
simple.
  • The society in Fahrenheit 451 was an extremely
    simple environment that contained very dull
    people.
  • No one thought much about anything, and they
    didn't take chances.
  • They were all just boring people who did the same
    thing every single day.
  • The citizens that lived in this society were
    basically forced to be simple just like the
    Volkswagen Beetle.

7
  • Allusion Number Two
  • Magna Carta

8
Historical Background
  • It was written in ancient Latin, in the year
    1215.
  • A document that challenged King John's (The King
    of England) powers, and secured citizens'
    privileges.
  • King John had unfair ruling, and the barons of
    England could not find a way to get themselves a
    new king.
  • They decided to write a formal document and force
    the king to sign it.
  • This document was the Magna Carta.
  • It limited the King's powers, and forced him to
    have fair ruling.

9
Connections to Fahrenheit 451
  • The Barons of England rebelled against the king
    in order to do what was best for the country.
  • They fought for their opinion, and didn't take no
    for an answer.
  • The "hobos" in Fahrenheit 451 rebel against the
    government, and do what they think is right by
    preserving literature.
  • They think the government is being unfair by
    eliminating reading from their society, so they
    stand up for it.
  • They know the truth behind thinking, and they
    know it can benefit their world, so they take a
    chance, and start a revolution.

10
Allegory
  • A literary device in which characters or events
    represent or symbolize ideas and concepts
  • The symbolization can usually be interpreted to
    reveal a hidden meaning, typically a moral or
    political one

11
Fahrenheit 451
  • Allegory
  • Platos Allegory of the Cave

12
PlatosAllegory of the Cave
13
Allegory of the Cave
  • Socrates describes a group of people who have
    lived chained to the wall of a cave all of their
    lives, facing a blank wall.
  • The people watch shadows projected on the wall by
    things passing in front of a fire behind them,
    and begin to attribute forms to these shadows.
  • According to Socrates, the shadows are as close
    as the prisoners get to viewing reality.
  • He then explains how the philosopher is like a
    prisoner who is freed from the cave and comes to
    understand that the shadows on the wall are not
    representative of reality at all, as he can
    recognize the true form of reality rather than
    the mere shadows seen by the prisoners.

14
What does Plato mean by all this?
  • Plato's main concept of the cave is that people
    view reality by what they can actually see when
    it is really more than that.
  • With a fire behind them, the prisoners can only
    see shadows of images, therefore they believe
    this to be reality.
  • However, if one of the prisoners was to climb out
    of the cave, he would begin to see the true image
    and not just the shadow of the image.
  • Then, if this prisoner was to go back to the
    cave, he would find that it would be impossible
    to conform back to his old world.
  • And, if the returning prisoner were to tell the
    other prisoners about the light and that their
    shadows were not real images, they would not
    believe him and would accuse him of trying to
    disrupt their way of life.

15
Your Assignment
  • Watch the video
    The Allegory of the Cave.
  • Answer Questions
  • With your group, determine what lesson Plato was
    trying to teach us and how it relates to
    Bradburys Fahrenheit 451.
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