Mildred shows the readers what the “normal” person is like in their society. Her whole life is absorbed by technology, not knowing how to do anything without it. She often gets confused between the real world and the technological world. She asserts to Montag: “ ‘Will you turn the parlor off?’ he asked. ‘That’s my family” (Bradbury 48-49). This is a prime example of her mixing up her two worlds as she refers to the tv characters as her “family”. When Montag starts to undergo his change, he begins to not recognize her: “And suddenly she was so strange he couldn’t believe he knew her at all” (Bradbury 39). Mildred shows the readers the negativity of technology. However another character, Clarisse McClellan, contrasts Mildred and emphasizes the impact technology has had on her. Clarisse is a girl described as not one of her time. Her opposing views make her stand out among everyone else in her society. She is often viewed as a threat to law a enforcement. Clarisse explains: “I’m antisocial they say, I don’t mix. It’s so strange. Im very social indeed. It all depends what you mean by social, doesnt it?” (Bradbury 26-27). She opens the eyes of Montag in the novel because she has emotion, questions everything, and has goals in life. This was something that was not seen at all in her time. Teens her age were submissive, violent, and emotionless. These two characters expose …show more content…
According to the Pew report, nearly 75 percent of those between the ages of thirteen and seventeen own or have access to a smartphone, and 94 percent of these teens said they are online more than half the day (“Teens”). These statistics show that technology is overused and people are “addicted” to it. Countless teens have forgotten a life without technology; they can not go anywhere without their phone. Kids born in 2007 or after know nothing more than the iPhone; they were born in the technological revolution. In Fahrenheit 451, Mildred Montag, was addicted to the parlor walls. The parlor walls were huge walls of tv that interacted back and forth with the user. Many of today’s people can relate to Mildred because she always wants another wall, just like today’s people always need the “latest” iPhone. The emotions that many characters in Fahrenheit 451 felt are becoming more and more familiar to today’s society and it is people of today overuse