Saturday, July 9, 2011

In Fahrenheit 451, how does the Mechanical Hound represent government control?

The
Mechanical Hound is the government's technological enforcement. Like a real dog, the hound can
sniff out things; in this case it is used to sniff out books. Using a sense of smell rather than
visual monitoring, the hound is still a means of surveillance, giving new meaning to the term
"watch dog." The hound also represents the oppressive use of technology. In this way,
the hound functions like the parlour shows. The shows are a technological advancement that have
become used to create a passive thoughtless public. The hound is used to hunt and kill those who
attempt to challenge their passive, oppressed lives. Both enforce the government's
agenda. 

In trying to create a public that does not think critically, a
public that goes through the motions of their lives mechanically, the government in Montag's
world is essentially trying to make the public into a thoughtless machine. This is what the
Mechanical Hound is. Although it is described as living and not living, it is a machine. As
Beatty says: 

"Come off it. It doesn't like or
dislike. It just 'functions.' It's like a lesson in ballistics. It has a trajectory we decide
for it. It follows through. It targets itself, homes itself, and cuts off. It's only copper
wire, storage batteries, and electricity." 

The
government uses the hound to enforce its policies. The government wishes to command the public
as it commands the hound. The government uses the hound to enforce the "trajectory"
they have for the entire society. This shows an interesting intersection of using technology to
control life. With such stringent control, the effect is that society becomes like a machine,
like the hound: thoughtless and less sentient. 

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