Murió Ray Bradbury, genio de la ciencia ficción - mundo | Perú 21
Perdemos a uno de los escritores preferidos de ciencia ficción, cuya novela dio origen a la película
Fahrenheit 451, dirigida por
François Truffaut, estrenada en
1966 y basada en la
novela homónima de
1953.
Aquí mayor información tomada de http://blogs.independent.co.uk/2012/06/08/ray-bradbury-a-warning-to-future-generations/
Ray Bradbury: A warning to future generations
This week science fiction writer Ray Bradbury died at the age of 91. He was most famously known for his dystopian novel
Fahrenheit 451.
Written in 1953,
Fahrenheit 451 sent out a stark warning to
future generations about the importance of reading. The novel follows
Guy Montag, a fireman who starts to question his life after a chance
encounter with a strange girl. Within this world, books are outlawed
because they are considered dangerous and the root cause of society’s
problems.
In place of reading, people sit in their parlours watching inane
television shows on screens the size of walls. The other key element to
this world is that instead of putting out fires, firemen burn books,
fahrenheit 451 being the temperature at which paper burns.
The people of Bradbury’s world stop asking questions because they are
engrossed in these television shows that lack any sort of substance.
They are simply blinded by bright colours and loud sounds. Unlike most
dystopian novels though, such as George Orwell’s
1984 and Aldous Huxley’s
Brave New World,
Bradbury offers readers the hope of a better time to come.
Unfortunately, we seem to be moving towards the reality that he feared,
as we spend more time sucked into reality television shows while leaving
books to one side.
Bradbury believed that the ills of society could be cured by reading
books and he is right. Statistics reveal that those with a higher level
of literacy are more likely to be in full-time employment at the age of
30 compared to those with a lower level of literacy. The written word
has the power to enlighten, to entertain and to inform. A book can take
you to places you never knew existed and open you up to new ideas.
According to research from the Literacy Trust released earlier this
year, one in six people in the UK struggles with literacy which means
that their level of literacy is below that expected of an 11-year-old.
While a quarter of young people do not recognise a link between reading
and success, and this seems to be where the problem partly lies. If this
link is reinforced then it may encourage young people to aim higher and
realise the opportunities that education and literacy can create.
Perhaps at a time when libraries are being closed across the country
and we face shocking levels of illiteracy, it is now more important than
ever to heed Bradbury’s warning. Reading books and education have never
been more important if we want to aspire and achieve.
A life without reading is only half lived and with the passing of Bradbury we should not forget the value of the written word.
Click here to read more about Ray Bradbury