Fahrenheit 451 Was Once Sanitized for Public Schools
A publishing company ironically removed the original version of the Ray Bradbury novel depicting mass media censorship.

Who needs books when you have mass media to dull your brain, and mob passions to keep you enraged?
Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451 (1953) is famously a novel about a world where books are banned and burned as a method of social control. The story follows Guy Montag, a "fireman" who sets books aflame. He's an agent of the state tasked with destroying literature that might spur people to think for themselves. Eventually, he is awakened to great writing's power to engage and enliven the mind.
But it's also a story about the power of modern media to both stupefy and incense the collective consciousness. It culminates in a crowdsourced manhunt televised for the amusement of self-satisfied dullards, all to serve the agenda of an authoritarian state. While the novel predates social media by decades, it describes what might be understood as media-driven cancel mobs. Bradbury understood how censorship could slide from seemingly innocuous attempts to ban a few "dangerous" ideas to prohibiting entire zones of thought, opinion, and inquiry—and eventually to direct attacks on the individuals who hold those ideas.
So it was rather ironic when, years later, the book became unavailable in its original form, having been sanitized for public schools. Starting in 1967, publisher Ballantine Books produced a second version of the text for consumption by high schoolers, omitting supposedly offensive curse words and a reference to a drunk. This version became known as the "Bal-Hi" edition, for Ballantine High School, and for several years it was available concurrently with the original text. In 1973, Ballantine began publishing only the Bal-Hi version, and it continued doing so until Bradbury, who had not consented to the publication change, complained in 1979.
Almost three decades later, with the original version of the book back on shelves, its use in schools was back up for debate. In 2006, several parents in the Conroe Independent School District in Texas protested the book's inclusion in the curriculum because of its language and its supposed denigration of firefighters. The school board eventually voted to keep teaching the book.
"It's just all kinds of filth," said parent Alton Verm, the Houston Chronicle reported. "I want to get the book taken out of the class." Verm's protest seemed to prove the novel's point: He admitted he hadn't read the book.
This article originally appeared in print under the headline "Fahrenheit 451."
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
A good article by Suderman. For a change, his TDS has been suppressed. I wonder when the Reason staff will see all the allegations of Trump being a threat to the country, are just psychological projection by his political opponents. We're starting to see the real fascists hiding their actions, in Biden, Obama, Clinton, the RINOs, the FBI, the DoJ, and the political establishment.
I am a student and I do work part time on this website to meet my needs. One who is jobless or want to earn more money for himself, (res-05) should must try this because this is really very easy and less time consuming and also advantageous without investing any amount.
.
SEE MORE:>>>> https://googlejobs0945.netlify.app/
I have provided irrefutable evidence that refutes the holocaust. This is a crime punishable with imprisonment in every nation where it allegedly occurred. Many who ostensibly advocate free speech don’t bat an eye when forced to recognize this coercive censorship.
Being a prisoner for political correctness is being a political prisoner. If you’re going to imprison someone for exercising free speech you’re going to have to explain if it matters if they’re telling the truth or not. If so, due process is owed and proof of lying is required. Paid and coerced testimony is inadmissible. If not, you advocate the removal of the requirement of truth from justice. There can be no justice without truth. This is why everyone testifying in court is required to swear to tell the truth the whole truth and nothing but the truth.
Instead, the bigoted trolls simply bleat “naaazi” like brainwashed sheeple have been programmed to.
It’s hard to imagine a civilization of bigots, because it can’t exist. Civilization requires considering counter arguments. If you aren’t part of the solution, you’re part of the problem.
When you can refute what you deny and prove what you claim you won’t be what’s wrong with society. Until then, you are.
Not sure which version I read. I know I have read it twice, probably more than that as it is a good, quick read. Fairly sure I got it from the local library, not the school library.
Fahrenheit 451 was a horrible book, what with its "hero" being anti-authority and defying the will of the benevolent state. 1984 was a much better book because at the end, Winston Smith came to realize that he loved Big Brother because Big Brother truly loved him. We should all strive to emulate Winston Smith in his acceptance of the truth rather than the rebellious Guy Montag with his failure to realize the truth.
You are not supposed to publish Reason’s internal memos.
I am creating eighty North American nation greenbacks per-hr. to finish some web services from home. I actually have not ever thought adore it would even (vst-30) realisable but my friend mate got $27k solely in four weeks simply doing this best assignment and conjointly she convinced Maine to avail. Look further details going this web-page.
.
---------->>> https://smartpay241.blogspot.com
“Fahrenheit 451 Was Once Sanitized for Public Schools”
No doubt based on the advice of Anthony Fauci to allegedly prevent the spread of AIDS Through surface transmission.
They once published a version of Huckleberry Finn with all the n-bombs taken out. They tried to do Tom Sawyer without all the synthesizers
FWIW, unbowdlerised, in the late 60s or early 70s it was a set book for HS'ers in Britain doing English O-level. My (Hungarian) Eng Lit teacher had us read it when we were 12 or 13.
"It culminates in a crowdsourced manhunt televised for the amusement of self-satisfied dullards, all to serve the agenda of an authoritarian state."
Remember the FBI putting up billboards asking people to call with information about j6 protesters
Or, for that matter: what was the old "America's Most Wanted" on Fox if it wasn't a "crowdsourced manhunt"?
(Granted, it was also "incredibly cheap programming on a Saturday night that we could pass off as a public service"...)
Tell you one thing for sure. The 2018 movie version suuuuuuucked.
It certainly did.
Agreed
Let me guess, it was about eventually burning the racist homophonic stuff
racist homophonic stuff
Is that "homophonic" in the musical sense, like the Alberti bass Mozart was so fond of in his piano works, or the verbal sense like "catsup" and "catch-up"?
I never knew that. Looking at my own copy, the bottom of the copyright page lists three "Special Editions" - the Asbestos Edition (Oct 1953) bound in (but apparently not printed on) actual asbestos, a Special Book Club Edition (Mar 1976) and, yes, the Revised Bal-Hi Editions (not dated).
"Sanitizing" a book for high schools is NOT the same thing as banning a book.
I am all against banning books, any book. Doesn't matter if it's Mein Kampf or The Communist Manifesto or Penthouse Forum, don't ban it.
But this current craze isn't about banned books at all, it's mostly about curating school library collections. Not the same thing.
I can remember when "Nineteen Eighty-Four," unabridged, was required reading in many high-schools. Ditto for "Animal Farm."
this.
I remember sitting in the pews during Mass one Sunday and the reading that day was from the Acts of the Apostles. It talked about how the early Christians shared food and people working what they could. I was left wondering why a passage from the Bible sounded so much Marx's Communist Manifesto. I only hope that those worried about books will take a look at this dangerous book and get it out of their churches.
Again the difficulty some people have with voluntary vs. involuntary communism.
There are several million differences.
^This
^
Starting in 1967, publisher Ballantine Books produced a second version of the text for consumption by high schoolers
High school? I remember reading this book in 6th or 7th grade. And Brave New World in 8th.
>>>Brave New World in 8th.
freaked my shit.
Brave New World isn't appropriate for an average 8th grader, though there's no problem with one reading it. They wouldn't have understood the sexuality or had enough perspective for the social issues in my day.
The fundamental themes of being unable to fit in, no matter what, are pretty pertinent to even a high school kid. The underlying notion that to make everyone happy all the time you have to purge anyone who doesn't fit in is quite something for a kid at a stage where he pretty much never fits in -- which describes 8th graders pretty well. Conform or we send you to the Falklands.
LOL, those dumb hick parents trying to ban books, thank goodness there are librarians committed to the precious freedom to read!
"PORTSMOUTH, Va. (WAVY) — Local public libraries have started removing books from iconic children’s author Dr. Seuss due to their racist and insensitive imagery....
"A spokesperson from Portsmouth Public Libraries told 10 On Your Side that although the six titles are currently in circulation around PPS libraries, officials have begun the process of removing them throughout the division."
https://www.wavy.com/news/local-news/local-libraries-begin-removal-of-controversial-dr-seuss-books/
You have to miss the days when librarians, quietly, told anyone who tried to dictate what books they kept in the library to fuck off.
I mean, they used the word "Sssh." But we all know it meant "Fuck off" I'm not going to be your censor.
Libraries swap out books all the time. Usually because they don't have any special value and are never read. They do have to manage available shelf space. You can remove books at that time, say nothing, avoid controversy, avoid the public eye. But geez you're getting in the middle of a shitstorm if you do it when someone demands it. It trains the perpetually offended to whine louder to get what they want, and now you've taken a side in a culture war.
Once you start the last year of your PhD program, brace yourself, for you will have a rough ride! Your professors will frequently assign coursework that will have to be submitted by a certain deadline. If you are meticulous in your work, you may want to look up some online exam writing service in the US just in case you need their professional help. Take care you consider Top Exam Grades, for we can this with surety that you will be pleased with choosing them as your writing company. https://topexamgrades.com/
OK, pop quiz: When the Hound caught up with a "criminal", what drugs did it inject into the miscreant?