Fahrenheit 451 includes the following dystopian characteristics. The ruling party has mandated that reading be illegal, at least for pleasure, and that doing so is punishable by death, being burned. The ruling party has also encouraged the destruction of deep meaning conversations with the mass marketing of parlor walls. They have also established killings to be legal, and if for pleasure, they are socially accepted. The society is one that revolves around a drive for pleasure, and it is illegal to act in a philosophical manner, and that is representative of a dystopia. In addition to this, citizens do not quite have a fear of an outside state, but they lack the curiosity to venture or inquire towards them, even though many citizens die from war bombings, and the reader is led to believe that this is due to a lack of care toward other people the body of people show. Overall, Fahrenheit 451 is a dystopia because of the lack of interest and social acceptability of venturing away from the district, the ruling party has brainwashed the citizens to dehumanize and have meaningless conversations, has lifted the prior legislation that bans killing for fun, in order to make the community a happier place, and has made reading