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Considering the Last Romantic, Ayn Rand, at 100
The NY Times ^ | 02/02/05 | EDWARD ROTHSTEIN

Posted on 02/02/2005 10:51:31 AM PST by Borges

What did Ayn Rand want?

Today is the centennial of her birth, and while newsletters and Web sites devoted to her continue to proliferate, and while little about her private life or public influence remains unplumbed, it is still easier to understand what she didn't want than what she did. Her scorn was unmistakable in her two novel-manifestos, "The Fountainhead" (1943), about a brilliant architect who stands proud against collective tastes and egalitarian sentimentality, and "Atlas Shrugged" (1957), about brilliant industrialists who stand proud against government bureaucrats and socialized mediocrity. It is still possible, more than 20 years after her death, to find readers choosing sides: those who see her as a subtle philosopher pitted against those who see her as a pulp novelist with pretensions.

She divided her world - and her characters - in similarly stark fashion into what she wanted and what she didn't want. Here is what she didn't want: Ellsworth M. Toohey, "second-handers," Wesley Mouch, looters, relativists, collectivists, altruists. Here is what she did want: Howard Roark, John Galt, individualism, selfishness, capitalism, creation.

But her villains have the best names, the most memorable quirks, the whiniest or most insinuating voices. At times, Rand even grants them a bit of compassion. Toohey, the Mephistophelean architecture critic in "The Fountainhead," could be her finest creation. And when she argued against collectivism, her cynicism had some foundation in experience: she was born in czarist Russia in 1905, witnessed the revolutions of 1917 from her St. Petersburg apartment and managed to get to the United States in 1926. Her sharpest satire can be found in some of her caricatures of collectivity.

(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: aynrand; aynrandlist; happybirthday
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To: Uncle Fud
More Ayn Rand stuff on a later post, same day, HERE.

61 posted on 02/03/2005 12:11:56 AM PST by FreeKeys (Happy 100th Birthday, Miss Rand!)
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To: dAnconia

I've read the first two chapters from The Fountainhead and found it pretty stiff. There are so many advocates for every far flung cause amongst literary scholars these days you would think at least one of them would start making a case for Rand's fiction. But even her staunchest fans seem to mainly stick to her non fiction.


62 posted on 02/03/2005 7:43:13 AM PST by Borges
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