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1 posted on 02/02/2005 10:51:32 AM PST by Borges
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To: Borges
"to find readers choosing sides...."

Not me. I think it's perfectly consistent to admire Rand's nonfiction, and many of her ideas (as I do) while viewing her fiction as ham-handed allegorical treacle.

2 posted on 02/02/2005 11:04:29 AM PST by Uncle Fud
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To: Borges

Happy Birthday Ayn!


3 posted on 02/02/2005 11:05:22 AM PST by Redbob
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To: Borges
As an aside, the film version of 'The Fountainhead' is an absolutely laughable failure. Due, foremost and primarily, to Rand herself who exercised dominating control of the project and drove it into the ground.
6 posted on 02/02/2005 11:18:00 AM PST by atomicpossum (I am the Cat that walks by himself, and all places are alike to me.)
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To: Borges

yeah...and sometimes it seems like Atlas Shrugged has been made into the ultimate reality show.


8 posted on 02/02/2005 11:21:23 AM PST by the invisib1e hand ("What are you gonna believe, the media, or your own eyes?" -- Marx .............(Groucho))
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To: Borges

10 posted on 02/02/2005 11:38:46 AM PST by Rudder
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To: Borges
It's easy to pick apart Rand's novels, and even some of her non-fiction. But the mere fact that she gets some stuff wrong doesn't make any of the stuff she got right any less important. In the long run, its her ideas, not her flaws, that matter.

Her most valuable contribution to modern philosophical thought is her defense of capitalism on moral, rather than utilitarian, grounds. It's the 800lb. gorilla that drives much of modern conservatism, and represents a recapturing of a moral high ground too easily surrendered by many of capitalism's so-called defenders.

20 posted on 02/02/2005 11:54:44 AM PST by XJarhead
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To: Borges
 Happy 100th birthday, AYN RAND Feb. 2, 2005 !!!!


image source: http://www.cascadepolicy.org/liberty/ayn_rand.jpg

23 posted on 02/02/2005 12:19:21 PM PST by FreeKeys (Happy 100th Birthday, Miss Rand!)
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To: Borges

She escaped from tyranny. She broke ranks with organized religion. She organized a small group into a tightly-knit organization with her in charge. Millions have been inspired by her life story. She would have just turned 100 this past week.

But enough about Maria Von Trapp...


26 posted on 02/02/2005 12:43:44 PM PST by Our man in washington
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To: Borges
Rand-O-Rama:
Ayn Rand’s long shelf life in American culture 
[a few of the ways her presence has been felt and references keep getting made]

“This is the only novel of ideas written by an American woman that I can recall.…Nothing she has to say is said in a second-rate fashion. You have to think of The Magic Mountain…when you think of The Fountainhead.” —Lorine Pruette, The New York Times Book Review (1943)

Whittaker Chambers [who it turned out, NEVER read the book] totally panned Atlas Shrugged, scathing and hateful in its intensity, in National Review (1957).

“Atlas Shrugged is a celebration of life and happiness. Justice is unrelenting. Creative individuals and undeviating purpose and rationality achieve joy and fulfillment. Parasites who persistently avoid either purpose or reason perish as they should. [The New York Times reviewer] suspiciously wonders ‘about a person who sustains such a mood through the writing of 1,168 pages and some fourteen years of work.’ This reader wonders about a person who finds unrelenting justice personally disturbing.” —Alan Greenspan, future chairman of the Federal Reserve, responding to a negative review of Atlas Shrugged, in The New York Times (1957)

“It’s all great, Hef! Except…do you really think our readers will dig a nude fold-out of Ayn Rand?” —“Hefner and His Pals,” a comic strip in Mad magazine (1967)

“Like most of my contemporaries, I first read The Fountainhead when I was 18 years old. I loved it. I too missed the point. I thought it was a book about a strong-willed architect...and his love life….I deliberately skipped over all the passages about egoism and altruism. And I spent the next year hoping I would meet a gaunt, orange-haired architect who would rape me. Or failing that, an architect who would rape me. Or failing that, an architect. I am certain that The Fountainhead did a great deal more for architects than Architectural Forum ever dreamed.” —Nora Ephron, The New York Times Book Review (1968)

“He spent several days deciding on the artifacts [that would be found with his dead body]....He would be found lying on his back, on his bed, with a copy of Ayn Rand’s The Fountainhead (which would prove he had been a misunderstood superman rejected by the masses and so, in a sense, murdered by his scorn) and an unfinished letter to Exxon protesting the cancellation of his gas credit card.” —Philip K. Dick, A Scanner Darkly (1977)

“With acknowledgement to the genius of Ayn Rand” —liner notes to the Rush album 2112 (1976)

JENNIFER GREY: You can’t just leave [the girl you impregnated].

MAX CANTOR: I could blow a summer hauling toasted bagels just to bail out some little chick who probably balled every guy in the place.…Some people count, and some people don’t. [pulls The Fountainhead from his pocket] Read it. I think it’s a book you’ll enjoy. But be sure you return it—I have notes in the margin. —Dirty Dancing, 1987

“Lots of girls fell in love with Definitism because of the erotic power of the books. No one wanted to admit how important the sex was, but let’s face it—the books were very erotic. There were all these intrigues going on, all these little girls wanting to satisfy their sexual cravings.” —Mary Gaitskill, Two Girls, Fat and Thin (1991)
 

MARGE: Maggie…likes a bottle of warm milk before nap time.

MS. SINCLAIR: A bottle? Mrs. Simpson, do you know what a baby’s saying when she reaches for a bottle?

MARGE: “Ba Ba?”

MS. SINCLAIR: She’s  saying “I am a leech!” Our aim here is to develop the bottle within.

MARGE: That sounds awfully harsh. —conversation between Marge and the proprietor of the Ayn Rand School for Tots, The Simpsons (1992)

LOUIS: I could have you arrested you.…creep. They’d think I put you in jail for beating me up.

JOE: I never hit anyone before, I…

LOUIS: But it’d really be for those decisions. It was like a sex scene in an Ayn Rand novel, huh?

JOE: I hurt you! I’m sorry, Louis. I never hit anyone before, I…

—from Angels in America, by Tony Kushner, conversation between lovers (1992)

“Yes, at first I was happy to be learning how to read. It seemed exciting and magical, but then I read this: Atlas Shrugged, by Ayn Rand. I read every last word of this garbage, and because of this piece of shit, I am never reading again.” —police officer Barbrady, South Park (1998)

“However completely you think you preside over your own schedule, there are inflexibilities there. Inflexibilities which not even one of Ayn Rand’s heroes could do very much about.” —William F. Buckley Jr., Miles Gone By: A Literary Autobiography  (2004)

“Unlike…any other Marvel [Comics] author, [Spider-Man co-creator Steve] Ditko received plotting credit as early as Amazing Spider-Man #25 (1965), an unprecedented concession that was most likely the result of Ditko’s contemporaneous discovery of Ayn Rand’s Objectivism, with its hatred of creative dilution and unearned rewards.” —Andrew Hultkrans in Give Our Regards to the Atom Smashers!: Writers on Comics (2004)

“The Incredibles…suggests a thorough, feverish immersion in both the history of American comic books and the philosophy of Ayn Rand.…Luckily, though, [writer and director Brad] Bird’s disdain for mediocrity is not simply ventriloquized through his characters, but is manifest in his meticulous, fiercely coherent approach to animation.” —A.O. Scott, The New York Times (2004)

-- from Reason, March 2005
 


32 posted on 02/02/2005 1:27:19 PM PST by FreeKeys (Happy 100th Birthday, Miss Rand!)
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To: Borges
Find links to excerpts of some of Ayn Rand's writings on the web HERE.
45 posted on 02/02/2005 3:34:12 PM PST by FreeKeys (Happy 100th Birthday, Miss Rand!)
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To: Borges

"Atlas Shrugged" - One of my all time favorite books.


55 posted on 02/02/2005 5:51:17 PM PST by Dan from Michigan (Republican Party Reptile)
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