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To: ADemocratNoMore; Aggie Mama; alexander_busek; AlligatorEyes; AmericanGirlRising; Amityschild; ...
FReeper Book Club

Atlas Shrugged

Part I: Non-Contradiction

Chapter VIII: The John Galt Line

Ping! The thread has been posted.

Special thanks to those FReepers who have participated in these threads. We’re having some excellent and insightful discussions of the book. We’ll rap up in early August, so let’s keep up the quality.

Earlier threads:
Our First Freeper Book Club: Atlas Shrugged
FReeper Book Club: Atlas Shrugged, The Theme
FReeper Book Club: Atlas Shrugged, The Chain
FReeper Book Club: Atlas Shrugged, The Top and the Bottom
FReeper Book Club: Atlas Shrugged, The Immovable Movers
FReeper Book Club: Atlas Shrugged, The Climax of the d’Anconias
FReeper Book Club: Atlas Shrugged, The Non-Commercial
FReeper Book Club: Atlas Shrugged, The Exploiters and the Exploited

3 posted on 03/07/2009 7:49:49 AM PST by Publius (The Quadri-Metallic Standard: Gold and silver for commerce, lead and brass for protection.)
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To: Publius

I was thinking about the “cartoonish” epithet that somebody tossed out somewhere upthread. While they meant it as an insult, it shouldn’t be. Stylistically there’s a fair point but it is intentional and purposeful. It is to mistake starkness for simplicity. The characters are drawn starkly. High contrast. The objective is to evaluate the differences between people, between worldviews, not to get distracted yet in the exact boundaries of where those differences are. Or... allow the context to become a character itself and too much a part of the story.

There’s a timelessness to the story and I think the style is there to support that. It’s “Film Noir”, to me anyway, as it plays in my head. I’m seeing cinema like an old Cagney or Bogart film. Sam Spade. I hadn’t thought about it before but yes, it’s even in black and white! Maybe a splash of color here and there... the blue on Rearden metal... some intense red on Dagny’s lipstick... the brief orange glow of a cigarette... but otherwise stark, dark and mostly colorless. Like a graphic novel. Like Bogart and Bacall.

Starkly drawn characters that don’t blend much with the setting, the decade, the techology at the time... it makes it possible then to tear them out of the story and put them down anywhere in time. The story is being told against this backdrop but it could easily be any other. Casablanca had stark, yes cartoonish characters, but it made for a story that wasn’t locked into a particular place and time but could find an analogue anywhere, in any time.


13 posted on 03/07/2009 8:47:49 AM PST by Ramius (Personally, I give us... one chance in three. More tea?)
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To: Publius

bttt


74 posted on 03/07/2009 10:15:57 PM PST by SuperLuminal (Where is another agitator for republicanism like Sam Adams when we need him?)
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