Behind the Words What is the point of having a society dedicated to equality, if you're not even pleased with it? Anthem by Ayn Rand is a novel based on equality. In this society there is no individuality, everyone says we to define the self instead of I. Equality 7 -2521 is the main character in this novel and he is smarter than others in this society. He explored his interest is and kept the secret of finding an old iron grill over a black hole from others until he lost track of time. He eventually…
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know words like “I”, they only use the word “we” when describing themselves. This is the society that Equality 7-2521 lives in. The theme of the novel, “Anthem” by Ayn Rand is individualism. More specifically, people are not going to act normal if they do not know how to be individual beings. Because of this the protagonist, Equality 7-2521, is an individual who is very egotistical. First, Equality 7-2521 was born different…
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“Anthem” In Anthem men are not allowed to be different. They are Confined to the Individuality of sameness. Every body must be the same, equal. One can't have a friend without have performed a transgression. They can't make decisions without the advocacy of the Council. Nothing is self dependent no love, no opinion, no peculiar figure, and no humanity. One person that was different, unique, peculiar, and had the want for humanity reached the surface of the small dystopia. Equality 7-2521. He was…
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Even though Vonnegut’s “Harrison Bergeron” and Rand’s Anthem look and sound completely different, they share some key ideas in them. “Harrison Bergeron” was published in 1961 while Anthem was published in 1938. “Harrison Bergeron” tells the story of a future society in which everyone is handicapped to keep them equal. Anthem tells the story of a civilization that regressed in technology and individualism does not exist. In both Ayn Rand’s Anthem and Kurt Vonnegut’s “Harrison Bergeron”, even though…
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Equality, from Ayn Rand’s novella Anthem and the character in William Henley’s poem “Invictus” share many similarities. Both characters has undaunted soul. Henley ends his poem, “I am the master of my fate. I am the Captain of my soul” (15-16). The quote portrays his belief about himself. The quote “I am the master of my fate.” says that he is the one that controlled himself and the quotes “ I am the Captain of my soul.” say that he could tell himself what he wanted to do to succeed. Anthem ended…
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Ayn Rand, who is the author of dystopian novel Anthem, uses her belief of “Objectivism” to criticize “Collectivism.” When Ayn Rand wrote the dystopian novel, she hoped to enlighten others about her philosophy about individualism, she said, “ "My philosophy, in essence, is the concept of man as a heroic being, with his own happiness as the moral purpose of his life, with productive achievement as his noblest activity, and reason as his only absolute” (Rand). In Anthem they have a society that is controlled…
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In Ayn Rand’s novel Anthem, freedom and individual rights have been completely taken away. The novel takes place in a dystopian society where everyone shares a common belief. “We are one in all and all in one. There are no men but only the great WE, One, indivisible and forever” (Rand 11). The government forbids anyone to think as an individual or write and invent things unless they are put into a house that allows them to do so. This creates a problem for the main character, Equality 7-2521, who…
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is proven that Equality is in fact a prime example of an ideal student. “Ideally, students will be intrinsically motivated, perverse in their pursuit of clearly defined learning goals, believe that it is their own efforts that determine their school success, want to be good students and get good grades, and believe that ideas, feelings, and learning new ideas are all important and pleasant” (Johnson 15). With Equality possessing many of these traits, there lies the proof that Equality is correct regarding…
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ample attributes that life offers. Sacrifice is something everybody must endure whether it be small such as sharing one's lunch with a fellow class mate or more austere like risking one's life in order to save another. We observe the reoccurring theme of sacrifice throughout The Hunger Games, specifically when Katniss volunteers her participation in the games in order to save Primrose, her little sister, from the wretched hands of death. While we watch Katniss' life in the Hunger Games unravel…
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flexibility, understanding and sympathy that temper our opinions, morals and ethics has been thrown aside; in many ways Dystopia is a ‘bad place’ where all sense of what is decent and normal has been tossed about; this is the moral attitude of Ayn Rand’s Anthem or Huxley’s Brave New World. Of course, and we so often forget this when uttering panegyrics to Orwell’s prophetic powers that he was not telling the future but reading the present. Orwell, as well, grasped that the morality, ethics and laws…
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