29
Ayn Rand and Anthem

Ayn Rand and Anthem

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Ayn Rand and Anthem. Ayn Rand 1905-1982 Born in Russia, educated under communists Escaped in 1926 to America because it represented her individualist philosophy. Anthem (1938). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Ayn Rand and  Anthem

Ayn Rand and Anthem

Page 2: Ayn Rand and  Anthem

Ayn Rand 1905-1982

Born in Russia, educated under communists

Escaped in 1926 to America because it represented her individualist philosophy

Page 3: Ayn Rand and  Anthem

Anthem (1938) This novella depicts a world

of the future, a society so collectivized that even the word "I" has vanished from the language. Anthem's theme is: the meaning and glory of man's ego.

Page 4: Ayn Rand and  Anthem

Anthem Written in 1937 as a

novelette about the essence of collectivism

Published in England in 1938, America in 1946

Page 5: Ayn Rand and  Anthem

Theme “It is a sin to write this. It is

a sin to think words no others think and put them down upon paper no others are to see… there is no transgression blacker than to do or think alone.”

Page 6: Ayn Rand and  Anthem

Theme This quote begins Anthem

which according to Rand expresses the meaning of man’s ego.

The story is about an individual imprisoned in the collective; how it can happen; what ideas one must accept for it to be possible.

Page 7: Ayn Rand and  Anthem

Theme It is both depressing as it

represents people in such a society, and it is hopeful in the triumph of the human spirit for those who are brave enough to reject the ethics of collectivism, no matter the cost.

Page 8: Ayn Rand and  Anthem

Philosophical Concepts

Page 9: Ayn Rand and  Anthem

Collectivism vs.

Individualism

Page 10: Ayn Rand and  Anthem

Collectivism

The subjugation of the individual to a group – whether to a race, class, or state does not matter

All thought and action must be “for the common good”

The individual has no right to lead his own life The individual has no right to pursue his own

happiness, or use his own property An individual’s worth is determined by his service

to the group

Page 11: Ayn Rand and  Anthem

Individualism Every man is an independent,

sovereign entity who possesses an inalienable right to his own life.

A civilized society can only be achieved on the basis of the recognition of individual rights.

Groups possess no rights separate from the individual members.

Individualism does not mean one can do whatever he feels like doing; it means every man is an individual and has the same rights.

Page 12: Ayn Rand and  Anthem

Selflessness Defined as “Lack of Self” No one has a name No one should prefer one person

over another It is wrong to disagree, to

question, to have independent thought

Individual has no rights

Page 13: Ayn Rand and  Anthem

Selflessness Without self, one must abstain from

thinking and simply obey the leaders. When individual identity and thought

are obliterated, a society of mindless robots with no motivation, no ambition, no hope emerges.

Nothing is created because there is no room for creativity.

Page 14: Ayn Rand and  Anthem

Egoism Defined as “being concerned

with one’s own interests.” Each man’s primary moral

obligation is to achieve his own welfare, well-being, or self-interest.

Man should be “selfish” in the sense of being the beneficiary of his own moral actions.

Page 15: Ayn Rand and  Anthem

Egoism For example:

Having ambition Wanting things for one’s

self Wanting to learn Wanting a career that

makes you happy Thinking for one’s self Loving another person of

choice

Page 16: Ayn Rand and  Anthem

Conformity The act or habit of bringing oneself

into harmony or agreement with others; adhering to conventional behavior.

Page 17: Ayn Rand and  Anthem

Independence Acceptance of the responsibility of

forming one’s own judgments and living by the work of one’s own mind.

Page 18: Ayn Rand and  Anthem

Free Will vs.

Determinism

Page 19: Ayn Rand and  Anthem

Free WillAdvocates that people:

can make choices can make up their own minds,

can direct their own lives by the ideas and values they adopt

Page 20: Ayn Rand and  Anthem

Determinism

Advocates that people are by nature in the grip of forces beyond their control

For example: Race, the Stars, Instincts

Page 21: Ayn Rand and  Anthem

ANTHEM & Free Will The story shows what it

means to have Free Will They are Robots by

CHOICE The Protagonist will

exercise his free will by making a different choice

Page 22: Ayn Rand and  Anthem

Romantic Realism The story is REALIST because these are

REAL PROBLEMS of normal people (not monsters, superheroes, or robots).

The story is Romantic because it is not about everyday trivia or the boy next door. It is instead about the “fundamental

universal problems and values of human existence.”

Romanticism contrasts with Naturalism which holds that people are crushed by forces over which they have NO CONTROL (FATE).

Setting/Point of View

Page 23: Ayn Rand and  Anthem

Point of View--First Person Plural

(“We” instead of “I”) Story begins in the distant future Protagonist is in his early

twenties Totalitarian Society –

Government controls every aspect of every individual’s life from cradle to grave.

Setting/Point of View

Page 24: Ayn Rand and  Anthem

Expectation is to expend one’s life for the needs of the society, never a moment for one’s self.

If one’s usefulness is gone, he is a burden and should not live.

Because no one has personal desires, the authorities need no threats or force to rule.

Page 25: Ayn Rand and  Anthem

Anyone who doubts his society feels guilty about doubting.

The society has no industry or technology.

The protagonist struggles to understand (man vs. society).

Page 26: Ayn Rand and  Anthem

Sequence of the Life in Anthem Society

Each is conceived in the Palace of Mating Young years are spent in the Home of

Infants Formative years are lived in the Home of

Students After being assigned a vocation,

individuals are placed in special homes according to vocation

Old Age is spent in the Home of the Useless

Page 27: Ayn Rand and  Anthem

Dystopia

A futuristic, imagined universe in which oppressive societal control and the illusion of a perfect society are maintained through coporate, bureaucratic, technological, moral or totalitarian control. Dystopias use an exaggerated worst-case scenario to criticize a current trend, societal norm, or political system.

*from ReadWriteThink

Page 28: Ayn Rand and  Anthem

Characterisitics of a Dystopian Society

Propaganda used to control citizens Information/independent thought restricted Worship of a figurehead or concept Citizens under constant surveillance Citizens fear the outside world Citizens live in a dehumanized state Natural world is banished and distrusted Individuality/dissent are evil; conformity is good Illusion of a perfect utopian world

From ReadWriteThink

Page 29: Ayn Rand and  Anthem

The Dystopian Protagonist

Often feels trapped and struggles to escape Questions the existing social/political systems Feels something is terribly wrong with the

society in which he or she lives Helps the audience recognize the negative

aspects of the dystopian world through his or her perspective

From ReadWriteThink