My Lord, let the peace fill throughout the earth until it overflows; that whom cannot speak, I may be their voice; that where anyone is rejected, I may lend a hand of acceptance; to the point where parents are overwhelmed, I may offer a word of comfort; where the children struggle, I may lift them up with my support; to some that see disability, I may reveal to them the gifts of God;
When others judge, I may share with them my happiness; and to those whom are overlooked, I may help shine the light upon all.
The Creator of All, grant that I may not so much seek to be encouragement as to be encouraged ; to be applauded, as to applaud; to be embraced, as to embrace; for it is in all our uncertainty that we are inspired to hope; it is in great
Individuality, a thing we all take for granted, but in a collectivist society, individuality is banned in all forms and is enforced with torture and execution in the name of “brotherly love”. In the novella Anthem, written by Ayn Rand, all men are bound to the society and held captive by the government’s beliefs. The Home of Scholars is responsible for all scientific discoveries. A new act is preventing them from releasing their findings into the society. Equality also dabbles in science, and he knows that this is a transgression. Equality wishes only to study the clockwork of the world, and to be accepted into The Home of Scholars. He brings his invention of a light to the council, but is turned down because his technological advancement
By the conclusion of the story Anthem, Equality 7-2521 has changed his mind and become very judgmental of the leaders of his society, denouncing them in many terms. Because of what the leaders made equality do, his actions were very understandable. The way they controlled his life and made him do things he did not want to do were very harsh. I feel as if equalities actions were correct. And here are some reasons why.
A noticable interesting topic about the story is the way Liberty acts. It seems Ayn Rand, the author, has something against women even though she is a woman herself. The meaning of this is, the women out there that act like girls and only care about fashion and themselves is what is being spoken of. The literary element that is being focased on deals with this issue. This essay will focas on the story "Anthem" written by Ayn Rand containing the literary element of character.
Summary: In a world where I does not exist, Equality 7-2521 and Liberty 5-3000 find themselves viewing one another as unique from the other men and women surrounding them. They are individually significant, even though their society greatly opposes the importance of an individual. They are forbidden from doing anything alone and are not allowed to think for themselves, Equality 7-2521 explores with the science of light and other things. Equality 7-2521 and Liberty 5-3000 break many laws, even simple things such as thinking of one another and giving a name to each other. While they do not know it, they have a sense of self in a place where one is forbidden from looking at themselves as individual people with a soul different from any other. When Equality 7-2521 runs away to the forest to avoid further conflict with the law, Liberty 5-3000 follows. In the woods, instead of facing death as they had expected, they find joy and a life worth living.
Ayn Rand was specifically against all monolithic forms of government and hated totalitarianism. Living in Russia when she was young and fleeing to Crimea for refuge during the Bolshevik Revolution, her disgust for dictators and collectivist societies was enormous. When she was 20 years old, she traveled to New York to visit relatives, assuring the USSR that her stay would be short. Ayn Rand never returned to the Soviet Union for any reason. Her books always discuss or show some form of totalitarianism, this is because of her background and experience. In the very first paragraph of Anthem, totalitarianism is depicted quite well. “It is a sin to write this. It is a sin to think words no others think and to put them down upon a paper no others are to see. It is base and evil.” (Rand, 1961, pg. #17). This is an example of censorship, collectivism, and indoctrination. This society teaches and molds everybody from a young age to strive to be the same as everybody else. This thought process is even being explored today, why? Because it always looks like a good idea from the outside, but once your eyes are cleared, when you are looking from the inside, it's usually too late.
In the 1937 novella “Anthem’ by Ayn Rand, their society has many rules in place to be able to control their citizens and to be the same as their brothers. Some of the main laws are citizens cannot write anything, citizens cannot have personal preferences, and citizens cannot keep secrets from their brothers. The city in the novella “Anthem” has many rules and regulations in order to ensure that their society does not fall apart like the society in the Unmentionable Times. Protagonist Equality 7-2521 has broken many of the city's laws and is much different all of his fellow brothers.
In the book, Anthem, the people of the City live in a dystopian society, where they study and live off of the ideas of collectivism. Collectivism has, unfortunately, significantly altered the people’s knowledge of the real world. This knowledge should not be disregarded, but it should be held tightly, as tight as they hold their collective customs. Knowledge is a precious thing that everyone has somewhere within themselves. In a dystopian society, attaining knowledge is something only one group of people may do. Equality 7-2521 are said to find the power of electricity. In order for them to know what electricity was they would need knowledge.
At the end of the novel, Equality sees nothing wrong with individuality and encourages it. He now even hates the word “we” since he believes that it was “the worship of the word ‘we’” (Rand 102) that brought his old society into submission. Equality also wishes to be called by an individual name, so he chooses the fitting name of Prometheus and gives the future mother of his children the name Gaea (Rand 99). The practices of his society, on the contrary, believe that everyone must be seen equally in each others eyes. There is no worse transgression than to “do or think alone” (Rand 17). While citizens under this government do have names by which they are addressed, they seem more like serial numbers than actual names (for example: Equality
The novel of Anthem, written by Ayn Rand, contributes to controversial subjects in society that are still relevant today. Some issues addressed by Rand in her novel include: equality, social hierarchy, individuality, and government. Throughout the duration of reading Anthem the issues in which Rand makes relevant are not obvious, but more so discussed through conflicts and situations that the main character, Equality 7-2521, encounters. Although many of the altercations that present social issues are provided by either other characters singlehandedly or by a group of the characters in alliance, some of the main issues that arise in this novel are presented within the main character himself.
All success starts with inner motivation. The most talented people that are living have an inner motivation that started their success story. The book “Anthem,” by Ayn Rand portrays the character Equality's main motivation which is individuality. Through his fearless discoveries he finally realizes the truth and that truth will set him free.
There has always been a slight anxiety, a slight fear, of being alone or standing alone. Students rarely want to admit to having an answer different from the rest of their classmates; some people do not want to go somewhere and do something by themselves. Notably, with more shy or anxious people, they will often stick around someone they know, so they will not be alone in the crowd. Although that company might help them make it through those nerve-wracking moments, when is the right time for them to walk alone? Should a person ever walk alone? In Ayn Rand’s Anthem, Equality’s internal conflict of conformity versus individuality plays a role that Equality needs to overcome in order to complete their quest for freedom which helps create
Ayn Rand's Anthem shows us her view of our world united under what seems to be communist rule. For example their view of right and wrong; which Anthem portrays is a system of very strict rules which mainly make sure that everyone is involved in a collective role within the society in this system no one is considered an individual or that they can even think as an individual.
brought them for a civilization where the word ?I? did not exist to a world
Vision a lifestyle where one perceives it as a sin to comprehend data more efficiently than of one’s peers; a felony to long for things that others do not wish upon. Where floods of white tunics and austere minds obliterate the Earth. A colony built upon leaders who asphyxiate anyone from infatuation of any object or significant being; moreover, a world suffocating in collectivism. Through exasperated transcription, Anthem brings about such a community; nevertheless, a world of black and white. Ayn Rand does not overemphasize the effects of totalitarianism, but amplifies it so that it is more effortless for one to enlighten he or she’s notion on the particular proposal. First, by analyzation of “Equality 7-2521”, and
“It is a sin to write this. It is a sin to think words no others think and to put them down upon a paper no others are to see. It is base and evil […] there is no transgression blacker than to do or think alone” (17). In the story Anthem it is a high offense to think for oneself and write without permission from the Council of Vocations. Equality 7-2521 has broken both these crimes simultaneously by writing in a journal over a span of months. By the end of the novel, Equality wrongly believes his actions are not truly sins. His action of writing is a sin because he has to hide the fact he is writing the journal and he been raised to believe that “it is not good to be different from our brothers, but it is evil to be superior to them” (21).