preview

Collectivism In Dystopian Society

Good Essays

The dystopian society within Ayn Rand’s Anthem utilizes diction to convey a strict collectivist theme and enforce both unity and equality among its members. Following the Great Rebirth, the futuristic society portrayed in this novella has a profound fear of returning to the Unmentionable Times. This time period is illegal and immoral to acknowledge, for something went terribly wrong and influenced the government’s decision of maintaining complete control over everyone and everything in the society through the use of language. The fear of reliving the past erases the basic concepts of freedom and individuality, giving members of society no purpose other than that of serving the government as a cohesive group. Although the society successfully enforces collectivism by owning its member’s identities and by stripping its member’s vocabularies of personal pronouns, it fails to outsmart the rebellious protagonist of the novella. First, the society implements collectivist doctrine through its methods of identifying and naming members of society. In this dystopia, each person receives an atypical identification at birth. Specifically, Anthem is written through the perspective of “Equality 7-2521, as it is written on the iron bracelet which all men wear on their left wrists with their names upon it” (Rand 18). All members of society must wear their names explicitly “on their left wrists” at all times as if it is a tag-- representative of ownership. Essentially, the society owns

Get Access