Context
Ayn Rand was born in
St. Petersburg, Russia, in February 1905,
and grew up in Russia during one of the country's most tumultuous
periods. Socialist revolutionaries overthrew the monarchy in 1905,
and in 1906 the first Duma, the new Russian
congress, convened. Several different socialist groups emerged after
the revolution of 1905, chief among them
the Bolsheviks and the Mensheviks. Several groups of revolutionaries
fell to infighting, especially during World War I, in which the
Bolsheviks urged an international civil war to bring about the rule
of the proletariat, or governance by the working class. The country
fell into a bitter civil war. The Bolsheviks, under Lenin, eventually
emerged as the preeminent party, and the group later became the
Communist Party.
In 1917, when she was twelve, Rand
witnessed the Bolshevik Revolution, in which the Bolsheviks took
control of the Soviet government, ushering in the Communist era
in Russia. Her family lost its business and was reduced to a state
of extreme poverty during the new regime. Rand despaired of the
corrupt Communist system, which claimed to subjugate the needs of
the individual to the needs of the many, but was ultimately manipulated
by a few greedy and tyrannical leaders, with disastrous consequences
for Russia's economy and people.
Rand completed high school in the Crimea, where she had
fled to escape the civil war. She returned to St. Petersburg (then
called Petrograd), where she attended the University of Petrograd,
and she graduated in 1924 with a degree in
philosophy and history. She also studied screenwriting at the State
Institute for Cinema Arts.
After Joseph Stalin ascended to power in the early 1920s,
a disillusioned and disgusted Rand escaped to Chicago in 1926.
She then moved to Hollywood to pursue a career as a screenwriter.
In Hollywood, she met her husband-to-be, actor Frank O'Connor, whom she
married in 1929. Rand and O'Connor remained
married until his death fifty years later. In 1932,
Rand sold her first screenplay, Red Pawn, and her
first stage play was produced on Broadway. The play, Night
of January 16th, was
a largely autobiographical account of the Soviet Union just after
the revolution. She completed her first novel, We the Living, in 1933,
and it was first published in 1936.
Anthem, Rand's second work of fiction,
was first published in Great Britain in 1938.
She later revised the novella and, in 1946, published
it in the United States. According to the preface she wrote for
the American edition, the only differences between the two editions
were stylistic. In the American version, Rand sought to eliminate
poetic and flowery language and to simplify and clarify the themes
she laid out.
Rand is best known for her two longest works of fiction, The Fountainhead (1943)
and Atlas Shrugged (1957).
She began work on The Fountainhead in 1935,
at the same time she was working on Anthem. Both
works introduce her theory of objectivism, or egoism, the idea that
an individual's worth comes from him- or herself and not from what
he or she contributes to society or to mankind. Objectivism is,
as both The Fountainhead and Anthem make explicit,
a wholesale rejection of the collectivist theories and tactics that
Rand believed were at the center of the brutalities visited on Russia
during the early part of the twentieth century. While The Fountainhead is
the fictional embodiment of objectivism, Anthem is Rand's
political manifesto. It takes the form of an allegory, a fictional
story whose purpose is to present a philosophical idea. Anthem describes
a dystopia, a nightmarish imaginary world through which Rand speculates
on the eventual result of society's negative aspects. Rand uses
the dystopia to show what she believes will happen when a nation
or society embraces collectivism and community ideals.
The novella largely mirrors the state of the Soviet Union
under the Stalinist terror, during which Stalin ordered purges of
all those who opposed him, especially independent thinkers and intellectuals.
In her novels, Rand idealizes those of the sort Stalin executed and
exalts her hero, a vibrant, intelligent, and physically beautiful youth,
who fights his way through the nameless, faceless mass of society
that seeks to use him for its own ends while draining him of all
vitality and vigor. She rejects religion and group identity in favor of
ego and self-determination.
Many consider Atlas Shrugged, which Rand
began in 1946 and first published in 1957,
to be her greatest accomplishment as a fiction writer. It is her
longest and most elaborate novel, and it was her last fictional
work. In the novel, she traces the lives of several individuals
who are involved in big business in the United States, exalting
their will to succeed and self-centered egoism. Atlas Shrugged fleshes
out the philosophy Rand had been developing all her life, the beginnings
of which are introduced in the concluding chapters of Anthem.
The world depicted in Atlas Shrugged is modeled
closely on America in the 1890s, during the
height of free markets and governmental nonintervention in business.
After the publication of Atlas Shrugged, Rand
wrote and lectured on objectivism. She died on March 6, 1982.
Her books have garnered her a cult following of philosophers and
thinkers, who continue her pursuit of objectivism and egoism in
the form of foundations and think tanks devoted to her work.