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Summary Of Anthem By Ayn Rand

696 Words3 Pages

Communism, a political theory advocating social war, was born in the 19th century, farthered by Karl Marx and later took a toll on the rest of the world. The Bolshevik Revolution took control over the Soviet Union and communism began to rise in Russia and everywhere else for that matter. Communism sparked rebellion and believers. In the novel Anthem, the author Ayn Rand recreates history using connection, characterization and tone in a fictional futuristic dystopia.
Anthem is a society based on collectivism, basically where there is no such thing as “I”, “me”, or any type of selfish pronouns. Like communism but worse, no one had a choice, their lives, occupations, families, and feeling were chosen for them. Rand portrays the leaders or “The …show more content…

Equality was like fictional Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. or Cesar Chavez, a natural born leader. Equality 7-2521, later renames himself Prometheus because of his belief in individualism. He rejects the collectivist and marxist society that surrounds him. Vain and self-centered, strong, beautiful, and intelligent and is wildly curious, Equality craves freedom to explore and think, and is unafraid of the society. With persistence and strong will for freedom, like any other, Equality was unstoppable. Family, punishments, the risk of failure or even love could chain him from his dream. Falling in love was not acceptable, but of course that did not matter to the young rebel. When he met Liberty 5-3000 it was love at first sight and he knew then he had to bring her along his journey to a better life. Even before the early 19th century it was a woman's place to follow her man and so she did, with little hesitation, Liberty 5-3000 followed her man. Although Liberty had her fair share of book time, she was placed to be an object of Equality. Like most relationships during the time period, women were a shadow of men, they were there to cater to the man and make him look better, be the perfect woman for him to love. Liberty was also vain, strong and beautiful and unafraid of the society. Even though this novel was meant to be a dystopia, their personalities gave it a more utopian

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