Flaming_Maniac wrote:
What do you think of her writing style? I am interested considering you have studied it so much.
Ayn Rand definitely has a very unique writing style. Distinct and takes a little getting used to, but overall easy enough to read.
Once you get used to her style, it's consistent and doesn't distract from the narrative.
.. except for her use of the word "Bromide", which quickly becomes it's own distracting "bromide". She could've just used the words "Banal" or "Cliche".
Flaming_Maniac wrote:
Isn't C+P exactly the opposite of The Fountainhead though? Pessimism in place of optimism, where the only middle ground is the question "is the glass half empty or half full" itself?
To me,
The Fountainhead just feels like a good 19th century Russian book (Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Turgenev, etc). The characterization, the pacing, the plot development.
Like the author is directing his characters with "You! You're Nietzschean philosophy as understood by a 20-something!... You! You're Machiavellian old man!.. and you! You're classical Aristotle!.. Mix! Mingle! Interact!"
In other words, the characters are the personification of particular philosophical perspectives.
The Fountainhead is the upside of the Nietzschean 'overman' -
Crime and Punishment is the downside. Both have much more to them than that, but that's their common point of reference.
Uzique wrote:
I read the passage a few times as well and I don't 'get' the beauty. Just read any half-rate philosophy text and it's crammed full of the same erudition.
Exactly.
Which is easier to read; A novel with particular philosophies personified by the characters, put into conflicts and situations to test the limits of those philosophies -- or a philosophy textbook?
Most people wouldn't bother to waste the time to "what if" real life scenarios while reading a philosophy textbook. The authors I listed did so, and made some heavy issues more accessible to their readers.
Contrasted against each other, the books I listed were intended to inspire and provoke.
Read one of them, and the author might sell you on their particular perspective.
Read two of them, and the conflicting perspectives & opinions make you decide for yourself.
Like
The Fountainhead versus
Crime and Punishment with Nietzsche as referee, in a 'Ubermensch versus Proletariat' cage match
Like Ayn Rand versus George Orwell, in a discussion of Political systems.
(Roark:Classical Democracy, Dominique:Classical Republic, Wynand:Dictatorship, Keating:Monarchy, Toohey:Soviet Communism)
...
Now, 'easy' Joyce versus Rand...
is more of a contrast between 'heady ideals & larger than life heroes' of Rand
and the 'youth coming of age & observations of the human condition' of Joyce.
Much like the contrast between the overwrought hand-wringing intensity of Dostoevsky, versus the more measured 'life as it comes at you' Turgenev
(
Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man and
Dubliners being the easy to read, accessible James Joyce.
Not to be confused with, say,
Ulysses.. thar be deep blue waters an' beware of dog an' here be dragons an' Abandon Hope All Ye Who Enter)
Last edited by rdx-fx (2009-01-04 13:04:07)