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Cargando... Anthem, Expanded 50th Anniversary Edition (edición 1999)por Ayn Rand, Leonard Peikoff (Introducción)
Información de la obraVivir (Himno) por Ayn Rand
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. What I like (and dislike) about Anthem is that, as a dystopian novel, it gets to the point. When it comes to dystopias, who're all too similar to one another, I'm notoriously picky about characterization and plot and am forever in search of some moral, which is why I'm not overly fond of Nineteen-Eighty Four or Brave New World. Anthem, however, doesn't screw around wasting your time with particulars but gives you the gist of what's going on in a single sitting. It's a simple book with a simple purpose, and that's exactly what I think a book like this should be. ( ) I'm big fan of dystopian novels. My personal opinion on this one-and you can take it or leave I could care less--is to read it and then decide whether it meant anything to you. It's 106 pages. Pretty short I'd say. It's simply written, but don't let the simplicity fool you. It's one of those books that makes you think, if you give it the chance to do so, and analyze the current state of our society. Some of the passages mirror what goes on daily in our present day humanity. It's also interesting to see the evolution of the main protagonist. As a feminist at heart (don't judge me), I can see what the author did with the secondary character. In my opinion, I don't believe that the intention was to cause a Feminist riot, but I can see what the author was intending on portraying with the characters. Honestly, don't let my review or other reviews cloud your judgment or inclination of wanting to discover this book for yourself. Take a chance. You might be surprised :) 5/10-6/10 I have to say that I liked this quite a bit more than The Fountainhead (which I did not enjoy for the most part). The characters were actually those you could get somewhat invested in, the dystopian world it created, while overly simple and unrealistic, was at least interesting to read about. The epistolary format was done well. The prose and general writing quality seemed vastly better than The Fountainhead. The themes and general ideas that Rand was trying to convey were executed much better here. Don't get me wrong, I still think her themes are absolute garbage, and she's an absolute garbage human being, and nobody should take her seriously. But the themes and messages were communicated fairly well in this book, in a way that was much easier and interesting to digest. I think the brevity of it is one of its strengths, at only like 90 pages, it can be read in an hour or two. Most of the patented Ayn Rand ridiculously heavy handed diatribes were kept to a minimum, or just the last few chapters. And it was still full of offensively simple propagandic proselytizing to push her nonsensical views, just a bit less overt than usual for 90% of the book. Still annoying when they come up, but it's easier to grit your teeth through 3 pages than 30 pages. Would I recommend it to someone looking for a book to understand what Ayn Rand is about? Definitely, it's a perfect intro to her. Would I recommend it to literally anyone else? Eh. But it's an easy read, that can be knocked out in an afternoon, so it gets bonus points for that. Ugh. Rand's simplistic allegory paints the world in black and white - there is the individual vs. the collective, a struggle which ultimately stands for freedom vs. totalitarianism. If she had read Freud or Darwin, she would know that human beings are a communal species - while it is true that individual rights should be protected and genius should be nurtured, you can not completely take a person out of the context of the community. This novel, and indeed all of her writing, is based on a false dichotomy, which was probably her reaction to seeing the results of the Russian Revolution - a reactionary response to a reactionary period in history. Unfortunately for Rand and the Soviets she despised, the world is much more nuanced than their respective dogmas will admit. I might have given this book two stars for the coherence of its philosophy, but a star was deducted for packaging the brief story with a sycophantic introduction by Rand disciple Leonard Peikoff, along with additional materials tailored to the Randroid cult of personality. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
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Ayn Rand (San Petersburgo, 1905 - Nueva York, 1982) es, sin lugar a dudas, una de las pensadoras más relevantes del siglo XX. La solidez de sus ideas está presente a lo largo de toda su obra literaria, que supone uno de los más brillantes análisis que existen acerca del valor del hombre como un bien en sí mismo. Sus novelas resultan inconfundibles por la realidad que incorporan sus protagonistas, individuos que rebasan por méritos propios la categoría de personajes literarios. Himno (Anthem) es su segundo libro publicado. Se trata de una novela corta publicada en 1938 que presenta la batalla de un hombre por sobrevivir en una sociedad que ha proscrito el pensamiento individual hasta olvidar su significado. En ella se apuntan temas que más tarde desarrollaría en sus dos obras de plenitud: "El Manantial" y "La Rebelión de Atlas", con las que tiene en común el concepto del hombre como "un ser heroico, con su propia felicidad como el propósito moral de su vida, con el logro productivo como su más noble actividad y la razón como su único absoluto", en palabras de la propia autora. "Dentro de mil años se recordará un solo nombre del siglo XX por haber sido, en la forma más sorprendente y positiva posible, el único cerebro que tuvo un pensamiento filosófico original en este siglo: AYN RAND." Editorial del Los Angeles Times a la muerte de la autora. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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