Anthem By Ayn Rand: Character Analysis

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“There is fear hanging in the air of the sleeping halls, and in the air of the streets. Fear walks through the City, fear without name, without shape. All men feel it and none dare to speak” (Rand 46). Equality 7-2125, the main character in the novel Anthem, by Ayn Rand, lives in the City, where the citizens live in fear. Fear of the government, fear of the Council, fear of each other, fear of their ideas. Due to that fear, the City’s government, the Council, has brainwashed all of the residents in to their way of thinking. The things people in the City accept in order to live a life of obedience, drudgery and fear are the Council is all knowing, conflict is unacceptable, and everyone has to be the same. One of the things the people needed …show more content…

The Teachers state "Dare not choose in your minds the work you would like to do when you leave the Home of the Students. You shall do that which the Council of Vocations shall prescribe for you” (Rand 22). The people can't think on their own because it causes conflict, and think the best thing to do is do what the Council tells them to do. Equality then recalls the evening rituals by saying "And as we all undress at night, in the dim light of the candles, our brothers are silent, for they dare not speak the thoughts of their minds. For all must agree with all, and they cannot know if their thoughts are the thoughts of all, and so they fear to speak” (Rand 47). The people are so scared that they won’t talk because all must agree; disagreeing results in conflict, which is a sin. The night Equality escaped the Palace of Corrective Detention, he wrote ”Then, tonight, we knew that we must escape. For tomorrow the World Council of Scholars is to meet in our City.It was easy to escape from the Palace of Corrective Detention. The locks are old on the doors and there are no guards about. There is no reason to have guards, for men have never defied the Councils so far as to escape from whatever place they were ordered to be” (Rand 66-67). Nobody wanted to cause conflict with the Council, so nobody has ever tried to escape

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