structural integration in "the fountainhead" and "atlas shrugged"
TRANSCRIPT
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Structural Integration in The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged
Kirsti Minsaas
In her writings on art, Ayn Rand put great emphasis on the value of structuralunity in an artwork. Holding that an important purpose of art is “to unify man’s
consciousness and offer him a coherent view of reality,” ( RM 73)1 she held
up integration—the ordering of an artwork’s component parts into a unified
and harmonious whole—as a central aesthetic virtue.2 Not only did she re-
gard such integration as consistent with man’s need to translate experience
into a cognitively coherent form, but she also saw it as a major source of
aesthetic pleasure. Thus, when in The Fountainhead Austen Heller asks
Howard Roark why he takes such pleasure in watching the construction of
the house Roark has designed for him, Roark points out that it springs from
one’s awareness of the building’s structure. As Roark explains, “Your own
eyes go through a structural process when you look at the house, you can
follow each step, you see it rise, you know what made it and why it stands.”3
(136)
The kind of structural processing Roark here describes can be trans-
ferred to the act of appraising a work of literature. Although Rand believed
that the pleasure derived from a literary work chiefly lay in its subject mat-
ter—in its presentation of exciting events and characters—she also believed
that the full enjoyment of a literary work, qua art, was bound up with its
success in integrating its diverse elements into an artistically satisfying whole.
Thus, to be properly appreciated, a good novel or play or poem requires, in a
way parallel to Roark’s house, that we pay special attention to its structural
composition.
In the case of a novel, such attention is, on the most basic level, a
question of following the plot. Most critics agree that a plot involves the way
the author orders the events of a story into a progressive and logically coher-
ent pattern serving his specific discursive aims. They disagree, however, in
regard to what constitutes the ordering principles. In Rand’s view, a plot can
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18 The Literary Art of Ayn Rand
be defined as “a purposeful progression of logically connected events leading
to the resolution of a climax.” ( RM 82) This is a definition that basically con-
forms to other attempts to define plot in terms of causality, as opposed to
mere temporality or chronology. Yet Rand’s conception of plot is distinctive in
that she makes final causation rather than efficient causation the chief order-
ing principle, emphasizing the forward thrust of the action through a character’s
pursuit of a goal or a project.4 Thus, she rejects deterministic plot types in
which the ordering of the events is based exclusively on efficient causation,
with the characters functioning as mere passive drifters whose actions are
determined by external happenings and circumstances beyond their control.
Instead, she argues for a teleological plot type, or one in which the events are
governed by the goals set by one or more of the major characters in such a
way that they add up to a “sequence in which every major event is connected
with, determined by and proceeds from the preceding events of the story.”( RM 82) It is only through the construction of such a plot, Rand believes, that
the novelist will be able to hold the reader’s interest, engaging him in the
progressive movement of the events towards their final resolution.
Yet, for all her emphasis on the importance of plot, Rand does not
consider plot the only structural component of a novel. Although she never
makes the point explicit, her writing clearly indicates that she regards a novel’s
structure more broadly as the way all its elements—scenes, incidents, char-
acters, descriptions, dialogic passages, etc.—are combined into an artistically
satisfying whole. Thus, she insists that “a good novel is an indivisible sum:
every scene, sequence and passage of a good novel has to involve, contribute
to and advance all three of its major attributes: theme, plot, characterization.”
( RM 93) A similar commitment to structural integrity is revealed in her admir-ing comment on Fritz Lang’s silent-screen classic Siegfried (1924):
It has been said that if one stopped the projection of Siegfried and
cut out a film frame at random, it would be as perfected in composi-
tion as a great painting. Every action, gesture and movement in this
film is calculated to achieve that effect. Every inch of the film is
stylized , i.e., condensed to those stark, bare essentials which convey
the nature and spirit of the story, of its events, of its locale. ( RM 72)
Rand here expresses a view that accords with (and may well derive from) the
traditional Romantic emphasis on organic unity in art, or the idea that an art-work should be composed in such a way that no part can be changed or
moved around or taken out without damaging the integrity of the whole.5 For
Rand, such organic unity not only constitutes a major criterion for judging the
artwork’s aesthetic merit, but she also sees it as essential to an understanding
of its meaning. As she lets Howard Roark formulate it:
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19Structural Integration in The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged
Nothing can be reasonable or beautiful unless it is made by one cen-
tral idea, and the idea sets every detail. A building is alive, like a man.
Its integrity is to follow its own truth, its own single theme, and to
serve its own single purpose. (FH 24)
The same line of thinking informs Rand’s own novels, which are all carefully
structured to convey a unifying theme. Since for Rand a theme is “the sum-
mation of a novel’s abstract meaning,” it “defines the novel’s purpose” and
hence determines its structural organization. “The theme,” she writes, “sets
the writer’s standard of selection, directing the innumerable choices he has to
make and serving as the integrator of the novel.” ( RM 81) This is a point often
ignored in discussions of Rand’s novels. Reading the novels philosophically
and not literarily, many commentators tend to base their interpretation on scenesor incidents as isolated units, divorced from their wider narrative context. But
not only does this lead to an impoverished appreciation of her novels, qua art,
it also leads to a deficient and sometimes flawed understanding of their the-
matic meaning.
Precisely because Rand was a philosophical novelist, seeking to com-
municate her ideas through the concrete form of a carefully organized narra-
tive, it is important that we interpret her novels as structured units. Avoiding
the pitfall of interpretive context-dropping, we have to be especially alert to
the ways in which the separate elements of her stories—whether incidents,
speeches, characters, descriptions, or symbols—constitute integral parts of a
larger whole, deriving their precise meaning from the way they are related to
each other. Only in this way shall we be able fully to grasp the many philo-sophical shades and nuances of Rand’s literary universe.
In the following pages, I wish to indicate some of the ways in which
attention to Rand’s art of structural integration contributes to a heightened
appreciation of her novels, both artistically and philosophically. The discussion
will first focus on The Fountainhead .
The Fountainhead
A key to the structural organization of The Fountainhead is the role played
by its central hero, Howard Roark. In the figure of Roark, Rand was able forthe first time to fulfill her literary goal of projecting an ideal man. In part, this
projection serves as an end in itself, as indicated by Rand’s statement in her
essay “The Goal of My Writing” that “My purpose, first cause and prime
mover is the portrayal of Howard Roark or John Galt or Hank Rearden or
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20 The Literary Art of Ayn Rand
Francisco d’Anconia as an end in himself —not as a means to any further
end.” ( RM 162) As an embodiment of an abstract moral ideal, Roark provides
the reader with the uplifting pleasure of contemplating, in concretized form,
an image of moral perfection, an image that demonstrates what is possible to
man at his best. But Rand’s projection of Roark also functions as the chief
vehicle for the presentation of the novel’s theme.
Initially, this theme was formulated as a moral defense of egoism. As
Rand writes in her first notes on The Fountainhead : “The first purpose of
the book is a defense of egoism in its real meaning, egoism as a new faith.
Therefore a new definition of egoism—and its living example.” ( JAR 77) 6
This declaration of intent clearly informs the finished work. Yet in the course
of her writing, Rand worked out a more precise conception of the theme,
namely, as she phrases it in her fiction-writing course: “individualism and col-
lectivism, not in politics, but in man’s soul.”7
While her earlier narrative works,We the Living and Anthem, deal with the theme of individualism versus col-
lectivism as it manifests itself in society, she now explores the theme as it
manifests itself in men’s spiritual lives, moving from the scene of a totalitarian
state to the scene of America in the 1920s and ’30s. Roark, however, remains
her primary vehicle for the presentation of this more narrowly defined theme.
Thus, the structure of The Fountainhead is marked by a close integration
between the aim of heroic projection and the aim of thematic projection, the
one serving the other.
The thematic centrality of Roark is first of all manifested in his cen-
tral role in the novel’s plot, in which he serves as the major plot-determining
character. To translate her theme of individualism versus collectivism in the
human soul into a living plot, Rand pits Roark against society, structuring theevents around his struggle to become an architect, fighting a lonely and diffi-
cult battle against a culture hostile to his innovative buildings. It is primarily by
observing the pattern of this struggle, especially as dramatized in the many
incidents where Roark displays his intellectual independence and integrity,
that we come to understand the nature of Roark’s egoism and thus the the-
matic significance of the novel. This, however, is not enough. To fully grasp
the moral implications of Roark’s struggle, we also have to attend to the many
other structural devices Rand employs in her presentation of Roark, devices
that simultaneously serve to highlight the novel’s theme.
One such device is the use of Roark’s figure to frame the story.
Ronald Merrill has noted that the novel begins and ends with Howard Roark’sname, seeing this as an indication of his centrality in the novel.8 But there is
more to this figural framing than Roark’s name. Beginning and ending the
novel are also two striking descriptive images of Roark. In the opening scene,
Roark is seen standing naked on top of a granite cliff. Significantly, the stone
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21Structural Integration in The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged
of the cliff is described in a way that suggests a dynamic stillness: “The stone
had the stillness of one brief moment in battle when thrust meets thrust and
the currents are held in a pause more dynamic than motion.” (15) Further-
more, this dynamic stillness is presented as the product of natural forces: the
stone is as yet untouched by man, indicating that it is the raw material of
which buildings are made, the kind of buildings Howard Roark one day may
create. The cliff, therefore, is there not just to provide a picturesque setting
for Roark; it also serves as a symbolic image suggestive of Roark’s position
as an architect in the opening of the story. For just as the stone is only poten-
tially a building, Roark is only potentially an architect, facing his future struggle.
The deeper implication is that, in fulfilling himself as an architect, he will be
the instrumental cause that realizes the stone’s potential to become a building.
The following passage, which takes us into Roark’s mind when he looks at the
stone, makes this clear:
He looked at the granite. To be cut, he thought, and made into walls.
He looked at a tree. To be split and made into rafters. He looked at a
streak of rust on the stone and thought of iron ore under the ground.
To be melted and to be merged as girders against the sky. These
rocks, he thought, are here for me; waiting for the drill, the dynamite
and my voice; waiting to be split, ripped, pounded, reborn; waiting for
the shape my hands will give them. (16)
The full significance of this scene, however, will not reach us until the end of
the novel, after we have followed Roark’s struggle and his ultimate triumph.
Here Rand very fittingly offers a closing image that recalls the opening one,but with a significant change. Having become a full-fledged architect, Roark
now stands on top of an almost completed building, the Wynand building, the
building Wynand asks him to build as a monument to “that spirit which is yours
and could have been mine.” (693)
I think there can be little doubt that Rand’s symbolic use of these
framing images is quite deliberate. This becomes evident when we observe
that they constitute parts of a larger pattern of repetition—a pattern that is
closely related to the novel’s four-part division. Thus, to balance the opening
image of Roark on the cliff in Part 1, Rand opens Part 2 with an image of
Roark drilling granite in the stone quarry. What does this image suggest to us?
As in the opening passage, the setting is once again stone shaped by nature.But instead of getting an inside glimpse of Roark as an aspiring architect,
shaping stone into buildings in his mind, we now observe him as a manual
laborer, having been demoted by a society that fails to recognize his creative
genius. Again, the setting is symbolically significant, serving as a means to
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22 The Literary Art of Ayn Rand
underscore Roark’s specific situation at this point in his struggle to become an
architect. The next variation of this image occurs in the opening of Part 4,
where Roark is placed on top of Monadnock Valley, overlooking the small
houses he has built on the ledges underneath. This time, the stone is no longer
just raw material but has been shaped into buildings, symbolizing his creative
power. The significance of this act of creation, the particular relationship it
involves between the shaping force of nature and the shaping force of man, is
given to us from the point of view of the boy on the bicycle:
He knew that the ledges had not been touched, that no artifice had
altered the unplanned beauty of the graded steps. Yet some power
had known how to build on these ledges in such a way that the houses
became inevitable, and one could no longer imagine the hills as beau-
tiful without them—as if the centuries and the series of chances thatproduced these ledges in the struggle of great blind forces had waited
for their final expression, had been only a road to a goal—and the
goal was these buildings, part of the hills, shaped by the hills, yet
ruling them by giving them meaning. (505–6)
It should be clear that in this setting Roark is no longer merely a potential
architect but is on his way to becoming a true creator.
The symbolic exploitation of structural patterns here described is char-
acteristic of Rand’s literary technique. Superficially, all these passages may
be read merely as separate moments in the plot development, marking differ-
ent stages in Roark’s struggle, but with no deeper symbolic meaning. This
meaning, I believe, can only be perceived once one becomes aware of thelogical relationships between them, particularly as manifested through the
changing significance of Roark in his particular setting. But once one learns to
note such relationships, one will have found a key to unlock layers of meaning
in the text that otherwise would have remained hidden and undetected.
To really see the sophistication of Rand’s use of this technique, it is
worth observing the way that structural patterns are exploited to delineate
Dominique Francon’s pattern of development as well. Dominique’s essential
role in the novel is that of a heroine who has made the error of accepting what
Rand in her theoretical writing referred to as the “malevolent universe premise”
(the view that aspiration towards human greatness and happiness is doomed
to defeat in this world), but who in the course of the novel undergoes a pro-cess of growth in which she comes to understand the nature of her error and
so is able to correct it.9 In terms of plot complication, this educational process
takes the peculiar Randian form of Dominique’s struggling to destroy Roark
and herself—and failing, the failure serving as a proof of her mistake and thus
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23Structural Integration in The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged
as a means to her moral and psychological liberation. But in addition, Rand
brings out the nature of Dominique’s moral growth by linking it to the struc-
tural symbolism she uses in her depiction of Roark’s development. It is prob-
ably not accidental, for example, that Dominique sees Roark for the first time
in the opening of Part 2, spotting him from a height above him while he is
drilling granite and appears to be only a common laborer. Not only does this
physical elevation of Dominique relative to Roark underscore her superior
social position, but it also suggests the fact that her sexual attraction takes the
form of a desire to be dragged down, a desire for degradation. In tune with
Rand’s love of paradox, however, Dominique’s desire is really a sense of
challenge, since in actual fact it is Roark who is her superior, confronting her
as a moral ultimatum that forces her to come to grips with her mistaken
premise. Dominique’s moral growth can therefore be seen as a struggle to
rise to Roark’s level, to become his moral equal. Her final triumph in thisstruggle is rendered in the novel’s closing moments when, in a symbolic act,
she rides the outside hoist of the rising Wynand building, leaving the world
below to join Roark standing alone on top of the building.
As the above discussion should indicate, Rand’s manner of making
the plot in The Fountainhead serve her dual aim of thematic and heroic
projection is not merely a question of ordering the events into a logical plot
sequence but also of weaving into the plot narrative motifs that occur in a
pattern of framing, repetition, and variation. This kind of structural enrichment
of the plot is related to the novel’s unfolding in time, that is, its temporal dimen-
sion. But Rand also elaborates her plots with structural devices that cut across
this temporal dimension, most notably by organizing characters, scenes, and
other elements into a pattern of analogy and contrast.We may here pay special attention to her distribution of characters.
One of the great feats of The Fountainhead is that so many of the charac-
ters function on several levels at the same time. In accordance with Rand’s
emphasis on plot, most characters fill a natural role in the plot development,
functioning mainly as agents interacting with Roark, either by helping him or
by hindering him in his struggle. But in addition to this plot function, many of
them also serve a thematic function by being held up as parallels or contrasts
to Roark, illustrating a specific idea or thematic point. This is most evident in
Rand’s efforts to bring out the essential features of Roark’s moral character
by offering various sets of characters that, in addition to their plot function,
also serve as his foils, as figures of contrast that assist our understanding of his peculiar form of egoism. Without such contrasting figures, Rand could not
possibly make the reader comprehend, far less accept, her portrayal of Roark
as a moral ideal. To understand what he is, to grasp his moral essence, we
must observe him not only in isolation but also in context, comparing him with
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24 The Literary Art of Ayn Rand
the many others that differ from him. In fact, what we have to do is to employ
a process of differentiation and integration, in accordance with Rand’s theory
of concept-formation, by observing similarities and differences between Roark
and the other characters.10
Of special prominence here are the many characters that in various
ways represent the spiritual collectivism Rand believed infused American life
in her day, especially on the cultural level. It is here interesting to note that
Rand originally called her novel “Second-Hand Lives,” a title that reflects her
idea that, contrary to Roark’s first-hand independence, most people live their
lives as second-handers, renouncing their own egos for the opinions of oth-
ers.11 In fact, most of the characters in The Fountainhead (with a few
exceptions) represent various forms of second-handedness, being persons
without proper selves or egos. But within this larger group of foils there are
several subgroups. Notable here is the group of characters we may regard asRoark’s artistic foils, the many architects and artists that in various ways
represent a second-hand form of creativity that serves to highlight the special
nature of Roark’s creative independence and originality as an architect, showing
how he steers clear of both the traditionalist conventionalism of the classicists
(like Keating and Francon) and the fake individualism of the modernists (like
Gus Webb and Lois Cook).
A more restricted but nevertheless important set of foils to Roark is
made up of the four characters that in various ways embrace the malevolent
universe premise: Gail Wynand, Dominique Francon, Henry Cameron, and
Steven Mallory. Part of the function of these four is simply to serve as nega-
tive contrasts to Roark’s benevolent belief that human aspiration is not doomed
to destruction but may, in spite of setbacks and opposition, triumph in the end.But in addition they function as foils to one another, providing variations of the
same theme by demonstrating the different forms the malevolent universe
premise may take. Of particular interest here is the distinction between Wynand
and Dominique. While in Wynand the acceptance of the malevolent universe
premise has the effect of making him seek power by catering to the tastes of
the masses, in Dominique it has the effect of making her renounce her own
ambitions and desires in order to forestall inevitable defeat. Both come to
recognize their error by witnessing Roark’s struggle and ultimate triumph, but
while Wynand is destroyed by it, realizing that he has wasted his life on ac-
count of a mistaken belief, Dominique is saved, being enabled to correct her
error. The most important set of foils to Roark’s character, however, is
constituted by the three other major male protagonists of the novel: Peter
Keating, Gail Wynand (now serving a different function), and Ellsworth Toohey.
While on the plot level these three play a central role as agents interacting
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25Structural Integration in The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged
with Roark, they also play a central role on the thematic level by representing
different versions of traditional egoism, or the paradox of “‘selfless’ egoism,”
as Rand chose to call it in one of her Journals entries (105). For what these
three have in common that differentiates them from Roark is that, despite
their apparently selfish concern with their own egos, they all turn out to be
second-handers. They are men without egos who, contrary to Roark, seek a
sense of self-worth through what comes from other people—Keating through
fame and popularity, Wynand and Toohey through different forms of power. It
is thus in large part through comparison with these three that we will be fully
able to understand, and assent to, Roark as an exemplary model of egoism.
The special nature of his egoism, his creative independence and integrity, is
made clear to us by being opposed to the phony egoism of the three others.
Of course, Rand’s use of these three characters as foils will be fairly
evident to any reasonably perceptive reader. What may be harder to detect ishow the deeper meaning of their contrasting role is brought out by means of
the novel’s four-part division. At first glance, this division may seem like a
rather arbitrary convenience. But to think so is to undervalue Rand’s commit-
ment to a meaningful use of structural composition. If we look a bit closer, we
will discover that this division serves a clear purpose.
A good clue is her choice to name each of the four parts after one of
the four major male protagonists. Although Roark as the central protagonist
dominates the whole story, only the fourth and last part, the part in which he
triumphs, is labeled with his name. The first three parts are named after his
three foils, the first after Peter Keating, the second after Ellsworth Toohey,
and the third after Gail Wynand. Now, why is this so? A closer look reveals
that although all three participate in the complete action, each is given specialemphasis—both in his interactive and in his contrasting function—in the par-
ticular part devoted to him. In this way, Rand invites the reader to observe
Roark in close juxtaposition with one of his chief foils at a time. It is impos-
sible in this context to go into a full discussion of the strategic significance of
this, but a glance at the organization of the opening three chapters of Part 1,
the Keating part, will give an indication. A notable feature here is that the first
chapter focuses mainly on Roark, the second on Keating, and the third (which
is split in two) on both alternately. Throughout these three chapters, the two
aspiring young architects are shown in similar scenes and situations as they
leave school to embark on a career in New York. The obvious purpose of this
is to control our moral response to Roark by inviting us to note, by way of comparison, the contrast between Roark’s love for and total absorption in his
work and Keating’s social orientation. The consistency, and also complexity,
of this comparative pattern can be observed in Chapter 3, where the differ-
ence between the two is brought out by means of one part that presents
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26 The Literary Art of Ayn Rand
Keating on his first day of work for Guy Francon and another part that shows
us Roark in his first interview with Henry Cameron. Not only are we here
invited to observe the difference between the two directly, in their different
manners of approaching their first employers, but we are also invited to ob-
serve their difference indirectly, by noting an analogous difference between
Francon and Cameron—an observation that again requires a comparison: of
the contrasting descriptions of the Frink National Bank Building (built by
Francon) and the Dana Building (built by Cameron).
Another important aspect of Rand’s shifting emphasis on the three
foils can be observed at the ends that conclude the successive parts devoted
to them. While all three suffer ultimate defeats in Part 4, in connection with
the Cortlandt climax, each is granted a partial, albeit ambiguous, triumph to-
wards the end of his specific part. Thus, at the end of Part 1, Keating’s part,
we observe Keating at a banquet, apparently triumphant, celebrating his part-nership in the firm now renamed Francon and Keating. But it is a triumph that
bears a question mark, raised by the ironic effect of a brief description of
Roark inserted just before this scene when he, apparently defeated, departs
for Connecticut. Looking back at the skyline of New York behind him, Roark
sees them as “bare outlines,” as “empty molds waiting to be filled.” “The city
on the edge of the skyline,” we are told, “held a question—and a promise.”
(200) Although it is Peter Keating who is being celebrated as the future hope
of American architecture, this brief insertion leaves us with a sense that the
job of filling the empty molds, of fulfilling the promise held by the skyline, still
rests with Roark. Similarly, at the end of Part 2, the Toohey part, we have a
concluding scene where, this time, Toohey is the apparent victor, while Roark
is the apparent loser. This is the scene at the site of the reconstructed StoddardTemple where Toohey, needing some kind of reassurance from Roark that he
has defeated him, asks him, “Why don’t you tell me what you think of me?”
and Roark, refusing to grant him that reassurance, answers, “But I don’t think
of you.” (389) Existentially, Toohey, like Keating, has triumphed over Roark,
but morally and psychologically we are left with no doubt as to who is the real
victor.
If we turn to the end of Part 3, Wynand’s part, we find that Wynand,
too, is granted a kind of triumph, but of a different kind than the two others.
While Keating and Toohey are allowed to experience a victory that proves
hollow and illusory in the long run, Wynand is given what seems a partial
vindication for his sins, a vindication that lends his final defeat a tragic staturemissing in the two others. To indicate the nature of this vindication, Rand
concludes Part 3 with the telling tableau of Dominique when she, in response
to Wynand’s declaration of his love for her, removes the cablegram she has
kept on her mirror, the cablegram that says: “Fire the bitch.” What vindicates
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27 Structural Integration in The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged
Wynand, we are made to understand, is his capacity for man-worship, his
ability to experience, as he tells Dominique “the kind of desire that becomes
an ultimatum.”(503) But Wynand’s false premise, his malevolent sense of life
and the actions it has led him to take, cannot be redeemed and must in the end
cause his defeat. The ultimate triumph in The Fountainhead , both existen-
tially and morally, is reserved for Howard Roark. The three others, in spite of
their moments of success, all fail in the long run, their failure demonstrating
the impotence of their codes.
As the above discussion should indicate, attention to the structural
integration of The Fountainhead is vital to one’s comprehension of the novel’s
moral meaning, especially as this meaning is projected through the figure of
Howard Roark. Such structural attention is even more important in the case
of Atlas Shrugged .
Atlas Shrugged
A critical objection sometimes raised against Atlas Shrugged is that its al-
most unbelievable structural complexity destroys its unity, making it a less
integrated and therefore artistically less successful work than The Fountain-
head . I don’t agree. In my view, one of the most astounding aspects of this
novel is precisely the way its complex and manifold material is integrated into
a satisfying whole.
To see how, it is useful to begin with Rand’s thematic intent for the
novel. As she has told us, the theme of Atlas is “the role of the mind in man’s
existence.” ( RM 81) As she also has told us, the first step of translating thistheme into a plot is by means of what she calls the “plot-theme,” which she
defines as “the central conflict or ‘situation’ of the story.” While a novel’s
theme is “the core of its abstract meaning,” the plot-theme is “the core of its
events,” thus providing a “link between the theme and the events.” ( RM 85)
In Atlas, this plot-theme is, in Rand’s own formulation, “the men of the mind
going on strike against an altruist-collectivist society.” ( RM 85) It is thus pri-
marily by means of the plot, by organizing the events into a causally coherent
pattern designed to show what happens to the world when the men of the
mind go on strike, that Rand conveys her theme in Atlas. The question is, how
does she go from the plot-theme to the plot? Or, how does she flesh out the
plot-theme so as to turn it into a living plot, one in which the plot-theme is fullyelaborated into a complete narrative?
The first point to be noted here is that one of Rand’s major plot-
devising strategies in Atlas is to make use of the double plot characteristic of
the detective novel or “whodunit” story. Characteristic of this type of fiction is
that there is a major story, the story of the crime, which is gradually uncov-
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28 The Literary Art of Ayn Rand
ered by means of a second story, the story of the detective’s investigation of
the crime.12 Rand, however, transcends the formulaic pattern of the detective
genre. Rand’s stroke of genius is that the mystery to be solved is not simply a
crime, but the philosophical meaning of the many curious events that take
place. Thus, her strategy is to keep hidden and to reveal only gradually what
is the major story, the story of the mind on strike, by means of a more overt
surface story, corresponding to the investigation story in a detective novel. In
part this surface story turns on Dagny’s and Rearden’s struggles to save their
industries in a society that appears to be collapsing, both industrially and cul-
turally. But in addition, it turns on what we may see as Dagny’s two quests: to
find the inventor of the motor (the man she believes can save the world) and
to stop the destroyer of the world (the man she believes is draining the world
of its brain power). Since, however, the two quests actually (and ironically)
are one, involving a search for the same man, Dagny is faced with a puzzlingparadox that must be solved before she will be able to find him, namely, the
question of whether he is in fact a savior or a destroyer. It is thus by means of
Dagny’s pursuit of these quests, and her need to solve the puzzles they present,
that the plot proper, the story of the strike, is ultimately uncovered. In this way,
Rand uses the simple formula of a detective story to create a highly complex
philosophical novel, a novel where the ideas are presented as answers to
paradoxical mysteries.
The way in which this is accomplished becomes clearer if we, as we
did with The Fountainhead , take a look at the novel’s division into parts. As
any reader will easily note, Atlas is formally divided into three major parts,
each of which is again subdivided into ten chapters. What may be harder to
note is the thematic significance of these divisions. For not only is the wholenovel informed by a unifying theme, but so is each of the three major parts, as
well as each chapter, just as in a system of Chinese boxes. The major theme,
the role of reason in human existence, is thus broken down into a number of
sub-themes that make up the novel’s larger thematic pattern. A major key to
an interpretation of this larger pattern is provided by the part and chapter
division.
Let us consider the three-part division first. As in The Fountain-
head , we must take our clue from the title headings: “Non-Contradiction,”
“Either-Or,” and “A Is A.” Philosophically, these titles, derived from Aristotle,
refer to the basic axioms of logic. In so doing, they serve as an important
thematic pointer, indicating the special significance the theme of reason playsin each part. In Part I, the “Non-Contradiction” section, we are presented
with a string of strange and apparently contradictory events in a society be-
ginning to fall apart: an inventor leaves the remnants of a revolutionary motor
to rust in an abandoned factory; a brilliant copper producer turns into a worth-
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29Structural Integration in The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged
less playboy; a prominent philosopher chooses to work as a cook in a diner,
etc. How are we to understand these events? Is the world merely a meaning-
less and perplexing place, or is there some rational explanation? This is the
basic question posed by the first part, and we are given no answer, only a
hint—through the title, “Non-Contradiction.” The specific meaning of this title
is made clear on the two occasions when Dagny is directly confronted with
the principle of non-contradiction—the first time, when Francisco uses it to
suggest to her that he may not be what he appears to be (191);13 the second
time, when Hugh Akston uses it to answer her request regarding the inventor
of the motor (315). Flatly, both men tell her that contradictions cannot exist,
and that if she seems to be facing one, she must check her premises—a clear
hint that there is some logical explanation to her puzzles that she is barred
from seeing through an error in her thinking. But what? This is the question
that now faces Dagny. Thus, from being involved in a mere detective searchfor the inventor of the motor, she is launched on a philosophical quest to
discover her error, which in turn means that she has to resolve the many
paradoxes that confront her. This wider quest, which is intertwined with
Rearden’s tortured quest to solve the contradictions of his situation, serves to
move the plot forward. But it also serves as a device to gradually uncover the
primary plot of the strike and, with it, the deeper meaning of the mysterious
events. In this way, we are kept in suspense both on the plot level, with regard
to what is going to happen, and on the philosophical level, with regard to what
is the significance of the things that happen. When the “Non-Contradiction”
part draws towards its end, Dagny and the readers are confronted with the
major paradox of the whole section, the fact that the triumph of the John Galt
Line is reversed to the destruction of Colorado. The symbolic image of thisironic reversal is Wyatt’s Torch, which faces Dagny (and the reader) with a
huge question mark when Part I concludes.
If we turn to the two following parts, we will discover that they too
serve thematic issues suggested by the headings. In Part II, the “Either-Or”
section, Dagny faces a fundamental choice between working for her railroad
and giving it up. Significantly, this choice involves another paradox that Dagny
has to resolve, a paradox Francisco holds up to her in the scene in the cabin
where he hints that the ideal man she claims she is working for, the man she
sees at the end of her railroad, is perhaps best served by abandoning her
railroad rather than by continuing to work for it. Ultimately, of course, this
paradox is philosophical, involving a choice between two incompatible codes,the code of the strikers and the code of the looters. Dagny’s problem is that
she is trying to serve both, both God and Caesar, as Francisco puts it (594).
The lesson she has to learn, the lesson learnt by all the strikers, is that one
cannot serve both, that it has to be one or the other. It is only in Part III, the “A
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30 The Literary Art of Ayn Rand
Is A” section—where the true nature of the events, together with the identity
of who is John Galt, is finally unraveled—that Dagny and Rearden are able to
resolve their contradictions and reach the full insight necessary to make the
choice of joining the strike. Dagny’s insight comes when she discovers the
death premise motivating the looters, and Rearden’s comes when he discov-
ers the principle of the sanction of the victim.
I hope this presentation of the part division in Atlas, although some-
what schematic, gives some idea of what an enormous feat of integration
Rand has accomplished in this novel—particularly when it comes to her subtle
and skillful interweaving of plot and theme. As in The Fountainhead , we
must infer philosophical meaning not only from the unfolding events as or-
dered into a causally significant plot but also as ordered into an artistic whole
where every element is combined in symbolic and structural relationships.
This becomes even clearer when we look at the chapter division.As suggested above, just as the novel as a whole as well as the three
parts are organized to convey a theme, so is each chapter. And in each case,
Rand relies heavily on structural devices to make her thematic points. Space
does not permit me to go into each chapter, but a few samples will illustrate.
Consider, for example, the chapter entitled “The Top and the Bottom” (I.3).
What is this chapter about? Again, the title gives us the initial clue. What it
refers to is the recurrent idea in Rand’s novels that in an irrational society, the
best are frequently demoted to the bottom while the worst are to be found at
the top. It is not easy, however, to infer this theme merely from the events. To
assist us, we may take certain symbolic and structural elements as supple-
mentary clues. If we do, we will discover that Rand has not forgotten the art
of using the architectural setting to suggest an idea. Thus, the chapter openswith the following description:
The ceiling was that of a cellar, so heavy and low that people stooped
when crossing the room, as if the weight of the vaulting rested on
their shoulders. The circular booths of dark red leather were built
into walls of stone that looked eaten by age and dampness. There
were no windows, only patches of blue light shooting from dents in
the masonry, the dead blue light proper for use in blackouts. The
place was entered by way of narrow steps that led down, as if de-
scending deep under the ground. This was the most expensive bar-
room in New York and it was built on the roof of a skyscraper. (48–9)
The image is that of a dark cellar—built on the roof of a skyscraper. And who
is occupying this place? Some exemplars of the bottom at the top: Wesley
Mouch, James Taggart, Orren Boyle, and Paul Larkin. And what are they
doing? Plotting against Hank Rearden. When rereading this novel with the
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31Structural Integration in The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged
special assignment of noticing things like this, I thought that surely there must
be a corresponding passage to suggest the opposite idea—that of the top at
the bottom. Leafing through the pages, I discovered at the very end of the
chapter this description of the Taggart Terminal underground cafeteria:
The cafeteria lay underground. It was a large room with walls of
white tile that glittered in the reflections of electric lights and looked
like silver brocade. It had a high ceiling, sparkling counters of glass
and chromium, a sense of space and light. (65)
This time, the image is that of a light and spacious room—built underground.
Now, who is occupying this room? Quite significantly, Eddie Willers and John
Galt, the latter in the position of a man morally and intellectually at the top but
socially demoted to the bottom by holding the job of a common railroad worker.Of course, the full significance of this kind of structural symbolism will not be
detected on a first reading, since the reader at this stage does not know who
John Galt is. It thus demonstrates why the novel, to be fully appreciated,
requires several readings, and in what way such rereadings are rewarded—
enhancing our aesthetic delight and deepening our thematic understanding.
Another example of Rand’s reliance on structural manipulation in
conveying a chapter’s specific theme can be observed in the one entitled
“Their Brothers’ Keepers” (III.5). The purpose of this chapter is to highlight
one of the novel’s major themes: the evil of the biblical injunction (presented in
the story of Cain and Abel) that man should be his brother’s keeper. Essen-
tially, Rand’s method is to show us the practical consequences of this injunc-
tion through the accelerating industrial collapse of the whole country—begin-ning with Francisco’s act of blowing up his own copper mines. The thematic
significance of this chapter can therefore easily be inferred from the logic of
the plot—a logic suggested ironically by the message Francisco leaves on the
public calendar after the explosion: “Brother, you asked for it.” (858) But
again, an alert eye to structural and symbolic elements will be helpful. It is
worth noting, for example, that the whole chapter is divided into four parts,
each of which begins with a sentence that a copper wire has broken down
somewhere in the country—in an order that reverses the historical industrial-
ization of the continent, marking a course of de-industrialization, by beginning
in California in the West and ending in New York in the East.
To make clear to us the philosophical meaning of this industrial col-lapse, that it is the logical result of the idea that man is his brother’s keeper,
Rand makes ingenious use of Dagny as a reflector reaching this insight in the
silent contemplation of her mind. This happens when, while sitting in Taggart’s
office, she looks rather absent-mindedly at the map of the transcontinental
railway system hanging on the wall. The many red lines on this map, which
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32 The Literary Art of Ayn Rand
Eddie Willers in the opening chapter had thought of as “a system of blood
vessels” (15, 17) bringing growth and wealth to the whole country, now be-
come, in Dagny’s mind, a one-way traffic system, a one-way stream of blood
running from a wound and draining the country of its last sustenance and life
(845). Thus, Dagny’s vision of the devastating consequences of accepting the
idea that man is his brother’s keeper is conveyed to us by having her interpret
the Taggart map symbolically, in light of what she sees happening to the coun-
try. I can think of no passage in Rand’s novels that more masterfully expli-
cates the thematic significance of the action. While Rand’s habit of present-
ing her ideas through lengthy philosophical speeches sometimes becomes in-
trusive and preachy, here, by relying on an inside view of Dagny’s mind, the
thematic idea is presented more discreetly and yet in a manner that makes it
poignantly clear. The reason, I think, for its striking effect is that the idea
presses itself on Dagny’s mind with an inevitable power and clarity in re-sponse to the logic of the events. As the narrator sums up:
She sat looking at the map, her glance dispassionately solemn, as if
no emotion save respect were permissible when observing the awe-
some power of logic. She was seeing—in the chaos of a perishing
continent—the precise, mathematical execution of all the ideas men
had held. (848)
In short, she was seeing the idea not as a distant abstraction, but in its con-
crete manifestation. In this way, her reflections serve as a guide to the reader
interpreting the same events.
In addition to refuting the notion that man is his brother’s keeper onthe industrial and political level, this chapter also refutes the idea on a more
personal level. It is no accident that this is the chapter where Phillip Rearden
asks Hank Rearden for a job, using as his chief argument that he is his brother.
When Rearden turns him down, it is in clear consequence of his discovery
that familial bonds are not morally binding irrespective of virtue. Since, how-
ever, this is a view that runs against traditional morality, according to which his
action will be judged callous and ruthless, Rand tries to clarify her point by
juxtaposing this scene with another scene, namely, the one where Tony the
Wet Nurse, at a point in the story where he has undergone a fundamental
moral change, also comes to Rearden asking for a job. The kind of fatherly
warmth and friendliness Rearden displays in this scene, despite the fact thathe has to reject the boy’s request, contrasts vividly with his cold treatment of
his own brother earlier on, accentuating that the earlier refutation of brotherly
obligation does not exclude a true brotherhood between human beings—a
brotherhood based on the principle of voluntary trade to mutual benefit rather
than on the principle of sacrificial duty.
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33Structural Integration in The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged
This kind of scenic juxtaposition, which frequently can be observed in
Rand’s novels, serves the function of thematic variation. As interpreters of
the novels we should therefore take notice of such juxtapositions. Just as in
The Fountainhead we had to pay particular attention to similarities and dif-
ferences between characters in our interpretation of Roark, in Atlas we have
to be especially alert to similarities and differences between scenes and events.
If, for example, we choose to interpret the scene between Rearden and his
brother out of context, as an isolated example of how to deal with relatives,
we may easily end up with a rather naive understanding of Rand’s moral
philosophy—whether friendly or hostile. To be understood properly, the two
scenes have to be seen in relation to each other, as structurally integrated
units.
Another example that illustrates the thematic importance of such sce-
nic juxtaposition is offered by the chapter entitled “Account Overdrawn” (II.5).In this chapter the exploiters are beginning to run out of victims by over-
stretching their victims’ endurance, or, as the title suggests metaphorically, by
overdrawing their accounts. The thematic implication of this is suggested by
Francisco’s statement “You can’t have your cake and let your neighbor eat it,
too.” (469) But to highlight the theme structurally, Rand shows us, in close
juxtaposition, two apparently unrelated scenes. One is a meeting of the board
of directors of Taggart Transcontinental where James Taggart is faced with a
number of financial demands: wage raises from the unions, cuts in rates from
the shippers, and payment of bonds from the government—demands that are
internally contradictory and that the company cannot possibly meet, that in
effect require that he run his railroad at a loss. The other scene is the episode
where Lillian Rearden demands of Rearden, after she has discovered that hismistress is not some worthless slut but Dagny Taggart, that he stop seeing her,
something he is totally unwilling to do. As should be clear, there is no causal
connection between these two scenes, only a thematic link, as both represent
variations of the same idea. This thematic link is further emphasized by the
fact that Taggart, faced with the demand from the government to pay the
bonds, appeals to the contract that had given the company a moratorium for
five years; similarly, Lillian, when she faces her husband’s unyielding attitude,
appeals to the sanctity of their marriage contract. In both cases, the contracts
have become worthless as legal obligations between people, showing the na-
ture of a world where exploitation is the ruling principle. I think it is very
difficult to discover the significance of these scenes unless one’s reading isaimed specifically at thematic understanding, and one takes care to pay atten-
tion to the specific clues Rand offers us. In this case, this means particular
attention to their parallel construction.
The need to attend to such structural juxtapositions sometimes ex-
tends to whole chapters. Many will, for example, be offended by the chapter
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34 The Literary Art of Ayn Rand
entitled “The Utopia of Greed” (III.2), both because of the provocative title
and because of its depiction of Galt’s Gulch as a capitalistic paradise. But
before we choose to condone or condemn, we should make sure that we
really understand what Rand means by greed. To do so, it is not enough to
identify this concept positively, in its affirmative manifestation; we must also
identify it negatively, by differentiating it from its opposite. This chance is
given to us in the following chapter, entitled “Anti Greed” (III.3), which, through
the chilling demonstration of Project X, gives us a clear image of dystopian
anti-greed. Thus, by comparing the two chapters, noting their contrasting func-
tion, we will discover that for Rand greed does not entail ruthless exploitation
but profitable production, to be distinguished from non-profitable destruction.
In this way, it becomes possible to see greed as truly utopian, in a way morally
defensible and not provocatively offensive.
A rather different example of the way in which chapters in Atlas arethematically connected, necessitating that they be seen in relation to each
other, can be observed in Rand’s device of connecting the opening chapter,
entitled “The Theme” (I.1), and the concluding chapter, entitled “In the Name
of the Best Within Us” (III.10). To connect these two chapters, Rand makes
use of Eddie Willers as a Jamesian reflector, the center of consciousness that
through his inner experiences and reflections serves as a guide to our under-
standing of the story events. Thus, in the opening of Chapter 1, Eddie, aged
10, asks Dagny a question about what she supposes to be “the best within
us.” (14) In certain ways, this question can be said to strike the first chord in
the development of the novel’s major theme, the role of reason in man’s life as
manifested in productive ability. At this point, however, Rand merely hints at
an answer by having Dagny remain silent, looking up the railroad track. It isonly towards the very end that we get a fully formulated answer, now backed
and clarified by all the events that have taken place in between. This happens
in the scene of the final chapter where Eddie, trapped on a frozen train, un-
able to make it move, speaks to the Dagny of his childhood, finally grasping
the truth: “Dagny, that is what it was . . . and you knew it, then, but I
didn’t . . . you knew it when you turned to look at the rails. . . . I said ‘not
business or earning a living’ . . . but, Dagny, business and earning a living
and that in man which makes it possible—that is the best within us.”
(1082) Thus, while in The Fountainhead the story was framed by the open-
ing and concluding images of Howard Roark, Atlas has a similar yet different
frame occupied by the figure of Eddie Willers formulating to himself a ques-tion and an answer that throw light on the thematic significance of the novel,
interpreted as a whole.
So far, I have focused on Rand’s structural organization in Atlas mainly
in terms of events and incidents, paying little attention to character. One rea-
son for this is that in Atlas, the presentation of character plays a less impor-
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35Structural Integration in The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged
tant role than it does in The Fountainhead . A clue to why this is so is pro-
vided by Rand’s Journals, where, in an entry dated January 1, 1945, she
writes that Atlas “is to be much more a ‘social’ novel than The Fountain-
head ,” where the major concern was “the characters, the people as such—
their natures.” In Atlas, however, the focus is going to be on the “relation”
between the characters, that is, on society, the “personal” being of secondary
importance. Thus, while The Fountainhead was “Roark’s story,” she writes,
Atlas “must be the world’s story—in relation to its prime movers.” (392–93)
These words reveal why Rand’s portrayal of John Galt, although intended as
a representation of her ideal man, never materializes into a fully fleshed out
human being the way Roark does. As a moral ideal, he comes across more as
a symbol than as a full-dimensioned character whose moral nature is best
perceived by comparing him with others functioning as his foils.
This, however, does not mean that we are not given the opportunity toobserve interesting structural relationships between the many characters in-
habiting the world of Atlas. But unlike in The Fountainhead, these relation-
ships do not constitute patterns of analogy and contrast circling around one
central hero representing the moral norm. Instead, we get a distribution of
characters roughly divided into two groups: those who represent the produc-
ers (or the prime movers) and those who represent the looters (or those who
exploit the prime movers). But within these two groups we find all sorts of
variations held up for comparison. If we compare James Taggart and Lillian
Rearden, for example, we see variations of evil rooted in the desire to destroy
goodness in others, Taggart in relation to Cherryl and Lillian in relation to
Rearden. And if we compare James Taggart and Robert Stadler, we see
variations of how a character is spiritually destroyed by false premises, Taggartillustrating the destruction of mediocrity consumed by envy and malice and
Stadler illustrating the destruction of greatness unwilling to correct a grave
error.
Yet, although many other examples could be mentioned, it is notable
that in Atlas the ideal man so central to Ayn Rand’s creative concerns is no
longer the center of the novel’s overall structural organization. Instead, he is
lurking as a kind of Olympian God behind the events, governing the plot but
not our moral attention, nor our emotional sympathies, nor our conceptualizing
processes. In this novel, it is not the central hero but the philosophical theme
that plays the major role, determining the way the diverse components are
combined to make up an artistic whole.
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36 The Literary Art of Ayn Rand
Conclusion
Although there is much more that can be said about Ayn Rand’s art of struc-
tural integration in The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged , I hope that this
brief discussion has been sufficient to suggest the importance of reading these
works with a heightened attention to their structural patterns. To fully appre-
ciate the two novels, it is not enough that we involve ourselves in the action on
the plot level; we must also respond to the works as artistically integrated
wholes, observing the many ways the component parts—whether chapters,
scenes, incidents, characters, or descriptive passages—are combined into
patterns both thematically meaningful and aesthetically pleasing. Far from
functioning as simplistic propaganda vehicles for Rand’s ideas, as many will
have it, the novels emerge as sophisticated narratives in which the ideas are
given highly variegated structural expression, challenging the readers to ob-
serve them in their full range of richness and complexity.
Notes
1 Ayn Rand, The Romantic Manifesto (New York: New American Library, 1975). All references
are to the Signet edition, hereafter RM .
2 Leonard Peikoff discusses the point in Objectivism: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand (New York:
Dutton, 1991), 445–47. See also Stephen Cox, “The Literary Achievement of The Foun-
tainhead ” (page 48 in this volume).
3 Ayn Rand, The Fountainhead (New York: New American Library, 1952). All references are to
the Signet edition, hereafter FH .
4 The critic who most notably has drawn attention to the forward movement of plot is Peter
Brooks, in Reading for the Plot: Design and Intention in Narrative (Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press, 1984). However, unlike Rand, Brooks bases his account of
plot on Freudian desire rather than on Aristotle’s notion of final causation.
5 On the centrality of organic unity in Romantic theory, see M. H. Abrams, The Mirror and the
Lamp (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1953), especially Ch. 8, 184–225. On a possible
link between Rand’s aesthetic concern with organic unity and Russian dialectical thought,
see Chris M. Sciabarra, Ayn Rand: The Russian Radical (University Park: Pennsylvania
State University Press, 1995), especially note 7, 414.
6 David Harriman, ed., Journals of Ayn Rand (New York: Dutton, 1997), hereafter JAR.
7 Ayn Rand, The Art of Fiction: A Guide for Writers and Readers, Tore Boeckmann, ed. (New
York: Plume, 2000), 17.
8 Ronald E. Merrill, The Ideas of Ayn Rand (La Salle IL: Open Court, 1991), 46.
9 On Rand’s view of the role of the malevolent universe premise in art, see RM 108–9.
10 See Ayn Rand, Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology (New York: New American Library,
1979), especially Ch. 2, 11–23.
11 Cf. JAR 90–91.
12 For an excellent analysis of the detective novel in these terms, see Tzvetan Todorov, “The
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37 Structural Integration in The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged
Typology of Detective Fiction,” in his The Poetics of Prose, trans. Richard Howard
(Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1977), 42–52.
13 Ayn Rand, Atlas Shrugged (New York: New American Library, 1957). All references are tothe Signet edition.