I’ll admit, I had to look the meaning of the title chapter up. Rand makes it clear in the next chapter that it’s an Aristotle reference, but she doesn’t elaborate. I know that people used to study the classics more than they do now, and so perhaps the concept was considered common knowledge at the…
Category: Sisyphus Winced
Atlas Shrugged Chapter 3: The Top and the Bottom
Alas, this chapter is not a foray into D/s relationships. Instead, it’s another contrast chapter, this time contrasting Jim’s high-on-the-hog lifestyle with Dagny’s more modest concerns. Chapter summary: Jim Taggert attends an event with various bigwigs in the steel industry, where they prattle on about Mexico and he complains about his sister. In a bridge…
Atlas Shrugged Chapter 2: The Chain
A disingenuousness of Third Person Omniscient is that it creates the perception of a somewhat objective perspective (in contrast to First Person) while potentially remaining subjective. “The Chain” is a good example of this; this is nearly entirely Hank Rearden’s perspective, with events and dialog presented to make him look good and the other people in his…
Atlas Shrugged Chapter 1: The Theme
First off, I’m already getting vaguely tired of “Who is John Galt?”, as I figured I would. I’m also finding myself trying too hard to sort “good guys” and “bad guys” with trepidation towards Rand’s message. So much cultural baggage has come to surround this book that it’s difficult to maintain objectivity. Chapter summary: Taggert…
Atlas Shrugged: My prejudices
Before I begin reading, I want to set out some of my own biases and perspectives. No reader enters a book without already having some sort of expectations, even if they’re indirect. Those expectations color the reader’s experience with and interpretation of the book. Politically, I call myself a liberal, a classical liberal, or a…
Atlas Shrugged: Prologue
My wife (let’s call her Miranda, because it amuses me to do so) was looking at me like one would a man about to descend into madness. “It has 1000 pages,” I’d said. “Ten pages a day would take, what? 100 days. About three months. I could blog about it as I read it.” I…