Lexington Books
Pages: 352
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-7391-1031-7 • Paperback • May 2005 • $56.99 • (£44.00)
978-0-7391-5474-8 • eBook • May 2005 • $54.00 • (£42.00)
Robert Mayhew is Professor of Philosophy at Seton Hall University.
Chapter 1
Chapter 1: The History of Anthem
Chapter 2 Anthem in Manuscript: Finding the Words
Chapter 3 Publishing Anthem
Chapter 4 Anthem: '38 and '46
Chapter 5 Reviews of Anthem
Chapter 6 Adapting Anthem: Projects That Were and Might Have Been
Chapter 7 Anthem and 'The Individualist Manifesto'
Chapter 8
Chapter 2: Anthem as Literature and as Philosophy
Chapter 9 Anthem as a Psychological Fantasy
Chapter 10 Anthem in the Context of Related Literary Works: 'We are not like our brothers'
Chapter 11 'Sacrilege toward the Individual': The Anti-Pride of Thomas More's Utopia and Anthem's Radical Alternative
Chapter 12 Needs of the Psyche in Ayn Rand's Early Ethical Thought
Chapter 13 Breaking the Metaphysical Chains of Dictatorship: Free Will and Determinism in Anthem
Chapter 14 Prometheus' Discovery: Individualism and the Meaning of the Concept I in Anthem
Chapter 15 Freedom of Disassociation in Anthem
Chapter 16 Anthem and Collectivist Regression into Primitivism
Chapter 17 Epilogue: Anthem: An Appreciation
Chapter 18 Appendix: Teaching Anthem: A Guide for High School and University Teachers
This collection sheds powerful light on the origins, literary genius, and striking philosophical depth of Ayn Rand's wonderful little novel. Some of the essays are astonishingly good.....
— Allan Gotthelf, author of On Ayn Rand
This book is filled with scholarly nuggets that provide insightful analyses of the history, literary techniques, and philosophic principles in Ayn Rand's futuristic novelette Anthem. It is valuable reading for anyone who desires a deeper understanding of this classic work....
— Gary Hull