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AVENGING_RAND
January 11, 2005
Quotations from Ayn Rand's
"Bootleg Romanticism", Collected in
dated January 1965. "The Romantic
Manifesto"
(1971).
"Thrillers are the product, the popular
offshoot, of the _Romantic_ school of art that
sees man, not as a helpless pawn of fate, but
as a being who possesses volition [...]"
"Romanticism is a value-oriented,
morality-centered movement: its material is
not journalistic minutiae, but the abstract,
the essential, the universal principles of
man's nature -- and its basic literary
commandment is to portray man 'as he might be
and ought to be.'"
"Thrillers are a simplified, elementary version of
Romantic literature. They are not concerned with a
delineation of values, but, taking certain fundamental
values for granted, they are concerned with [...] the
battle of good against evil in terms of purposeful action"
"Thrillers are the kindergarten arithmetic, of which
the higher mathematics is the greatest novels of
world literature."
"The last remnants of Romanticism are flickering
only in the field of popular art [...] Thrillers
are the last refuge of the qualities that have
vanished from modern literature: life, color,
imagination [...]"
"The social status of thrillers reveals the profound
gulf splitting today's culture -- the gulf between
the people and its alleged intellectual leaders."
"A sample of that cultural gulf -- a small sample
of a vast modern tragedy -- may be seen in an
interesting little article in _TV Guide_ (May 9,
1964), under the title 'Violence Can Be Fun' and
with the eloquent subtitle: 'In Britain,
everybody laughs at 'The Avengers'-- except the
audience.'"
"_The Avengers_ is a sensationally successful British
television series featuring the adventures of secret
agent John Steed and his attractive assistant
Catherine Gale -- 'surrounded by some delightfully
ingenious plots ...' states the article. '_The
Avengers_ is compulsive viewing for a huge audience.
Steed and Mrs. Gale are household words.'"
"But recently 'the secret sorrow of producer John
Bryce was revealed: _The Avengers_ was conceived
as a satire of counterespionage thrillers, but
the British public still insists on taking it
seriously.'"
"Nobody takes thrillers literally, nor cares
about their specific events, nor harbors
any frustrated desire to become a secret
agent or a private eye. Thrillers are
taken symbolically; they dramatize one of
man's widest and most crucial abstractions:
the abstraction of _moral conflict_."
"What people seek in thrillers is the
spectacle of _man's efficacy_: of his
ability to fight for his values and to
achieve them. What they see is a
condensed, simplified pattern, reduced to
its essentials: a man fighting for a vital
goal -- [...]"
"Far from suggesting an easy or 'unrealistic'
view of life, a thriller suggests the
necessity of a difficult struggle; if the hero
is 'larger-than-life,' so are the villains and
the dangers."
"An abstraction has to be 'larger-than-life' [...]"
"In the privacy of his own soul, nobody
identifies himself with the folks next
door, unless he has given up. "
"It is _not_ a leader or a protector that
they seek in a hero, since his exploits are
always highly individualistic and un-social.
What they seek is profoundly personal:
self-confidence and self-assertion."
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