Anthem's Collectivist Society

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“Councils are the voice of all justice, for they are the voice of all men (22)”. In Anthem’s collectivist society, the council attains all power, and the citizens have no power at all. The council makes all decisions and is bias against any sort of individuality. Citizens are not allowed to make many decisions of their own. They have been trained to believe that everything the council says and does is correct and that their way is the only way. “We are one in all and all in one. There are no men but only the great WE. One, indivisible and forever (19).” The people in Anthem live by these words. Their council leaders have convinced them that these words are true. Anthem’s collectivist society revolves around the beliefs and ideas of the …show more content…

The basic ideas the council rulers appeal to in order to retain power consist of limiting the people of their world below them to having nothing of their own, such as a house, friends, let alone their own name (which is replaced with a sequence of words and numbers to identify an individual). Some of the beliefs of the council are very similar to the ones in Plato’s Republic. For instance, Plato states that “Philosophers form the only class of men to possess knowledge and are also the most just of men (Plato’s Republic 2). In other words, what Plato is essentially saying is that the only the highest class (in Anthem’s case, the council) is worthy to obtain any additional knowledge past basic grade school education. This is extremely demeaning due to the fact that this society is said to revolve around equality, when overall, it is just a massive dictatorship ruled by the so called “elite” …show more content…

An example of this is shown in the book when Equality learns of the unspeakable word: “I”. When Equality discovers this word, a whole new perspective of life is revealed to him. The next chapter opens up with the words, “I am. I think. I will. My hands… My spirit… My sky… My forest… This earth of mine…. What must I say besides? These are the words. This is the answer (94).”. Equality’s discovery of the unspeakable word enabled him to view life from a different angle; he was able to realize the significance of himself as an individual. He was able to understand that every action he made didn’t have to be for the “good of his

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