Theme Of Individuality In Ayn Rand's Anthem

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There has always been a slight anxiety of being alone or standing alone. Students rarely want to admit to having an answer different from the rest of their classmates; some people do not want to go somewhere and do something by themselves. Notably, with more shy or anxious people, they will often stick around someone they know, so they will not be alone in the crowd. Although that company might help them make it through those nerve-wracking moments, when is the right time for them to walk alone? Should a person ever walk alone? In Ayn Rand’s Anthem, Equality’s internal conflict of conformity versus individuality plays a role that Equality needs to overcome in order to complete their quest for freedom which helps create their outcast archetype and gives significance to the final word of the novel. The internal conflict in Anthem plays a role within the novel by providing the complication that the protagonist, Equality, has to overcome in order to complete their Anthem closes with one final word: ego, which can be defined as “self-image” or “self-importance”, according to dictionary.com. It is portrayed as an important word, as Rand describes at the end of the novel, “The word which can never die on this earth, for it is the heart of it and the meaning and the glory. The sacred word: ego” (Rand 105). This is one of the many examples of how Equality glorified this word. After a long internal struggle between submission and disobedience towards conforming to their ways, Equality decides to disobey the rules of his society and rediscovered the forgotten words “I” and “ego”. Equality’s internal conflict throughout Anthem provides an obstacle in their quest for freedom. The detail creates their outcast archetype and helps create the powerful ending that closes the novel. In a world of conformity, Equality managed to find their own individuality, their own

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