Ayn Rand
Ayn Rand (Ayn rhymes with "mine") (February 2, 1905 - March 6, 1982), born
Alissa Zinovievna Rosenbaum, was a controversial American philosopher and
novelist, most famous for her philosophy of Objectivism.
Ayn Rand was born to Jewish parents in Saint Petersburg, Russia. She studied
philosophy and history at the University of Petrograd. In 1925, she was
permitted by the Soviet government to leave the USSR briefly to visit her
relatives in America. Although she was only allowed a brief visit, she was
resolute never to return to Russia. When she arrived in America, at the age
of 21, she stayed with relatives in Chicago for 6 months before moving to
Hollywood to become a screenwriter. At this time she changed her name to Ayn
Rand, suspecting that, if her anti-socialist views became famous in America,
her family back in Russia might be persecuted by the Soviet government. In
Hollywood, while working as an extra on Cecil B. DeMille's King of Kings she
met Frank O'Connor by tripping him on purpose, and they married in 1929.
Frank O'Connor was an aspiring young actor doing bit-parts on Hollywood. His
emerging career ended when the couple moved to New York in the mid-1930s and
he was no longer available for Hollywood roles.
Initially Rand struggled in Hollywood and was forced to take odd jobs to pay
her rent. Her first success came with the sale of her screenplay Red Pawn in
1932 to Universal Studios. Rand released The Night of January 16th, a play,
in 1934, and published two commercially unsuccessful novels, We The Living
(1936), and Anthem (1938).
Rand's first major success came with the best-selling novel The Fountainhead
(1943). The manuscript for this book was difficult to get into print. It
was initially taken from publisher to publisher collecting rejection slips
as it went before it was picked up by the Bobbs-Merrill Company publishing
house. The book was so successful that the royalties and movie rights made
Rand famous and financially secure.
In 1947, as a "friendly witness" in the House Committee on Un-American
Activities, Rand testified against the activities of communist propagandists
active in Hollywood. Rand's testimony involved analysis of the 1943 film
Song of Russia. Rand testified that the movie grossly misrepresented the
socioeconomic conditions in the Soviet Union. She told the committee that
the film presented Russia as if it were an amazing paradise of comfort,
beauty and plenty for everybody. However, she said, in reality the
conditions of the average Russian peasant farmer were appalling. Apparently
this 1943 film was intentional wartime propaganda by US patriots. The tone
of the movie was, at the time, intended to provide some comfort to the US
public during their alliance with Russia toward the end of World War II.
After the HUAC hearings, when Ayn Rand was asked about her feelings on the
effectiveness of their investigations, she described the process as
"futile".
In the early 1950s Rand moved to New York. She was a visiting lecturer at
Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut (1960), Princeton University, New
Jersey (1960), Columbia University, New York (1960, 1962), The University of
Wisconsin (1961), Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore (1961), Harvard
University, Cambridge (1962), and The Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
Cambridge (1962).
In 1951 Rand met the young psychology student Nathaniel Branden, who had
read her book The Fountainhead at the age of 14. Branden, now 19, enjoyed
discussing Rand's emerging Objectivist philosophy with her. Branden's
relationship with Rand eventually took on romantic aspects, though they were
both married at the time.
Rand published the book described as her "magnum opus", Atlas Shrugged
in 1957. This book, as with The Fountainhead also became a best seller.
According to a joint survey conducted in 1991 by the Library of Congress
and the Book of the Month Club, Atlas Shrugged is recognised as the "second
most influential book for Americans today", after The Bible by numerous
authors. It is also named as one of the "25 books that have most shaped
readers lives" in a 1995–1996 list developed with the theme "Shape
Your Future—READ!" Along with Branden, Rand launched the Objectivist
movement to promote her philosophy, which she termed Objectivism.
Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, Rand developed and promoted her Objectivist
philosophy through both her fiction and non-fiction works.
Rand broke with Branden in 1968.
Ayn Rand died on March 6, 1982 and was interred in the Kensico Cemetery,
Valhalla, New York.
The Ayn Rand Institute, Center for the Advancement of Objectivism has
since registered the name Ayn Rand as a trademark, despite Ayn Rand's desire
that her name never be used to promote the philosophy she developed. During
her life Ayn Rand expressed her wishes to keep her name and the philosopy of
Objectivism separate. It is understood that this was in order to assure the
continued survival of the philosophy she developed once her own life was over.
Leonard Peikoff is Rand's sole heir, and as such, he inherited her
copyrights and manuscripts. He calls himself her "intellectual heir", and it
is widely but falsely believed that she gave him that title, intending him
to be an official leader of the Objectivist movement after her death. While
he claims to be promoting and naturally extending her philosophies, some
scholars see him as espousing his own philosophy, one that some argue Rand
herself may not have agreed with were she still alive.