Ayn Rand's Fountainhead and its Russian antecedents
The Modern Language Review, vol. 115, no. 4, 2020, pp. 763–790
Abstract
The American novelist Ayn Rand (1905-1982), who has strongly influenced right-wing politics in the Western Anglophone world, was a product of late imperial Russia, where she grew up. In this article, I use Rand’s first major novel, The Fountainhead (1943), to illustrate her unacknowledged debt to certain nineteenth-century Russian writers and thinkers. It is in their works that we find the seeds of Rand’s controversial thoughts on religion and atheism, determinism and free will, egoism and altruism. They shaped her critique of socialism, her celebration of self-interest, and her division of mankind into a self-willed elite and a compliant herd.
