Why did Ayn Rand feel it necessary to have Cheryl Taggert take her own life?
Posted by richrobinson 9 years, 5 months ago to The Gulch: General
When I first read Atlas Shrugged the death of Cheryl was tragic and powerful. I was thinking the other day that I may be missing something. Ayn Rand had things happen for a reason. She thought things thru in agonizing detail. Is there more to Cheryls death than I realize? Why didn't Cheryl just reach out to Dagny again? Why not get a divorce with a big financial settlement and disappear? Why not just run away? I am wondering what all her death represents.
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I wasn't at rock bottom when I read atlas shrugged but I never went back.
And I would add to your statement, "...using them as baby factories and cannon fodder" -and as voting machines.
And the world marches on in its socialist-collectivist triumphs little-by-little as it destroys freedom while men and nations fail to recognize its evil.
As you state, "...where James was respected and Dagny looked down on."
How could Cheryl trust herself to fight in a world controlled by Taggarts and his other powerful cronies when she had been so blind, so wrong...
Rand showed us how easy it was to fall into blind belief, hero worship without basis, failure to question. Cheryl represented the everyday common person of limited experience and knowledge. She had no defenses against the evils which she found herself living amongst. She was by no means prepared emotionally or intellectually.
When the Beast raised its head and she saw it for the first time... and that she had been living in its belly as it survived off her... Then self-immolation may have been her only recourse.
ent novel who has a certain similarity: Catherine
Halsey in The Fountainhead. Catherine is also
destroyed by the most evil villain in the novel, Ells-
worth Toohey. Wanting to be a virtuous person, but mistaking altruism for virtue and selfishness
for evil, she finds herself becoming dishonest,
hypocritical, nasty, and "selfish" (in a worse way
than she had expected); and Toohey tells her
that she has just made the "most selfish speech" he has heard in his life. "To hell with
everybody, as long as I'm virtuous," he des-
cribes her attitude. When he gets done with her,
she looks as if she has "been run over by a
tank." And when Peter Keating jilts her, that
takes the last prop from under her. However, I
don't want to equate the two. I have much more
respect for Cherryl; at least, when she finds her
idol going against her values, it is he whom she
denounces, rather than her values.--I feel real
pity for Catherine, but also a certain amount of
contempt (at least, for the way she has become
in her last appearance, in the scene with Keat-
ing). I feel respect for Cherryl, and sympathy
for her in her distress.
These archetypes, already quite prevalent and well established in our society, outline the roles that James wanted himself and Cheryl to play - and which Cheryl initially played to perfection. James' ego flourished under this attention, which thought him greater than his sister. When Cheryl's own personal growth and increased maturity and knowledge shattered the roles, James lashed out and Cheryl's nascent strength was destroyed.
Tragedy.
Jan
Being in business with its ups and downs and dealing with various forms of avarice there were many times I needed to re-read something by Rand to keep me from becoming derailed.
Taggart and others like him. If she had gotten a
divorce and a big settlement, the evil might not
have impressed the reader as being so serious.
Cherryl thought that Dagny, also, was doomed.
A person without such an explicit philosophy
like the strikers, might not have the strength to
survive that situation .
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