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.
Quite the stretch. How are you deriving these stats? Without some facts, this is merely using a math label to add gravitas to an opinion...your opinion.
And... You asked. :)
Also, I have never forgiven Rand and Dagny for just abandoning Eddie Williers, with whom I most identify: I can't run a railroad (or much of anything else) but I know right from wrong.
Even if we're just followers, we are followers of the right, of reason and liberty.
How is that for a scientist playing a psychologist?
All of her characters were extremely realistic, and she spent countless hours, months and sometimes even years developing each one.
Cheryl committed suicide for the simple reason that she felt at a loss about everything she believed in, which was much more than the honor and dignity of her husband. No, her entire world turned on her and well; she ended up realizing that she was on the wrong side and not the right after all. Her own dignity drove her to do what in some cultures is considered quite honourable; keeping one´s honor by ending one´s own life.
I believe her death represents the end of a farse, and for the character the ultimate escape from the winding wrong-turned road she ultimately realises she´s taken, to her surprise and due to deceit. A weak character or a very proud one, that too is left for each of us to decide.
Great Work
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