...One of the chapters in the book deals with Ayn Rand. Im going to quote from it directly as I dont think there is a better way to sum it up. Saint Petersburg in revolt gave us Vladamir Nabokov, Isaiah Berlin, and Ayn Rand. The first was a novelist, the second philosopher. The third was neither but thought she was both.
I really dont think Ive seen a better quote summing up the phenomenon that is Ayn Rand. This is not political jousting either in the book youre generally quite respectful of conservative theorists. But Ayn Rand is unusual in that
well
she really was a hack. There is no way she was on par with the other theorists discussed in the book. Her work was just cartoonish, amateurish; almost a self-parody. She had no real philosophical influences and this shone through in the innumerable cracks in what she referred to as her philosophy. So, how on earth do you account for her popularity today? Is her mediocrity part of what makes her so appealing?
CR: This is one of the questions I really struggled with in writing about Rand, and I dont think I ever fully resolved it. Because youre right about her mediocrity, and Im certain thats part of her appeal, but what makes that strange is that she is a writer who claims to speak for excellence. And thats whats so odd to me: I dont know that I can think of a single less talented writer who has ever pressed the claims of superiority that there are superior beings out there, that she is one of them, that her readers are among them too with such unwarranted self-confidence. Its that marriage of total arrogance and total confidence that I find so mystifying.
Some people think that that is in a way her appeal: she gives not very talented people a sense that they are part of an Olympian guard. Im not really persuaded of that. I think her appeal lies elsewhere: she has a vision of transcendence, of self-overcoming, which is central to conservatism, but its a vision that is ultimately flat and cartoonish.
Its the purest form of kitsch: it preys upon an idea of high culture, of cultural greatness, but it doesnt make the demands of that culture, except in a cheesy and romantic way. It allows people to imagine themselves living these exalted lives, without having to actually live those lives. Its pure movie magic.
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