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Fore more urdu books visit www.4Urdu.com

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More oxford <strong>books</strong> @ www.OxfordeBook.<strong>com</strong><strong>Fore</strong> <strong>more</strong> <strong>urdu</strong> <strong>books</strong> <strong>visit</strong> <strong>www.4Urdu</strong>.<strong>com</strong>CHAPTER TWOIndividualists of the World, Unite!$once she spotted the first pink, Rand began to see them everywhere.They had even infiltrated the movie studios, she soon discovered.Despite her success as a novelist and playwright, Rand could findno work in the lucrative film industry, a failure she blamed on her outspokenopposition to Soviet Russia. She turned instead to the novel thatwould be<strong>com</strong>e The Fountainhead. Politics soon emerged as a wel<strong>com</strong>edistraction. As Roosevelt launched his historic program of governmentreforms Rand watched closely. She read the New York newspapers regularlyand began dipping into the work of authors critical of the president.By 1940 her interest in politics had be<strong>com</strong>e all-consuming. Firedto action by the presidential campaign of Wendell Willkie she stoppedwork on her novel and began volunteering full time for the New YorkCity Willkie Club.The Willkie campaign helped Rand crystallize the political nature ofher work and resolve unarticulated tensions about American democracyand capitalism that surfaced during her early work on The Fountainhead.At first Rand was hesitant to ascribe political meaning to the novel. Shewanted her new book to be philosophical and abstract, not rooted inhistoric circumstance, as was We the Living. Nor was she certain of whather political ideas were, beyond principled anti-Communism. Rand wassuspicious of both democracy and capitalism, unsure if either systemcould be trusted to safeguard individual rights against the dangers ofthe mob.A few months’ immersion in the hurly-burly of American politicswashed away this cynicism. The campaign was an unexpected windowinto her adopted country, spurring new understandings of Americanhistory and culture. Afterward Rand began to praise America in termsthat would have been utterly alien to her only months before. Like any39

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