Abstract
Objectivist economics rests upon the gold standard, understood to signal a commitment to self-regulation and a rejection of all discretionary measures. For Objectivists, gold has an intrinsic value, and an economy based on the precious metal is thus taken to be rooted in reality and resistant to inflation. Rand makes an analogy between this understanding of gold and ‘competence’ within everyday life: accurately comprehending the world and having the skills to productively act within it are declared to be the ‘gold standard’ of morality. This chapter is concerned specifically with questioning this construction of the gold standard in Ayn Rand’s Atlas Shrugged. Through a detailed reading of the text, it draws out gold’s constitutive tensions within the novel: a substance and yet substitutive; necessarily present while always somewhere else; secondary as well as primary; reassuringly natural yet dangerously figurative. Through an appeal to Melinda Cooper’s recent work on the family within C20th American politics, the chapter concludes this book by contending that the gold standard morality and economics of Atlas Shrugged rest on unacknowledged contradictions, with the uncanny supporting the Randian political economy even as it disturbs the self-identity and surety upon which this calls.
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Acknowledgements
My thanks to Grant Cocks, Stephen Thomson, Kristina West, and Karin Lesnik-Oberstein for their help in the research, writing, and editing of this chapter.
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Cocks, N. (2020). ‘“Oh, that’s Francisco’s private joke” […]’: Atlas Shrugged, the Gold Standard, and Utopia. In: Cocks, N. (eds) Questioning Ayn Rand. Palgrave Studies in Literature, Culture and Economics. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-53073-0_10
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