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The Fountainhead

The Fountainhead is a 1943 novel by Russian-American author Ayn Rand, her first major literary success. The novel's protagonist, Howard Roark, is an intransigent young architect who battles against conventional standards and refuses to compromise with an architectural establishment unwilling to accept innovation. Roark embodies what Rand believed to be the ideal man, and his struggle reflects Rand's belief that individualism is superior to collectivism.

The Fountainhead
Cover of the first edition
AuthorAyn Rand
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenrePhilosophical fiction
PublisherBobbs Merrill
Publication date
1943
Pages753 (1st edition)
OCLC300033023

Roark is opposed by what he calls "second-handers", who value conformity over independence and integrity. These include Roark's former classmate, Peter Keating, who succeeds by following popular styles but turns to Roark for help with design problems. Ellsworth Toohey, a socialist architecture critic who uses his influence to promote his political and social agenda, tries to destroy Roark's career. Tabloid newspaper publisher Gail Wynand seeks to shape popular opinion; he befriends Roark, then betrays him when public opinion turns in a direction he cannot control. The novel's most controversial character is Roark's lover, Dominique Francon. She believes that non-conformity has no chance of winning, so she alternates between helping Roark and working to undermine him.

Twelve publishers rejected the manuscript before an editor at the Bobbs-Merrill Company risked his job to get it published. Contemporary reviewers' opinions were polarized. Some praised the novel as a powerful paean to individualism, while others thought it overlong and lacking sympathetic characters. Initial sales were slow, but the book gained a following by word of mouth and became a bestseller. More than 10 million copies of The Fountainhead have been sold worldwide and it has been translated into more than 30 languages. The novel attracted a new following for Rand and has enjoyed a lasting influence, especially among architects, entrepreneurs, American conservatives and libertarians.[1]

The novel has been adapted into other media several times. An illustrated version was syndicated in newspapers in 1945. Warner Bros. produced a film version in 1949; Rand wrote the screenplay, and Gary Cooper played Roark. Critics panned the film, which did not recoup its budget; several directors and writers have considered developing a new film adaptation. In 2014, Belgian theater director Ivo van Hove created a stage adaptation, which received mixed reviews.

Plot edit

 
Ayn Rand in 1943

In early 1922, Howard Roark is expelled from the architecture department of the Stanton Institute of Technology because he has not adhered to the school's preference for historical convention in building design. Roark goes to New York City and gets a job with Henry Cameron. Cameron was once a renowned architect, but now gets few commissions. In the meantime, Roark's popular but vacuous fellow student and housemate Peter Keating (whom Roark sometimes helped with projects) graduates with high honors. He too moves to New York, where he has been offered a position with the prestigious architecture firm, Francon & Heyer. Keating ingratiates himself with Guy Francon and works to remove rivals among his coworkers. After Francon's partner, Lucius Heyer, suffers a fatal stroke brought on by Keating's antagonism, Francon chooses Keating to replace him. Meanwhile, Roark and Cameron create inspired work, but struggle financially.

After Cameron retires, Keating hires Roark, whom Francon soon fires for refusing to design a building in the classical style. Roark works briefly at another firm, then opens his own office but has trouble finding clients and closes it down. He gets a job in a granite quarry owned by Francon. There he meets Francon's daughter Dominique, a columnist for The New York Banner, while she is staying at her family's estate nearby. They are immediately attracted to each other, leading to a rough sexual encounter that Dominique later calls a rape.[2] Shortly after, Roark is notified that a client is ready to start a new building, and he returns to New York. Dominique also returns to New York and learns Roark is an architect. She attacks his work in public, but visits him for secret sexual encounters.

Ellsworth M. Toohey, who writes a popular architecture column in the Banner, is an outspoken socialist who shapes public opinion through his column and a circle of influential associates. Toohey sets out to destroy Roark through a smear campaign. He recommends Roark to Hopton Stoddard, a wealthy acquaintance who wants to build a Temple of the Human Spirit. Roark's unusual design includes a nude statue modeled on Dominique; Toohey persuades Stoddard to sue Roark for malpractice. Toohey and several architects (including Keating) testify at the trial that Roark is incompetent as an architect due to his rejection of historical styles. Dominique also argues for the prosecution in tones that can be interpreted to be speaking more in Roark's defense than for the plaintiff, but he loses the case. Dominique decides that since she cannot have the world she wants, in which men like Roark are recognized for their greatness, she will live entirely in the world she has, which shuns Roark and praises Keating. She marries Keating and turns herself over to him, doing and saying whatever he wants, and actively persuading potential clients to hire him instead of Roark.

To win Keating a prestigious commission offered by Gail Wynand, the owner and editor-in-chief of the Banner, Dominique agrees to sleep with Wynand. Wynand is so strongly attracted to Dominique that he pays Keating to divorce her, after which Wynand and Dominique are married. Wanting to build a home for himself and his new wife, Wynand discovers that Roark designed every building he likes and so hires him. Roark and Wynand become close friends; Wynand is unaware of Roark's past relationship with Dominique.

Washed up and out of the public eye, Keating pleads with Toohey to use his influence to get the commission for the much-sought-after Cortlandt housing project. Keating knows his most successful projects were aided by Roark, so he asks for Roark's help in designing Cortlandt. Roark agrees in exchange for complete anonymity and Keating's promise that it will be built exactly as designed. After taking a long vacation with Wynand, Roark returns to find that Keating was not able to prevent major changes from being made in Cortlandt's construction. Roark dynamites the project to prevent the subversion of his vision.

Roark is arrested and his action is widely condemned, but Wynand decides to use his papers to defend his friend. This unpopular stance hurts the circulation of his newspapers, and Wynand's employees go on strike after Wynand dismisses Toohey for disobeying him and criticizing Roark. Faced with the prospect of closing the paper, Wynand gives in and publishes a denunciation of Roark. At his trial, Roark makes a lengthy speech about the value of ego and integrity, and he is found not guilty. Dominique leaves Wynand for Roark. Wynand, who has betrayed his own values by attacking Roark, finally grasps the nature of the power he thought he held. He shuts down the Banner and commissions a final building from Roark, a skyscraper that will serve as a monument to human achievement. Eighteen months later, the Wynand Building is under construction. Dominique, now Roark's wife, enters the site to meet him atop its steel framework.

Major characters edit

Howard Roark edit

 
In writing the character of Howard Roark, Rand was inspired by the architect Frank Lloyd Wright.

Rand's stated goal in writing fiction was to portray her vision of an ideal man.[3][4] The character of Howard Roark, the protagonist of The Fountainhead, was the first instance where she believed she had achieved this.[5] Roark embodies Rand's egoistic moral ideals,[6] especially the virtues of independence[7] and integrity.[8]

The character of Roark was at least partly inspired by American architect Frank Lloyd Wright. Rand described the inspiration as limited to specific ideas he had about architecture and "the pattern of his career".[9] She denied that Wright had anything to do with the philosophy expressed by Roark or the events of the plot.[10][11] Rand's denials have not stopped commentators from claiming stronger connections between Wright and Roark.[11][12] Wright equivocated about whether he thought Roark was based on him, sometimes implying that he did, at other times denying it.[13] Wright biographer Ada Louise Huxtable described significant differences between Wright's philosophy and Rand's, and quoted him declaring, "I deny the paternity and refuse to marry the mother."[14] Architecture critic Martin Filler said that Roark resembles the Swiss-French modernist architect Le Corbusier more closely than Wright.[15]

Peter Keating edit

In contrast to the individualistic Roark, Peter Keating is a conformist who bases his choices on what others want. Introduced to the reader as Roark's classmate in architecture school, two years ahead of him, Keating does not really want to be an architect. He loves painting, but his mother steers him toward architecture instead.[16] In this as in all his decisions, Keating does what others expect rather than follow his personal interests. He becomes a social climber, focused on improving his career and social standing using a combination of personal manipulation and conformity to popular styles.[16][17][18] He follows a similar path in his private life: he chooses a loveless marriage to Dominique instead of marrying the woman he loves—who lacks Dominique's beauty and social connections. By middle age, Keating's career is in decline and he is unhappy with his path, but it is too late for him to change.[19][20]

Rand did not use a specific architect as a model for Keating.[21] Her inspiration for the character came from a neighbor she knew while working in Hollywood in the early 1930s. Rand asked this young woman to explain her goals in life. The woman's response was focused on social comparisons: the neighbor wanted her material possessions and social standing to equal or exceed those of other people. Rand created Keating as an archetype of this motivation, which she saw as the opposite of self-interest.[22]

Dominique Francon edit

 
Patricia Neal played Dominique Francon in the film adaptation.

Dominique Francon is the heroine of The Fountainhead, described by Rand as "the woman for a man like Howard Roark".[23] Rand described Dominique as similar to herself "in a bad mood".[24] Philosopher Andrew Bernstein wrote: "For much of the novel, Dominique is a tortured soul, tormented by a profound inner conflict between her imperishable idealism and a deep-seated conviction that a debased society will inexorably crush the towering genius she so fervently hero-worships".[25] Believing that the values she admires cannot survive in the real world, she chooses to turn away from them so that the world cannot harm her. Only at the end of the novel does she accept that she can be happy and survive.[24][26][27]

The character has provoked varied reactions from commentators. Philosopher Chris Matthew Sciabarra called her "one of the more bizarre characters in the novel".[17] Literature scholar Mimi Reisel Gladstein called her "an interesting case study in perverseness".[18] Writer Tore Boeckmann described her as a character with conflicting beliefs and saw her actions as a logical representation of how those conflicts might play out.[28]

Gail Wynand edit

Gail Wynand is a wealthy newspaper mogul who rose from a destitute childhood in the ghettoes of New York (Hell's Kitchen) to control much of the city's print media. While Wynand shares many of the character qualities of Roark, his success is dependent upon his ability to pander to public opinion. Rand presents this as a tragic flaw that eventually leads to his downfall. In her journals Rand described Wynand as "the man who could have been" a heroic individualist, contrasting him to Roark, "the man who can be and is".[29][30] Some elements of Wynand's character were inspired by real-life newspaper tycoon William Randolph Hearst,[29][31][32] including Hearst's yellow journalism and mixed success in attempts to gain political influence.[29] Wynand ultimately fails in his attempts to wield power, losing his newspaper, his wife (Dominique), and his friendship with Roark.[33] The character has been interpreted as a representation of the master morality described by philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche;[34] his tragic nature illustrates Rand's rejection of Nietzsche's philosophy.[30][35][36] In Rand's view, a person like Wynand, who seeks power over others, is as much a "second-hander" as a conformist such as Keating.[37][38][39]

Ellsworth Toohey edit

 
Harold Laski was one of Rand's inspirations for the character of Ellsworth Toohey.

Ellsworth Monkton Toohey is Roark's antagonist. He is Rand's personification of evil—the most active and self-aware villain in any of her novels.[19][40][41] Toohey is a socialist, and represents the spirit of collectivism more generally. He styles himself as representative of the will of the masses, but his actual desire is for power over others.[19][42] He controls individual victims by destroying their sense of self-worth, and seeks broader power (over "the world", as he declares to Keating in a moment of candor) by promoting the ideals of ethical altruism and a rigorous egalitarianism that treats all people and achievements as equally valuable.[40][43] Rand used her memory of the democratic socialist British Labour Party Chairman Harold Laski to help her imagine what Toohey would do in a given situation. She attended a New York lecture by Laski as part of gathering material for the novel, following which she changed the physical appearance of the character to be similar to that of Laski.[44] New York intellectuals Lewis Mumford and Clifton Fadiman also helped inspire the character.[31][32]

History edit

Background and development edit

When Rand first arrived in New York as an immigrant from the Soviet Union in 1926, she was greatly impressed by the Manhattan skyline's towering skyscrapers, which she saw as symbols of freedom, and resolved that she would write about them.[45][46] In 1927, Rand was working as a junior screenwriter for movie producer Cecil B. DeMille when he asked her to write a script for what would become the 1928 film Skyscraper. The original story by Dudley Murphy was about two construction workers working on a skyscraper who are rivals for a woman's love. Rand rewrote it, transforming the rivals into architects. One of them, Howard Kane, was an idealist dedicated to erecting the skyscraper despite enormous obstacles. The film would have ended with Kane standing atop the completed skyscraper. DeMille rejected Rand's script, and the completed film followed Murphy's original idea. Rand's version contained elements she would use in The Fountainhead.[47][48]

In 1928, Rand made notes for a proposed, but never written, novel titled The Little Street.[49] Rand's notes for it contain elements that carried over into her work on The Fountainhead.[50] David Harriman, who edited the notes for the posthumously published Journals of Ayn Rand (1997), described the story's villain as a preliminary version of the character Ellsworth Toohey, and this villain's assassination by the protagonist as prefiguring the attempted assassination of Toohey.[51]

 
 
New York skyscrapers such as the McGraw Hill Building (left) and the Woolworth Building (right) inspired Rand to write a novel about architecture.

Rand began The Fountainhead (originally titled Second-Hand Lives) following the completion of her first novel, We the Living, in 1934. That earlier novel was based in part on people and events familiar to Rand; the new novel, on the other hand, focused on the less-familiar world of architecture. She therefore conducted extensive research that included reading many biographies and other books about architecture.[52] She also worked as an unpaid typist in the office of architect Ely Jacques Kahn.[53] Rand began her notes for the new novel in December 1935.[54]

Rand wanted to write a novel that was less overtly political than We the Living, to avoid being viewed as "a 'one-theme' author".[55] As she developed the story, she began to see more political meaning in the novel's ideas about individualism.[56] Rand also planned to introduce the novel's four sections with quotes from Friedrich Nietzsche, whose ideas had influenced her own intellectual development, but she eventually decided that Nietzsche's ideas were too different from hers. She edited the final manuscript to remove the quotes and other allusions to him.[57][58]

Rand's work on The Fountainhead was repeatedly interrupted. In 1937, she took a break from it to write a novella called Anthem.[59] One night in June 1938, she almost completely gave up on writing the book, but her husband Frank O'Connor encouraged her in an hours-long conversation, ultimately convincing her not to give up.[60] She also completed a stage adaptation of We the Living that ran briefly in 1940.[59] That same year, she became active in politics. She first worked as a volunteer in Wendell Willkie's presidential campaign, and then attempted to form a group for conservative intellectuals.[61] As her royalties from earlier projects ran out, she began doing freelance work as a script reader for movie studios. When Rand finally found a publisher, the novel was only one-third complete.[62]

Publication history edit

Although she was a previously published novelist and had a successful Broadway play, Rand had difficulty finding a publisher for The Fountainhead. Macmillan Publishing, which had published We the Living, rejected the book after Rand insisted they provide more publicity for her new novel than they had done for the first one.[63] Rand's agent began submitting the book to other publishers; in 1938, Knopf signed a contract to publish the book. When Rand was only a quarter done with the manuscript by October 1940, Knopf canceled her contract.[64] Several other publishers rejected the book. When Rand's agent began to criticize the novel, Rand fired the agent and decided to handle submissions herself.[65] Twelve publishers (including Macmillan and Knopf) rejected the book.[62][66][67]

While Rand was working as a script reader for Paramount Pictures, her boss put her in touch with the Bobbs-Merrill Company. A recently hired editor, Archibald Ogden, liked the book, but two internal reviewers gave conflicting opinions. One said it was a great book that would never sell; the other said it was trash but would sell well. Ogden's boss, Bobbs-Merrill president D.L. Chambers, decided to reject the book. Ogden responded by wiring to the head office, "If this is not the book for you, then I am not the editor for you." His strong stand won Rand the contract on December 10, 1941. She also got a $1,000 advance so she could work full-time to complete the novel by January 1, 1943.[68][69]

Rand worked long hours through 1942 to complete the final two-thirds of her manuscript, which she delivered on December 31, 1942.[69][70] Rand's working title for the book was Second-Hand Lives, but Ogden pointed out that this emphasized the story's villains. Rand offered The Mainspring as an alternative, but this title had been recently used for another book. She then used a thesaurus and found 'fountainhead' as a synonym.[66] The Fountainhead was published on May 7, 1943, with 7,500 copies in the first printing. Initial sales were slow, but they began to rise in late 1943, driven primarily by word of mouth.[71][72] The novel began appearing on bestseller lists in 1944.[73] It reached number six on The New York Times bestseller list in August 1945, over two years after its initial publication.[74] By 1956, the hardcover edition sold over 700,000 copies.[75] The first paperback edition was published by the New American Library in 1952.[76]

A 25th anniversary edition was issued by the New American Library in 1971, including a new introduction by Rand.[77] The cover of the twenty-fifth anniversary edition featured a painting by Frank O'Connor titled Man Also Rises.[71] In 1993, a 50th anniversary edition from Bobbs-Merrill added an afterword by Rand's heir, Leonard Peikoff.[77] The novel has been translated into more than 30 languages.[a]

Deleted Passages edit

Some passages were deleted during the publication of the novel, the most important of which concerns the relationship of the protagonist Howard Roark with actress Vesta Dunning. The deleted passages were first published posthumously in section 3 of The Early Ayn Rand in 1984.

Themes edit

Individualism edit

Rand indicated that the primary theme of The Fountainhead was "individualism versus collectivism, not in politics but within a man's soul".[79] Philosopher Douglas Den Uyl identified the individualism presented in the novel as being specifically of an American kind, portrayed in the context of that country's society and institutions.[80] Apart from scenes such as Roark's courtroom defense of the American concept of individual rights, she avoided direct discussion of political issues. As historian James Baker described it, "The Fountainhead hardly mentions politics or economics, despite the fact that it was born in the 1930s. Nor does it deal with world affairs, although it was written during World War II. It is about one man against the system, and it does not permit other matters to intrude."[81] Early drafts of the novel included more explicit political references, but Rand removed them from the finished text.[82]

Architecture edit

 
Rand's descriptions of Roark's buildings were inspired by the work of Frank Lloyd Wright, such as Fallingwater.

Rand chose the profession of architecture as the background for her novel, although she knew nothing about the field beforehand.[83] As a field that combines art, technology, and business, it allowed her to illustrate her primary themes in multiple areas.[84] Rand later wrote that architects provide "both art and a basic need of men's survival".[83] In a speech to a chapter of the American Institute of Architects, Rand drew a connection between architecture and individualism, saying time periods that had improvements in architecture were also those that had more freedom for the individual.[85]

Roark's modernist approach to architecture is contrasted with that of most of the other architects in the novel. In the opening chapter, the dean of his architecture school tells Roark that the best architecture must copy the past rather than innovate or improve.[86] Roark repeatedly loses jobs with architectural firms and commissions from clients because he is unwilling to copy conventional architectural styles. In contrast, Keating's mimicry of convention brings him top honors in school and an immediate job offer.[87] The same conflict between innovation and tradition is reflected in the career of Roark's mentor, Henry Cameron.[88]

Philosophy edit

Den Uyl calls The Fountainhead a "philosophical novel", meaning that it addresses philosophical ideas and offers a specific philosophical viewpoint about those ideas.[89] In the years following the publication of The Fountainhead, Rand developed a philosophical system that she called Objectivism. The Fountainhead does not contain this explicit philosophy,[90] and Rand did not write the novel primarily to convey philosophical ideas.[91] Nonetheless, Rand included three excerpts from the novel in For the New Intellectual, a 1961 collection of her writings that she described as an outline of Objectivism.[92] Peikoff used many quotes and examples from The Fountainhead in his 1991 book on Rand's philosophy, Objectivism: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand.[93]

Reception and legacy edit

Critical reception edit

The Fountainhead polarized critics and received mixed reviews upon its release.[94] In The New York Times, Lorine Pruette praised Rand as writing "brilliantly, beautifully and bitterly", stating that she had "written a hymn in praise of the individual" that would force readers to rethink basic ideas.[95] Writing for the same newspaper, Orville Prescott called the novel "disastrous" with a plot containing "coils and convolutions" and a "crude cast of characters".[96] Benjamin DeCasseres, a columnist for the New York Journal-American, described Roark as "one of the most inspiring characters in modern American literature". Rand sent DeCasseres a letter thanking him for explaining the book's themes about individualism when many other reviewers did not.[97] There were other positive reviews, although Rand dismissed many of them as either not understanding her message or as being from unimportant publications.[94] A number of negative reviews focused on the length of the novel,[98] such as one that called it "a whale of a book" and another that said "anyone who is taken in by it deserves a stern lecture on paper-rationing". Other negative reviews called the characters unsympathetic and Rand's style "offensively pedestrian".[94]

In the years following its initial publication, The Fountainhead has received relatively little attention from literary critics.[99][100] Assessing the novel's legacy, philosopher Douglas Den Uyl described The Fountainhead as relatively neglected compared to her later novel Atlas Shrugged and said, "our problem is to find those topics that arise clearly with The Fountainhead and yet do not force us to read it simply through the eyes of Atlas Shrugged."[99] Among critics who have addressed it, some consider The Fountainhead to be Rand's best novel,[101][102][103] although in some cases this assessment is tempered by an overall negative judgment of Rand's writings.[104][105] Purely negative evaluations have also continued; a 2011 overview of American literature said "mainstream literary culture dismissed [The Fountainhead] in the 1940s and continues to dismiss it".[1]

Feminist criticisms edit

Feminist critics have condemned Roark and Dominique's first sexual encounter, accusing Rand of endorsing rape.[106] This was one of the most controversial elements of the book. Feminist critics have attacked the scene as representative of an antifeminist viewpoint in Rand's works that makes women subservient to men.[107] Susan Brownmiller, in her 1975 work Against Our Will: Men, Women and Rape, denounced what she called "Rand's philosophy of rape", for portraying women as wanting "humiliation at the hands of a superior man". She called Rand "a traitor to her own sex".[108] Susan Love Brown said the scene presents Rand's view of sex as sadomasochism involving "feminine subordination and passivity".[109] Barbara Grizzuti Harrison suggested women who enjoy such "masochistic fantasies" are "damaged" and have low self-esteem.[110] While Mimi Reisel Gladstein found elements to admire in Rand's female protagonists, she said that readers who have "a raised consciousness about the nature of rape" would disapprove of Rand's "romanticized rapes".[111]

Rand's posthumously published working notes for the novel indicate that when she started on the book in 1936, she conceived of Roark's character that "were it necessary, he could rape her and feel justified".[112] She denied that what happened in the finished novel was actually rape, referring to it as "rape by engraved invitation".[113] She said Dominique wanted and "all but invited" the act, citing, among other things, a passage where Dominique scratches a marble slab in her bedroom to invite Roark to repair it.[114] A true rape, Rand said, would be "a dreadful crime".[115] Defenders of the novel have agreed with this interpretation. In an essay specifically explaining this scene, Andrew Bernstein wrote that although much "confusion" exists about it, the descriptions in the novel provide "conclusive" evidence of Dominique's strong attraction to Roark and her desire to have sex with him.[116] Individualist feminist Wendy McElroy said that while Dominique is "thoroughly taken", there is nonetheless "clear indication" that Dominique both gave consent for and enjoyed the experience.[117] Both Bernstein and McElroy saw the interpretations of feminists such as Brownmiller as based in a false understanding of sexuality.[117][106]

Effect on Rand's career edit

 
Gary Cooper played Howard Roark in the film adaptation.

Although Rand had some mainstream success previously with her play Night of January 16th and had two previously published novels, The Fountainhead was a major breakthrough in her career. It brought her lasting fame and financial success. She sold the movie rights to The Fountainhead and returned to Hollywood to write the screenplay for the adaptation.[118] In April 1944, she signed a multiyear contract with movie producer Hal Wallis to write original screenplays and adaptations of other writers' works.[119]

The success of the novel brought Rand new publishing opportunities. Bobbs-Merrill offered to publish a nonfiction book expanding on the ethical ideas presented in The Fountainhead. Though this book was never completed, a portion of the material was used for an article in the January 1944 issue of Reader's Digest.[120] Rand was also able to get an American publisher for Anthem, which previously had been published in England, but not in the United States.[121] When she was ready to submit Atlas Shrugged to publishers, over a dozen competed to acquire the new book.[122]

The Fountainhead also attracted a new group of fans who were attracted to its philosophical ideas. When she moved back to New York in 1951, she gathered a group of these admirers to whom she referred publicly as "the Class of '43" in reference to the year The Fountainhead was published. The group evolved into the core of the Objectivist movement that promoted the philosophical ideas from Rand's writing.[123][124]

Cultural influence edit

The Fountainhead has continued to have strong sales throughout the last century into the current one. By 2023, it had sold over 10 million copies.[125] It has also been referred to in a variety of popular entertainments, including movies, television series, and other novels.[126][127]

The year 1943 also saw the publication of The God of the Machine by Isabel Paterson and The Discovery of Freedom by Rose Wilder Lane. Rand, Lane, and Paterson have been referred to as the founding mothers of the American libertarian movement with the publication of these works.[128] Journalist John Chamberlain, for example, credited these works with converting him from socialism to what he called "an older American philosophy" of libertarian and conservative ideas.[129] Literature professor Philip R. Yannella said the novel is "a central text of American conservative and libertarian political culture".[1] In the United Kingdom, Conservative politician Sajid Javid has spoken of the novel's influence on him and how he regularly rereads the courtroom scene from Roark's criminal trial.[130]

The book has a particular appeal to young people, an appeal that led historian James Baker to describe it as "more important than its detractors think, although not as important as Rand fans imagine".[102] Philosopher Allan Bloom said the novel is "hardly literature", but when he asked his students which books mattered to them, someone always was influenced by The Fountainhead.[131] Journalist Nora Ephron wrote that she had loved the novel when she was 18, but admitted that she "missed the point", which she suggested is largely subliminal sexual metaphor. Ephron wrote that she decided upon rereading that "it is better read when one is young enough to miss the point. Otherwise, one cannot help thinking it is a very silly book."[132]

Numerous architects have cited The Fountainhead as an inspiration for their work. Architect Fred Stitt, founder of the San Francisco Institute of Architecture, dedicated a book to his "first architectural mentor, Howard Roark".[133] According to architectural photographer Julius Shulman, Rand's work "brought architecture into the public's focus for the first time". He said The Fountainhead was not only influential among 20th century architects, but also it "was one, first, front and center in the life of every architect who was a modern architect".[134] The novel also had a significant impact on the public perception of architecture.[135][136][137] During his 2016 presidential campaign, real estate developer Donald Trump praised the novel, saying he identified with Roark.[138] Roark Capital Group, a private equity firm, is named for the character Howard Roark.[139]

Adaptations edit

Film edit

In 1949, Warner Bros. released a film based on the book, starring Gary Cooper as Howard Roark, Patricia Neal as Dominique Francon, Raymond Massey as Gail Wynand, and Kent Smith as Peter Keating. Rand, who had previous experience as a screenwriter, was hired to adapt her own novel. The film was directed by King Vidor. It grossed $2.1 million, $400,000 less than its production budget.[140] Critics panned the movie. Negative reviews appeared in publications ranging from newspapers such as The New York Times and the Los Angeles Times, to movie industry outlets such as Variety and The Hollywood Reporter, to magazines such as Time and Good Housekeeping.[140][141]

In letters written at the time, Rand's reaction to the film was positive. She said it was the most faithful adaptation of a novel ever made in Hollywood.[142] and a "real triumph".[143] Sales of the novel increased as a result of interest spurred by the film.[144] She displayed a more negative attitude later, saying she disliked the entire movie and complaining about its editing, acting, and other elements.[145] Rand said she would never sell rights to another novel to a film company that did not allow her to pick the director and screenwriter, as well as edit the film.[146]

Various filmmakers have expressed interest in doing new adaptations of The Fountainhead, although none of these potential films has begun production. In the 1970s, writer-director Michael Cimino entered a deal to film his own script for United Artists starring Clint Eastwood as Roark, but postponed the project in favor of abortive biographical films on Janis Joplin and Frank Costello.[147][148] The deal collapsed after the failure of Cimino's 1980 film Heaven's Gate, which caused United Artists to refuse to finance any more of his films.[149] Cimino continued to hope to film the script until his death in 2016.[150]

In 1992, producer James Hill optioned the rights and selected Phil Joanou to direct.[151] In the 2000s, Oliver Stone was interested in directing a new adaptation; Brad Pitt was reportedly under consideration to play Roark.[152] In a March 2016 interview, director Zack Snyder expressed interest in doing a new film adaptation of The Fountainhead,[153] an interest he repeated in 2018.[154] Snyder said in 2020 that he was no longer pursuing the adaptation.[155] In 2024, he said that he unsuccessfully pitched a television series adaptation to Netflix.[156]

Play edit

 
Ivo van Hove staged a theatrical adaptation of the novel.

The Dutch theater company Toneelgroep Amsterdam presented a Dutch-language adaptation for the stage at the Holland Festival in June 2014. The company's artistic director Ivo van Hove wrote and directed the adaptation. Ramsey Nasr played Howard Roark, with Halina Reijn playing Dominique Francon.[157] The four-hour production used video projections to show close-ups of the actors and Roark's drawings, as well as backgrounds of the New York skyline.[158][159] After its debut the production went on tour, appearing in Barcelona, Spain, in early July 2014,[160] and at the Festival d'Avignon in France later that month.[158] The play appeared at the Odéon-Théâtre de l'Europe in Paris in November 2016,[161] and at the LG Arts Center in Seoul from March 31 to April 2, 2017.[162][163] The play had its first American production at the Brooklyn Academy of Music's Next Wave Festival, where it ran from November 28 to December 2, 2017.[164]

The European productions of the play received mostly positive reviews. The Festival d'Avignon production received positive from the French newspapers La Croix,[159] Les Échos,[165] and Le Monde,[166] as well as from the English newspaper The Guardian, whose reviewer described it as "electrifying theatre".[167] The French magazine Télérama gave the Avignon production a negative review, calling the source material inferior and complaining about the use of video screens on the set,[168] while another French magazine, La Terrasse, complimented the staging and acting of the Odéon production.[161]

American critics gave mostly negative reviews of the Next Wave Festival production. Helen Shaw's review for The Village Voice said the adaptation was unwatchable because it portrayed Rand's characters and views seriously without undercutting them[169] The reviewer for the Financial Times said the play was too long and that Hove had approached Rand's "noxious" book with too much reverence.[170] In a mixed review for The New York Times, critic Ben Brantley complimented Hove for capturing Rand's "sheer pulp appeal", but described the material as "hokum with a whole lot of ponderous speeches".[171] A review for The Huffington Post complimented van Hove's ability to portray Rand's message, but said the play was an hour too long.[172]

Television edit

The novel was adapted in Urdu for the Pakistan Television Network in the 1970s, under the title Teesra Kinara. The serial starred Rahat Kazmi, who also wrote the adaptation.[173] Kazmi's wife, Sahira Kazmi, played Dominique.[174]

The novel was parodied in an episode of the animated adventure series Mighty Mouse: The New Adventures[175] and in season 20 of the animated sitcom The Simpsons, in the last part of the episode "Four Great Women and a Manicure".[176]

Other adaptations edit

In 1944, Omnibook Magazine produced an abridged edition of the novel that was sold to members of the United States Armed Forces. Rand was annoyed that Bobbs-Merrill allowed the edited version to be published without her approval of the text.[177] King Features Syndicate approached Rand the following year about creating a condensed, illustrated version of the novel for syndication in newspapers. Rand agreed, provided that she could oversee the editing and approve the proposed illustrations of her characters, which were provided by Frank Godwin. The 30-part series began on December 24, 1945, and ran in over 35 newspapers.[178] Rand biographer Anne Heller complimented the adaptation, calling it "handsomely illustrated".[177]

To provide publicity for a translation of the novel into French, the Swiss publisher Jeheber allowed the Swiss Broadcasting Corporation to air a radio play adaptation in the late 1940s. Rand did not authorize the adaptation and learned about it through a letter from a Swiss fan in 1949.[179]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ According to the Ayn Rand Institute, The Fountainhead has been translated into Albainian, Bulgarian, Chinese, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Estonian, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Icelandic, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Lithuanian, Marathi, Mongolian, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Serbian, Slovenian, Spanish, Swedish, Turkish, Ukrainian, and Vietnamese.[78]

References edit

Citations edit

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  3. ^ Gladstein 1999, p. 8
  4. ^ Sciabarra 1995, p. 97
  5. ^ Sciabarra 1995, p. 106
  6. ^ Den Uyl 1999, p. 60
  7. ^ Smith, Tara. "Unborrowed Vision: Independence and Egoism in The Fountainhead". In Mayhew 2006, pp. 287–289
  8. ^ Schein, Dina. "Roark's Integrity". In Mayhew 2006, p. 305
  9. ^ Rand 2005b, p. 190
  10. ^ Berliner, Michael S. "Howard Roark and Frank Lloyd Wright". In Mayhew 2006, pp. 48–50
  11. ^ a b Reidy 2010
  12. ^ Berliner, Michael S. "Howard Roark and Frank Lloyd Wright". In Mayhew 2006, pp. 42–44
  13. ^ Berliner, Michael S. "Howard Roark and Frank Lloyd Wright". In Mayhew 2006, pp. 47–48
  14. ^ Huxtable 2008, p. 226
  15. ^ Filler 2009, p. 33
  16. ^ a b Smith, Tara. "Unborrowed Vision: Independence and Egoism in The Fountainhead". In Mayhew 2006, p. 290
  17. ^ a b Sciabarra 1995, pp. 107, 109
  18. ^ a b Gladstein 1999, p. 41
  19. ^ a b c Gladstein 1999, p. 62
  20. ^ Den Uyl 1999, p. 50
  21. ^ Berliner, Michael S. "Howard Roark and Frank Lloyd Wright". In Mayhew 2006, p. 56
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  157. ^ . Holland Festival. Archived from the original on August 20, 2014. Retrieved August 19, 2014.
  158. ^ a b Candoni 2014.
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Works cited edit

External links edit

  • Annual The Fountainhead essay contest (Ayn Rand Institute)
  • CliffsNotes for The Fountainhead
  • SparkNotes study guide for The Fountainhead
  • Panel discussion about "The Relevance of The Fountainhead in Today's World" on May 12, 2002 from C-SPAN

fountainhead, fountainhead, redirects, here, other, uses, fountainhead, disambiguation, 1943, novel, russian, american, author, rand, first, major, literary, success, novel, protagonist, howard, roark, intransigent, young, architect, battles, against, conventi. Fountainhead redirects here For other uses see Fountainhead disambiguation The Fountainhead is a 1943 novel by Russian American author Ayn Rand her first major literary success The novel s protagonist Howard Roark is an intransigent young architect who battles against conventional standards and refuses to compromise with an architectural establishment unwilling to accept innovation Roark embodies what Rand believed to be the ideal man and his struggle reflects Rand s belief that individualism is superior to collectivism The FountainheadCover of the first editionAuthorAyn RandCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishGenrePhilosophical fictionPublisherBobbs MerrillPublication date1943Pages753 1st edition OCLC300033023 Roark is opposed by what he calls second handers who value conformity over independence and integrity These include Roark s former classmate Peter Keating who succeeds by following popular styles but turns to Roark for help with design problems Ellsworth Toohey a socialist architecture critic who uses his influence to promote his political and social agenda tries to destroy Roark s career Tabloid newspaper publisher Gail Wynand seeks to shape popular opinion he befriends Roark then betrays him when public opinion turns in a direction he cannot control The novel s most controversial character is Roark s lover Dominique Francon She believes that non conformity has no chance of winning so she alternates between helping Roark and working to undermine him Twelve publishers rejected the manuscript before an editor at the Bobbs Merrill Company risked his job to get it published Contemporary reviewers opinions were polarized Some praised the novel as a powerful paean to individualism while others thought it overlong and lacking sympathetic characters Initial sales were slow but the book gained a following by word of mouth and became a bestseller More than 10 million copies of The Fountainhead have been sold worldwide and it has been translated into more than 30 languages The novel attracted a new following for Rand and has enjoyed a lasting influence especially among architects entrepreneurs American conservatives and libertarians 1 The novel has been adapted into other media several times An illustrated version was syndicated in newspapers in 1945 Warner Bros produced a film version in 1949 Rand wrote the screenplay and Gary Cooper played Roark Critics panned the film which did not recoup its budget several directors and writers have considered developing a new film adaptation In 2014 Belgian theater director Ivo van Hove created a stage adaptation which received mixed reviews Contents 1 Plot 2 Major characters 2 1 Howard Roark 2 2 Peter Keating 2 3 Dominique Francon 2 4 Gail Wynand 2 5 Ellsworth Toohey 3 History 3 1 Background and development 3 2 Publication history 3 2 1 Deleted Passages 4 Themes 4 1 Individualism 4 2 Architecture 4 3 Philosophy 5 Reception and legacy 5 1 Critical reception 5 2 Feminist criticisms 5 3 Effect on Rand s career 5 4 Cultural influence 6 Adaptations 6 1 Film 6 2 Play 6 3 Television 6 4 Other adaptations 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 Works cited 10 External linksPlot edit nbsp Ayn Rand in 1943 In early 1922 Howard Roark is expelled from the architecture department of the Stanton Institute of Technology because he has not adhered to the school s preference for historical convention in building design Roark goes to New York City and gets a job with Henry Cameron Cameron was once a renowned architect but now gets few commissions In the meantime Roark s popular but vacuous fellow student and housemate Peter Keating whom Roark sometimes helped with projects graduates with high honors He too moves to New York where he has been offered a position with the prestigious architecture firm Francon amp Heyer Keating ingratiates himself with Guy Francon and works to remove rivals among his coworkers After Francon s partner Lucius Heyer suffers a fatal stroke brought on by Keating s antagonism Francon chooses Keating to replace him Meanwhile Roark and Cameron create inspired work but struggle financially After Cameron retires Keating hires Roark whom Francon soon fires for refusing to design a building in the classical style Roark works briefly at another firm then opens his own office but has trouble finding clients and closes it down He gets a job in a granite quarry owned by Francon There he meets Francon s daughter Dominique a columnist for The New York Banner while she is staying at her family s estate nearby They are immediately attracted to each other leading to a rough sexual encounter that Dominique later calls a rape 2 Shortly after Roark is notified that a client is ready to start a new building and he returns to New York Dominique also returns to New York and learns Roark is an architect She attacks his work in public but visits him for secret sexual encounters Ellsworth M Toohey who writes a popular architecture column in the Banner is an outspoken socialist who shapes public opinion through his column and a circle of influential associates Toohey sets out to destroy Roark through a smear campaign He recommends Roark to Hopton Stoddard a wealthy acquaintance who wants to build a Temple of the Human Spirit Roark s unusual design includes a nude statue modeled on Dominique Toohey persuades Stoddard to sue Roark for malpractice Toohey and several architects including Keating testify at the trial that Roark is incompetent as an architect due to his rejection of historical styles Dominique also argues for the prosecution in tones that can be interpreted to be speaking more in Roark s defense than for the plaintiff but he loses the case Dominique decides that since she cannot have the world she wants in which men like Roark are recognized for their greatness she will live entirely in the world she has which shuns Roark and praises Keating She marries Keating and turns herself over to him doing and saying whatever he wants and actively persuading potential clients to hire him instead of Roark To win Keating a prestigious commission offered by Gail Wynand the owner and editor in chief of the Banner Dominique agrees to sleep with Wynand Wynand is so strongly attracted to Dominique that he pays Keating to divorce her after which Wynand and Dominique are married Wanting to build a home for himself and his new wife Wynand discovers that Roark designed every building he likes and so hires him Roark and Wynand become close friends Wynand is unaware of Roark s past relationship with Dominique Washed up and out of the public eye Keating pleads with Toohey to use his influence to get the commission for the much sought after Cortlandt housing project Keating knows his most successful projects were aided by Roark so he asks for Roark s help in designing Cortlandt Roark agrees in exchange for complete anonymity and Keating s promise that it will be built exactly as designed After taking a long vacation with Wynand Roark returns to find that Keating was not able to prevent major changes from being made in Cortlandt s construction Roark dynamites the project to prevent the subversion of his vision Roark is arrested and his action is widely condemned but Wynand decides to use his papers to defend his friend This unpopular stance hurts the circulation of his newspapers and Wynand s employees go on strike after Wynand dismisses Toohey for disobeying him and criticizing Roark Faced with the prospect of closing the paper Wynand gives in and publishes a denunciation of Roark At his trial Roark makes a lengthy speech about the value of ego and integrity and he is found not guilty Dominique leaves Wynand for Roark Wynand who has betrayed his own values by attacking Roark finally grasps the nature of the power he thought he held He shuts down the Banner and commissions a final building from Roark a skyscraper that will serve as a monument to human achievement Eighteen months later the Wynand Building is under construction Dominique now Roark s wife enters the site to meet him atop its steel framework Major characters editHoward Roark edit nbsp In writing the character of Howard Roark Rand was inspired by the architect Frank Lloyd Wright Rand s stated goal in writing fiction was to portray her vision of an ideal man 3 4 The character of Howard Roark the protagonist of The Fountainhead was the first instance where she believed she had achieved this 5 Roark embodies Rand s egoistic moral ideals 6 especially the virtues of independence 7 and integrity 8 The character of Roark was at least partly inspired by American architect Frank Lloyd Wright Rand described the inspiration as limited to specific ideas he had about architecture and the pattern of his career 9 She denied that Wright had anything to do with the philosophy expressed by Roark or the events of the plot 10 11 Rand s denials have not stopped commentators from claiming stronger connections between Wright and Roark 11 12 Wright equivocated about whether he thought Roark was based on him sometimes implying that he did at other times denying it 13 Wright biographer Ada Louise Huxtable described significant differences between Wright s philosophy and Rand s and quoted him declaring I deny the paternity and refuse to marry the mother 14 Architecture critic Martin Filler said that Roark resembles the Swiss French modernist architect Le Corbusier more closely than Wright 15 Peter Keating edit In contrast to the individualistic Roark Peter Keating is a conformist who bases his choices on what others want Introduced to the reader as Roark s classmate in architecture school two years ahead of him Keating does not really want to be an architect He loves painting but his mother steers him toward architecture instead 16 In this as in all his decisions Keating does what others expect rather than follow his personal interests He becomes a social climber focused on improving his career and social standing using a combination of personal manipulation and conformity to popular styles 16 17 18 He follows a similar path in his private life he chooses a loveless marriage to Dominique instead of marrying the woman he loves who lacks Dominique s beauty and social connections By middle age Keating s career is in decline and he is unhappy with his path but it is too late for him to change 19 20 Rand did not use a specific architect as a model for Keating 21 Her inspiration for the character came from a neighbor she knew while working in Hollywood in the early 1930s Rand asked this young woman to explain her goals in life The woman s response was focused on social comparisons the neighbor wanted her material possessions and social standing to equal or exceed those of other people Rand created Keating as an archetype of this motivation which she saw as the opposite of self interest 22 Dominique Francon edit nbsp Patricia Neal played Dominique Francon in the film adaptation Dominique Francon is the heroine of The Fountainhead described by Rand as the woman for a man like Howard Roark 23 Rand described Dominique as similar to herself in a bad mood 24 Philosopher Andrew Bernstein wrote For much of the novel Dominique is a tortured soul tormented by a profound inner conflict between her imperishable idealism and a deep seated conviction that a debased society will inexorably crush the towering genius she so fervently hero worships 25 Believing that the values she admires cannot survive in the real world she chooses to turn away from them so that the world cannot harm her Only at the end of the novel does she accept that she can be happy and survive 24 26 27 The character has provoked varied reactions from commentators Philosopher Chris Matthew Sciabarra called her one of the more bizarre characters in the novel 17 Literature scholar Mimi Reisel Gladstein called her an interesting case study in perverseness 18 Writer Tore Boeckmann described her as a character with conflicting beliefs and saw her actions as a logical representation of how those conflicts might play out 28 Gail Wynand edit Gail Wynand is a wealthy newspaper mogul who rose from a destitute childhood in the ghettoes of New York Hell s Kitchen to control much of the city s print media While Wynand shares many of the character qualities of Roark his success is dependent upon his ability to pander to public opinion Rand presents this as a tragic flaw that eventually leads to his downfall In her journals Rand described Wynand as the man who could have been a heroic individualist contrasting him to Roark the man who can be and is 29 30 Some elements of Wynand s character were inspired by real life newspaper tycoon William Randolph Hearst 29 31 32 including Hearst s yellow journalism and mixed success in attempts to gain political influence 29 Wynand ultimately fails in his attempts to wield power losing his newspaper his wife Dominique and his friendship with Roark 33 The character has been interpreted as a representation of the master morality described by philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche 34 his tragic nature illustrates Rand s rejection of Nietzsche s philosophy 30 35 36 In Rand s view a person like Wynand who seeks power over others is as much a second hander as a conformist such as Keating 37 38 39 Ellsworth Toohey edit nbsp Harold Laski was one of Rand s inspirations for the character of Ellsworth Toohey Ellsworth Monkton Toohey is Roark s antagonist He is Rand s personification of evil the most active and self aware villain in any of her novels 19 40 41 Toohey is a socialist and represents the spirit of collectivism more generally He styles himself as representative of the will of the masses but his actual desire is for power over others 19 42 He controls individual victims by destroying their sense of self worth and seeks broader power over the world as he declares to Keating in a moment of candor by promoting the ideals of ethical altruism and a rigorous egalitarianism that treats all people and achievements as equally valuable 40 43 Rand used her memory of the democratic socialist British Labour Party Chairman Harold Laski to help her imagine what Toohey would do in a given situation She attended a New York lecture by Laski as part of gathering material for the novel following which she changed the physical appearance of the character to be similar to that of Laski 44 New York intellectuals Lewis Mumford and Clifton Fadiman also helped inspire the character 31 32 History editBackground and development edit When Rand first arrived in New York as an immigrant from the Soviet Union in 1926 she was greatly impressed by the Manhattan skyline s towering skyscrapers which she saw as symbols of freedom and resolved that she would write about them 45 46 In 1927 Rand was working as a junior screenwriter for movie producer Cecil B DeMille when he asked her to write a script for what would become the 1928 film Skyscraper The original story by Dudley Murphy was about two construction workers working on a skyscraper who are rivals for a woman s love Rand rewrote it transforming the rivals into architects One of them Howard Kane was an idealist dedicated to erecting the skyscraper despite enormous obstacles The film would have ended with Kane standing atop the completed skyscraper DeMille rejected Rand s script and the completed film followed Murphy s original idea Rand s version contained elements she would use in The Fountainhead 47 48 In 1928 Rand made notes for a proposed but never written novel titled The Little Street 49 Rand s notes for it contain elements that carried over into her work on The Fountainhead 50 David Harriman who edited the notes for the posthumously published Journals of Ayn Rand 1997 described the story s villain as a preliminary version of the character Ellsworth Toohey and this villain s assassination by the protagonist as prefiguring the attempted assassination of Toohey 51 nbsp nbsp New York skyscrapers such as the McGraw Hill Building left and the Woolworth Building right inspired Rand to write a novel about architecture Rand began The Fountainhead originally titled Second Hand Lives following the completion of her first novel We the Living in 1934 That earlier novel was based in part on people and events familiar to Rand the new novel on the other hand focused on the less familiar world of architecture She therefore conducted extensive research that included reading many biographies and other books about architecture 52 She also worked as an unpaid typist in the office of architect Ely Jacques Kahn 53 Rand began her notes for the new novel in December 1935 54 Rand wanted to write a novel that was less overtly political than We the Living to avoid being viewed as a one theme author 55 As she developed the story she began to see more political meaning in the novel s ideas about individualism 56 Rand also planned to introduce the novel s four sections with quotes from Friedrich Nietzsche whose ideas had influenced her own intellectual development but she eventually decided that Nietzsche s ideas were too different from hers She edited the final manuscript to remove the quotes and other allusions to him 57 58 Rand s work on The Fountainhead was repeatedly interrupted In 1937 she took a break from it to write a novella called Anthem 59 One night in June 1938 she almost completely gave up on writing the book but her husband Frank O Connor encouraged her in an hours long conversation ultimately convincing her not to give up 60 She also completed a stage adaptation of We the Living that ran briefly in 1940 59 That same year she became active in politics She first worked as a volunteer in Wendell Willkie s presidential campaign and then attempted to form a group for conservative intellectuals 61 As her royalties from earlier projects ran out she began doing freelance work as a script reader for movie studios When Rand finally found a publisher the novel was only one third complete 62 Publication history edit Although she was a previously published novelist and had a successful Broadway play Rand had difficulty finding a publisher for The Fountainhead Macmillan Publishing which had published We the Living rejected the book after Rand insisted they provide more publicity for her new novel than they had done for the first one 63 Rand s agent began submitting the book to other publishers in 1938 Knopf signed a contract to publish the book When Rand was only a quarter done with the manuscript by October 1940 Knopf canceled her contract 64 Several other publishers rejected the book When Rand s agent began to criticize the novel Rand fired the agent and decided to handle submissions herself 65 Twelve publishers including Macmillan and Knopf rejected the book 62 66 67 While Rand was working as a script reader for Paramount Pictures her boss put her in touch with the Bobbs Merrill Company A recently hired editor Archibald Ogden liked the book but two internal reviewers gave conflicting opinions One said it was a great book that would never sell the other said it was trash but would sell well Ogden s boss Bobbs Merrill president D L Chambers decided to reject the book Ogden responded by wiring to the head office If this is not the book for you then I am not the editor for you His strong stand won Rand the contract on December 10 1941 She also got a 1 000 advance so she could work full time to complete the novel by January 1 1943 68 69 Rand worked long hours through 1942 to complete the final two thirds of her manuscript which she delivered on December 31 1942 69 70 Rand s working title for the book was Second Hand Lives but Ogden pointed out that this emphasized the story s villains Rand offered The Mainspring as an alternative but this title had been recently used for another book She then used a thesaurus and found fountainhead as a synonym 66 The Fountainhead was published on May 7 1943 with 7 500 copies in the first printing Initial sales were slow but they began to rise in late 1943 driven primarily by word of mouth 71 72 The novel began appearing on bestseller lists in 1944 73 It reached number six on The New York Times bestseller list in August 1945 over two years after its initial publication 74 By 1956 the hardcover edition sold over 700 000 copies 75 The first paperback edition was published by the New American Library in 1952 76 A 25th anniversary edition was issued by the New American Library in 1971 including a new introduction by Rand 77 The cover of the twenty fifth anniversary edition featured a painting by Frank O Connor titled Man Also Rises 71 In 1993 a 50th anniversary edition from Bobbs Merrill added an afterword by Rand s heir Leonard Peikoff 77 The novel has been translated into more than 30 languages a Deleted Passages edit Some passages were deleted during the publication of the novel the most important of which concerns the relationship of the protagonist Howard Roark with actress Vesta Dunning The deleted passages were first published posthumously in section 3 of The Early Ayn Rand in 1984 Themes editIndividualism edit Rand indicated that the primary theme of The Fountainhead was individualism versus collectivism not in politics but within a man s soul 79 Philosopher Douglas Den Uyl identified the individualism presented in the novel as being specifically of an American kind portrayed in the context of that country s society and institutions 80 Apart from scenes such as Roark s courtroom defense of the American concept of individual rights she avoided direct discussion of political issues As historian James Baker described it The Fountainhead hardly mentions politics or economics despite the fact that it was born in the 1930s Nor does it deal with world affairs although it was written during World War II It is about one man against the system and it does not permit other matters to intrude 81 Early drafts of the novel included more explicit political references but Rand removed them from the finished text 82 Architecture edit nbsp Rand s descriptions of Roark s buildings were inspired by the work of Frank Lloyd Wright such as Fallingwater Rand chose the profession of architecture as the background for her novel although she knew nothing about the field beforehand 83 As a field that combines art technology and business it allowed her to illustrate her primary themes in multiple areas 84 Rand later wrote that architects provide both art and a basic need of men s survival 83 In a speech to a chapter of the American Institute of Architects Rand drew a connection between architecture and individualism saying time periods that had improvements in architecture were also those that had more freedom for the individual 85 Roark s modernist approach to architecture is contrasted with that of most of the other architects in the novel In the opening chapter the dean of his architecture school tells Roark that the best architecture must copy the past rather than innovate or improve 86 Roark repeatedly loses jobs with architectural firms and commissions from clients because he is unwilling to copy conventional architectural styles In contrast Keating s mimicry of convention brings him top honors in school and an immediate job offer 87 The same conflict between innovation and tradition is reflected in the career of Roark s mentor Henry Cameron 88 Philosophy edit Den Uyl calls The Fountainhead a philosophical novel meaning that it addresses philosophical ideas and offers a specific philosophical viewpoint about those ideas 89 In the years following the publication of The Fountainhead Rand developed a philosophical system that she called Objectivism The Fountainhead does not contain this explicit philosophy 90 and Rand did not write the novel primarily to convey philosophical ideas 91 Nonetheless Rand included three excerpts from the novel in For the New Intellectual a 1961 collection of her writings that she described as an outline of Objectivism 92 Peikoff used many quotes and examples from The Fountainhead in his 1991 book on Rand s philosophy Objectivism The Philosophy of Ayn Rand 93 Reception and legacy editCritical reception edit The Fountainhead polarized critics and received mixed reviews upon its release 94 In The New York Times Lorine Pruette praised Rand as writing brilliantly beautifully and bitterly stating that she had written a hymn in praise of the individual that would force readers to rethink basic ideas 95 Writing for the same newspaper Orville Prescott called the novel disastrous with a plot containing coils and convolutions and a crude cast of characters 96 Benjamin DeCasseres a columnist for the New York Journal American described Roark as one of the most inspiring characters in modern American literature Rand sent DeCasseres a letter thanking him for explaining the book s themes about individualism when many other reviewers did not 97 There were other positive reviews although Rand dismissed many of them as either not understanding her message or as being from unimportant publications 94 A number of negative reviews focused on the length of the novel 98 such as one that called it a whale of a book and another that said anyone who is taken in by it deserves a stern lecture on paper rationing Other negative reviews called the characters unsympathetic and Rand s style offensively pedestrian 94 In the years following its initial publication The Fountainhead has received relatively little attention from literary critics 99 100 Assessing the novel s legacy philosopher Douglas Den Uyl described The Fountainhead as relatively neglected compared to her later novel Atlas Shrugged and said our problem is to find those topics that arise clearly with The Fountainhead and yet do not force us to read it simply through the eyes of Atlas Shrugged 99 Among critics who have addressed it some consider The Fountainhead to be Rand s best novel 101 102 103 although in some cases this assessment is tempered by an overall negative judgment of Rand s writings 104 105 Purely negative evaluations have also continued a 2011 overview of American literature said mainstream literary culture dismissed The Fountainhead in the 1940s and continues to dismiss it 1 Feminist criticisms edit Feminist critics have condemned Roark and Dominique s first sexual encounter accusing Rand of endorsing rape 106 This was one of the most controversial elements of the book Feminist critics have attacked the scene as representative of an antifeminist viewpoint in Rand s works that makes women subservient to men 107 Susan Brownmiller in her 1975 work Against Our Will Men Women and Rape denounced what she called Rand s philosophy of rape for portraying women as wanting humiliation at the hands of a superior man She called Rand a traitor to her own sex 108 Susan Love Brown said the scene presents Rand s view of sex as sadomasochism involving feminine subordination and passivity 109 Barbara Grizzuti Harrison suggested women who enjoy such masochistic fantasies are damaged and have low self esteem 110 While Mimi Reisel Gladstein found elements to admire in Rand s female protagonists she said that readers who have a raised consciousness about the nature of rape would disapprove of Rand s romanticized rapes 111 Rand s posthumously published working notes for the novel indicate that when she started on the book in 1936 she conceived of Roark s character that were it necessary he could rape her and feel justified 112 She denied that what happened in the finished novel was actually rape referring to it as rape by engraved invitation 113 She said Dominique wanted and all but invited the act citing among other things a passage where Dominique scratches a marble slab in her bedroom to invite Roark to repair it 114 A true rape Rand said would be a dreadful crime 115 Defenders of the novel have agreed with this interpretation In an essay specifically explaining this scene Andrew Bernstein wrote that although much confusion exists about it the descriptions in the novel provide conclusive evidence of Dominique s strong attraction to Roark and her desire to have sex with him 116 Individualist feminist Wendy McElroy said that while Dominique is thoroughly taken there is nonetheless clear indication that Dominique both gave consent for and enjoyed the experience 117 Both Bernstein and McElroy saw the interpretations of feminists such as Brownmiller as based in a false understanding of sexuality 117 106 Effect on Rand s career edit nbsp Gary Cooper played Howard Roark in the film adaptation Although Rand had some mainstream success previously with her play Night of January 16th and had two previously published novels The Fountainhead was a major breakthrough in her career It brought her lasting fame and financial success She sold the movie rights to The Fountainhead and returned to Hollywood to write the screenplay for the adaptation 118 In April 1944 she signed a multiyear contract with movie producer Hal Wallis to write original screenplays and adaptations of other writers works 119 The success of the novel brought Rand new publishing opportunities Bobbs Merrill offered to publish a nonfiction book expanding on the ethical ideas presented in The Fountainhead Though this book was never completed a portion of the material was used for an article in the January 1944 issue of Reader s Digest 120 Rand was also able to get an American publisher for Anthem which previously had been published in England but not in the United States 121 When she was ready to submit Atlas Shrugged to publishers over a dozen competed to acquire the new book 122 The Fountainhead also attracted a new group of fans who were attracted to its philosophical ideas When she moved back to New York in 1951 she gathered a group of these admirers to whom she referred publicly as the Class of 43 in reference to the year The Fountainhead was published The group evolved into the core of the Objectivist movement that promoted the philosophical ideas from Rand s writing 123 124 Cultural influence edit The Fountainhead has continued to have strong sales throughout the last century into the current one By 2023 it had sold over 10 million copies 125 It has also been referred to in a variety of popular entertainments including movies television series and other novels 126 127 The year 1943 also saw the publication of The God of the Machine by Isabel Paterson and The Discovery of Freedom by Rose Wilder Lane Rand Lane and Paterson have been referred to as the founding mothers of the American libertarian movement with the publication of these works 128 Journalist John Chamberlain for example credited these works with converting him from socialism to what he called an older American philosophy of libertarian and conservative ideas 129 Literature professor Philip R Yannella said the novel is a central text of American conservative and libertarian political culture 1 In the United Kingdom Conservative politician Sajid Javid has spoken of the novel s influence on him and how he regularly rereads the courtroom scene from Roark s criminal trial 130 The book has a particular appeal to young people an appeal that led historian James Baker to describe it as more important than its detractors think although not as important as Rand fans imagine 102 Philosopher Allan Bloom said the novel is hardly literature but when he asked his students which books mattered to them someone always was influenced by The Fountainhead 131 Journalist Nora Ephron wrote that she had loved the novel when she was 18 but admitted that she missed the point which she suggested is largely subliminal sexual metaphor Ephron wrote that she decided upon rereading that it is better read when one is young enough to miss the point Otherwise one cannot help thinking it is a very silly book 132 Numerous architects have cited The Fountainhead as an inspiration for their work Architect Fred Stitt founder of the San Francisco Institute of Architecture dedicated a book to his first architectural mentor Howard Roark 133 According to architectural photographer Julius Shulman Rand s work brought architecture into the public s focus for the first time He said The Fountainhead was not only influential among 20th century architects but also it was one first front and center in the life of every architect who was a modern architect 134 The novel also had a significant impact on the public perception of architecture 135 136 137 During his 2016 presidential campaign real estate developer Donald Trump praised the novel saying he identified with Roark 138 Roark Capital Group a private equity firm is named for the character Howard Roark 139 Adaptations editFilm edit Main article The Fountainhead film In 1949 Warner Bros released a film based on the book starring Gary Cooper as Howard Roark Patricia Neal as Dominique Francon Raymond Massey as Gail Wynand and Kent Smith as Peter Keating Rand who had previous experience as a screenwriter was hired to adapt her own novel The film was directed by King Vidor It grossed 2 1 million 400 000 less than its production budget 140 Critics panned the movie Negative reviews appeared in publications ranging from newspapers such as The New York Times and the Los Angeles Times to movie industry outlets such as Variety and The Hollywood Reporter to magazines such as Time and Good Housekeeping 140 141 In letters written at the time Rand s reaction to the film was positive She said it was the most faithful adaptation of a novel ever made in Hollywood 142 and a real triumph 143 Sales of the novel increased as a result of interest spurred by the film 144 She displayed a more negative attitude later saying she disliked the entire movie and complaining about its editing acting and other elements 145 Rand said she would never sell rights to another novel to a film company that did not allow her to pick the director and screenwriter as well as edit the film 146 Various filmmakers have expressed interest in doing new adaptations of The Fountainhead although none of these potential films has begun production In the 1970s writer director Michael Cimino entered a deal to film his own script for United Artists starring Clint Eastwood as Roark but postponed the project in favor of abortive biographical films on Janis Joplin and Frank Costello 147 148 The deal collapsed after the failure of Cimino s 1980 film Heaven s Gate which caused United Artists to refuse to finance any more of his films 149 Cimino continued to hope to film the script until his death in 2016 150 In 1992 producer James Hill optioned the rights and selected Phil Joanou to direct 151 In the 2000s Oliver Stone was interested in directing a new adaptation Brad Pitt was reportedly under consideration to play Roark 152 In a March 2016 interview director Zack Snyder expressed interest in doing a new film adaptation of The Fountainhead 153 an interest he repeated in 2018 154 Snyder said in 2020 that he was no longer pursuing the adaptation 155 In 2024 he said that he unsuccessfully pitched a television series adaptation to Netflix 156 Play edit Main article The Fountainhead play nbsp Ivo van Hove staged a theatrical adaptation of the novel The Dutch theater company Toneelgroep Amsterdam presented a Dutch language adaptation for the stage at the Holland Festival in June 2014 The company s artistic director Ivo van Hove wrote and directed the adaptation Ramsey Nasr played Howard Roark with Halina Reijn playing Dominique Francon 157 The four hour production used video projections to show close ups of the actors and Roark s drawings as well as backgrounds of the New York skyline 158 159 After its debut the production went on tour appearing in Barcelona Spain in early July 2014 160 and at the Festival d Avignon in France later that month 158 The play appeared at the Odeon Theatre de l Europe in Paris in November 2016 161 and at the LG Arts Center in Seoul from March 31 to April 2 2017 162 163 The play had its first American production at the Brooklyn Academy of Music s Next Wave Festival where it ran from November 28 to December 2 2017 164 The European productions of the play received mostly positive reviews The Festival d Avignon production received positive from the French newspapers La Croix 159 Les Echos 165 and Le Monde 166 as well as from the English newspaper The Guardian whose reviewer described it as electrifying theatre 167 The French magazine Telerama gave the Avignon production a negative review calling the source material inferior and complaining about the use of video screens on the set 168 while another French magazine La Terrasse complimented the staging and acting of the Odeon production 161 American critics gave mostly negative reviews of the Next Wave Festival production Helen Shaw s review for The Village Voice said the adaptation was unwatchable because it portrayed Rand s characters and views seriously without undercutting them 169 The reviewer for the Financial Times said the play was too long and that Hove had approached Rand s noxious book with too much reverence 170 In a mixed review for The New York Times critic Ben Brantley complimented Hove for capturing Rand s sheer pulp appeal but described the material as hokum with a whole lot of ponderous speeches 171 A review for The Huffington Post complimented van Hove s ability to portray Rand s message but said the play was an hour too long 172 Television edit The novel was adapted in Urdu for the Pakistan Television Network in the 1970s under the title Teesra Kinara The serial starred Rahat Kazmi who also wrote the adaptation 173 Kazmi s wife Sahira Kazmi played Dominique 174 The novel was parodied in an episode of the animated adventure series Mighty Mouse The New Adventures 175 and in season 20 of the animated sitcom The Simpsons in the last part of the episode Four Great Women and a Manicure 176 Other adaptations edit In 1944 Omnibook Magazine produced an abridged edition of the novel that was sold to members of the United States Armed Forces Rand was annoyed that Bobbs Merrill allowed the edited version to be published without her approval of the text 177 King Features Syndicate approached Rand the following year about creating a condensed illustrated version of the novel for syndication in newspapers Rand agreed provided that she could oversee the editing and approve the proposed illustrations of her characters which were provided by Frank Godwin The 30 part series began on December 24 1945 and ran in over 35 newspapers 178 Rand biographer Anne Heller complimented the adaptation calling it handsomely illustrated 177 To provide publicity for a translation of the novel into French the Swiss publisher Jeheber allowed the Swiss Broadcasting Corporation to air a radio play adaptation in the late 1940s Rand did not authorize the adaptation and learned about it through a letter from a Swiss fan in 1949 179 See also edit nbsp Novels portal Architecture of the United States Romantic realism Ely Jacques Kahn Kahn and Ayn RandNotes edit According to the Ayn Rand Institute The Fountainhead has been translated into Albainian Bulgarian Chinese Croatian Czech Danish Dutch Estonian French German Greek Hebrew Hungarian Icelandic Italian Japanese Korean Lithuanian Marathi Mongolian Norwegian Polish Portuguese Romanian Russian Serbian Slovenian Spanish Swedish Turkish Ukrainian and Vietnamese 78 References editCitations edit a b c Yannella 2011 p 17 Rand 2005a p 657 He raped me That s how it began Gladstein 1999 p 8 Sciabarra 1995 p 97 Sciabarra 1995 p 106 Den Uyl 1999 p 60 Smith Tara Unborrowed Vision Independence and Egoism in The Fountainhead In Mayhew 2006 pp 287 289 Schein Dina Roark s Integrity In Mayhew 2006 p 305 Rand 2005b p 190 Berliner Michael S Howard Roark and Frank Lloyd Wright In Mayhew 2006 pp 48 50 a b Reidy 2010 Berliner Michael S Howard Roark and Frank Lloyd Wright In Mayhew 2006 pp 42 44 Berliner Michael S Howard Roark and Frank Lloyd Wright In Mayhew 2006 pp 47 48 Huxtable 2008 p 226 Filler 2009 p 33 a b Smith Tara Unborrowed Vision Independence and Egoism in The Fountainhead In Mayhew 2006 p 290 a b Sciabarra 1995 pp 107 109 a b Gladstein 1999 p 41 a b c Gladstein 1999 p 62 Den Uyl 1999 p 50 Berliner Michael S Howard Roark and Frank Lloyd Wright In Mayhew 2006 p 56 Heller 2009 p 109 Rand 1997 p 89 a b Gladstein 1999 p 52 Dominique Francon Ayn Rand s Profoundly Misunderstood Heroine The Objective Standard 2022 05 21 Retrieved 2022 06 03 Branden 1986 p 106 Boeckmann Tore Rand s Literary Romanticism In Gotthelf amp Salmieri 2016 pp 440 441 Boeckmann Tore Aristotle s Poetics and The Fountainhead In Mayhew 2006 pp 158 164 a b c Burns 2009 pp 44 45 a b Heller 2009 pp 117 118 a b Johnson 2005 pp 44 45 a b Berliner Michael S Howard Roark and Frank Lloyd Wright In Mayhew 2006 p 57 Gladstein 1999 pp 52 53 Hicks 2009 p 267 Gotthelf 2000 p 14 Merrill 1991 pp 47 50 Smith Tara Unborrowed Vision Independence and Egoism in The Fountainhead In Mayhew 2006 pp 291 293 Baker 1987 pp 102 103 Den Uyl 1999 pp 58 59 a b Den Uyl 1999 pp 54 55 Minsaas Kirsti The Stylization of Mind in Ayn Rand s Fiction In Thomas 2005 p 187 Baker 1987 p 52 Sciabarra 1995 pp 109 110 Rand 1997 p 113 Schleier 2009 p 123 Ralston Richard E Publishing The Fountainhead In Mayhew 2006 p 70 Heller 2009 pp 65 441 Eyman 2010 p 252 Rand 1997 p 20 Burns 2009 p 70 Rand 1997 p 31 Burns 2009 p 41 Gladstein 1999 p 11 Heller 2009 p 98 Burns 2009 p 43 Burns 2009 p 69 Burns 2009 p 87 Milgram Shoshana The Fountainhead from Notebook to Novel In Mayhew 2006 pp 13 17 a b Britting 2004 pp 54 56 Heller 2009 p 130 Burns 2009 pp 54 66 a b Branden 1986 pp 170 171 Branden 1986 p 155 Burns 2009 p 52 Burns 2009 p 68 a b Burns 2009 p 80 Heller 2009 p 186 Ralston Richard E Publishing The Fountainhead In Mayhew 2006 p 68 a b Heller 2009 pp 144 145 Branden 1986 pp 172 174 a b Gladstein 1999 p 12 Heller 2009 pp 149 156 Heller 2009 p 166 Timeline of Ayn Rand s Life and Career Ayn Rand Institute Archived from the original on September 30 2012 Retrieved April 23 2011 Ralston Richard E Publishing Atlas Shruggged In Mayhew 2009 p 127 Perinn 1990 p 22 a b Gladstein 2009 p 122 Foreign Editions PDF Ayn Rand Institute December 19 2023 Retrieved March 7 2024 Rand 1997 p 223 Den Uyl 1999 pp 14 16 Baker 1987 p 51 Milgram Shoshana The Fountainhead from Notebook to Novel In Mayhew 2006 pp 11 12 a b Berliner Michael S Howard Roark and Frank Lloyd Wright In Mayhew 2006 p 58 Den Uyl 1999 p 30 Ralston Richard E Publishing The Fountainhead In Mayhew 2006 p 58 Boeckmann Tore Rand s Literary Romanticism In Gotthelf amp Salmieri 2016 p 427 Boeckmann Tore The Fountainhead as a Romantic Novel In Mayhew 2006 pp 130 131 Cox Stephen D The Literary Achievement of The Fountainhead In Thomas 2005 p 46 Den Uyl 1999 pp 29 32 Gotthelf amp Salmieri 2016 p 12 Den Uyl 1999 pp 35 36 Gladstein 2009 pp 21 22 Mayhew 2006 p 328 a b c Berliner Michael S The Fountainhead Reviews in Mayhew 2006 pp 77 82 Pruette 1943 Prescott 1943 Rand 1995 p 75 Gladstein 1999 pp 117 119 a b Den Uyl 1999 p 21 Hornstein 1999 p 431 Cullen DuPont 2000 p 211 a b Baker 1987 p 57 Merrill 1991 p 45 Kingwell 2006 p 70 Walker 1999 p 79 a b Bernstein Andrew Understanding the Rape Scene in The Fountainhead In Mayhew 2006 p 207 Den Uyl 1999 p 22 Brownmiller 1975 pp 348 350 Reprinted in Gladstein amp Sciabarra 1999 pp 63 65 Brown Susan Love Ayn Rand The Woman Who Would Not Be President In Gladstein amp Sciabarra 1999 p 289 Harrison Barbara Grizzuti Psyching Out Ayn Rand In Gladstein amp Sciabarra 1999 pp 74 75 Gladstein 1999 pp 27 28 Rand 1997 p 96 Burns 2009 p 86 Rand 1995 p 631 Rand 1995 p 282 Bernstein Andrew Understanding the Rape Scene in The Fountainhead In Mayhew 2006 pp 201 203 a b McElroy Wendy Looking Through a Paradigm Darkly In Gladstein amp Sciabarra 1999 pp 162 164 Milgram Shoshana The Life of Ayn Rand In Gotthelf amp Salmieri 2016 p 29 Heller 2009 p 164 Heller 2009 p 171 Heller 2009 p 198 Heller 2009 p 271 Milgram Shoshana The Life of Ayn Rand In Gotthelf amp Salmieri 2016 p 30 Burns 2009 p 144 Eilenberger 2023 p 348 n26 Sciabarra 2004 pp 3 5 Burns 2009 pp 282 283 Powell 1996 p 322 Chamberlain 1982 p 136 Sylvester 2019 Bloom 1987 p 62 Ephron 1970 p 47 Branden 1986 p 420 McConnell 2010 pp 84 85 Flowers 2009 p 92 Lewis 2007 Hosey 2013 Powers 2016 About Our Name Roark Capital Group Retrieved February 28 2021 a b Hoberman 2011 pp 96 98 Gladstein 1999 p 118 Rand 1995 p 445 Rand 1995 p 419 Gladstein 2009 p 95 Britting 2004 p 71 McConnell 2010 p 262 Carducci 1989 p 40 Mueller 2015 Unproduced and Unfinished Films An Ongoing Film Comment Project Film Comment Archived from the original on May 12 2021 Retrieved March 15 2021 Thompson 2016 Oliver 1992 Weiss 2012 p 251 Siegel 2016 Hipes 2018 Dockterman 2020 Davis 2024 The Fountainhead World Premier Holland Festival Archived from the original on August 20 2014 Retrieved August 19 2014 a b Candoni 2014 a b Mereuze 2014 The Fountainhead in Barcelona Toneelgroep Amsterdam Retrieved August 19 2014 a b Santi 2016 Yim 2017 Yoon 2017 BAM The Fountainhead Brooklyn Academy of Music Retrieved November 30 2017 Chevilley 2014 Darge 2014 Todd 2014 Pascaud 2014 Shaw 2017 McGuinness 2017 Brantley 2017 Freeling 2017 Chughtai 2015 Adil 2007 Phipps 2010 Leo 2009 a b Heller 2009 p 187 Sciabarra 2004 p 6 Bruhwiler 2021 p 135 Works cited edit Adil Mamun M January February 2007 The Portrait of a Lady Aurora Retrieved June 1 2017 Baker James T 1987 Ayn Rand Boston Massachusetts Twayne Publishers ISBN 0 8057 7497 1 Bloom Allan 1987 The Closing of the American Mind New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 671 65715 1 Branden Barbara 1986 The Passion of Ayn Rand Garden City New York Doubleday amp Company ISBN 0 385 19171 5 Brantley Ben November 29 2017 Review The Fountainhead High Tech Juicy and Full of Pulp The New York Times Retrieved December 3 2017 Britting Jeff 2004 Ayn Rand Overlook Illustrated Lives New York Overlook Duckworth ISBN 1 58567 406 0 Brownmiller Susan 1975 Against Our Will Men Women and Rape New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 671 22062 4 Bruhwiler Claudia Franziska 2021 Out of a Gray Fog Ayn Rand s Europe Politics Literature amp Film Kindle ed Lanham Maryland Lexington Books ISBN 978 1 79363 686 7 Burns Jennifer 2009 Goddess of the Market Ayn Rand and the American Right New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 532487 7 Candoni Christopher July 16 2014 The Fountainhead Ivo Van Hove architecte d un grand spectacle The Fountainhead Ivo Van Hove architect of a great show Toute la Culture in French Retrieved August 19 2014 Carducci Mark Patrick 1989 Michael Cimino In Gallagher John Andrew ed Film Directors on Directing Westport Connecticut Praeger ISBN 0 275 93272 9 Chamberlain John 1982 A Life with the Printed Word Chicago Illinois Regnery Gateway ISBN 0 89526 656 3 Chevilley Philippe July 15 2014 Avignon Ivo van Hove le constructeur Avignon Ivo van Hove the builder Les Echos in French Archived from the original on January 5 2017 Retrieved December 23 2016 Chughtai Zahra January 2015 Once Upon a Time Newsline Retrieved June 1 2017 Cullen DuPont Kathryn 2000 Encyclopedia of Women s History in America 2nd ed New York Infobase Publishing ISBN 0 8160 4100 8 Darge Fabienne July 14 2014 La Liberte de l artiste contre la cociete de masse Freedom of the artist against mass society Le Monde in French Retrieved December 23 2016 Davis Edward March 7 2024 Zack Snyder Says He Pitched His Fountainhead Movie to Netflix as a Series but They Passed The Playlist Retrieved March 7 2024 Den Uyl Douglas J 1999 The Fountainhead An American Novel Twayne s Masterwork Studies New York Twayne Publishers ISBN 0 8057 7932 9 Eilenberger Wolfram 2023 The Visionaries Arendt Beauvoir Rand Weil and the Power of Philosophy in Dark Times Translated by Whiteside Shaun Kindle ed New York Penguin ISBN 978 0 593 29746 9 Dockterman Eliana May 21 2020 What to Know About the Justice League Snyder Cut and Why Some People Are Upset About Its Release Time Archived from the original on March 24 2022 Retrieved May 21 2020 Ephron Nora 1970 The Fountainhead Revisited Wallflower at the Orgy New York Viking Press p 47 ISBN 0 670 74926 5 Eyman Scott 2010 Empire of Dreams The Epic Life of Cecil B DeMille New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 7432 8955 9 Filler Martin April 30 2009 Maman s Boy The New York Review of Books Vol 56 no 7 pp 33 36 Flowers Benjamin 2009 Skyscraper The Politics and Power of Building New York City in the Twentieth Century Philadelphia Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 978 0 8122 4184 6 Freeling Isa December 2 2017 Toneelgroep Amsterdam Does Ayn Rand s The Fountainhead at BAM The Huffington Post Retrieved December 3 2017 Gladstein Mimi Reisel 1999 The New Ayn Rand Companion Westport Connecticut Greenwood Press ISBN 0 313 30321 5 Gladstein Mimi Reisel 2009 Ayn Rand Major Conservative and Libertarian Thinkers series New York Continuum Publishing ISBN 978 0 8264 4513 1 Gladstein Mimi Reisel amp Sciabarra Chris Matthew eds 1999 Feminist Interpretations of Ayn Rand Re reading the Canon University Park Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State University Press ISBN 0 271 01830 5 Gotthelf Allan 2000 On Ayn Rand Wadsworth Philosophers Series Belmont California Wadsworth Publishing ISBN 0 534 57625 7 Gotthelf Allan amp Salmieri Gregory eds 2016 A Companion to Ayn Rand Blackwell Companions to Philosophy Hoboken New Jersey Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 1 4051 8684 1 Heller Anne C 2009 Ayn Rand and the World She Made New York Doubleday ISBN 978 0 385 51399 9 Hicks Stephen R C Spring 2009 Egoism in Nietzsche and Rand The Journal of Ayn Rand Studies 10 2 249 291 doi 10 2307 41560389 JSTOR 41560389 Hipes Patrick May 28 2018 Zack Snyder Says The Fountainhead Is His Next Project Deadline Hollywood Retrieved May 31 2018 Hoberman J 2011 An Army of Phantoms American Movies and the Making of the Cold War New York The New Press ISBN 978 1 59558 005 4 Hornstein Alan D 1999 The Trials of Howard Roark PDF Legal Studies Forum 23 4 431 448 Hosey Lance November 14 2013 The Fountainhead Everything That s Wrong with Architecture ArchDaily Retrieved September 17 2016 Huxtable Ada Louise 2008 2004 Frank Lloyd Wright A Life New York Penguin Publishing ISBN 978 0 14 311429 1 Johnson Donald Leslie 2005 The Fountainheads Wright Rand the FBI and Hollywood Jefferson North Carolina McFarland amp Company ISBN 0 7864 1958 X Kingwell Mark 2006 Nearest Thing to Heaven The Empire State Building and American Dreams New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 10622 0 Leo Alex June 11 2009 Maggie Speaks The Littlest Simpson Says Her First Sentence While Acting Out The Fountainhead The Huffington Post Retrieved May 28 2018 Lewis Michael J December 2007 The Rise of the Starchitect The New Criterion Vol 26 no 4 Retrieved September 20 2017 Mayhew Robert ed 2006 Essays on Ayn Rand s The Fountainhead Lanham Maryland Lexington Books ISBN 0 7391 1577 4 Mayhew Robert ed 2009 Essays on Ayn Rand s Atlas Shrugged Lanham Maryland Lexington Books ISBN 978 0 7391 2780 3 McConnell Scott 2010 100 Voices An Oral History of Ayn Rand New York New American Library ISBN 978 0 451 23130 7 McGuinness Max December 1 2017 Ivo van Hove takes on Ayn Rand The Fountainhead in New York Financial Times Archived from the original on 2022 12 10 Retrieved December 3 2017 Mereuze Didier July 17 2014 Fountainhead Roark l architecte en sa tour d ivoire Fountainhead Roark the architect in his ivory tower La Croix in French Retrieved December 22 2016 Merrill Ronald E 1991 The Ideas of Ayn Rand La Salle Illinois Open Court Publishing ISBN 0 8126 9157 1 Mueller Matt August 11 2015 Michael Cimino Tells Locarno Audience I ll Never Stop Screen Daily Archived from the original on July 26 2019 Retrieved March 15 2021 Oliver Charles December 1992 Who ll Play Roark Reason Retrieved September 20 2017 Pascaud Fabienne July 14 2014 Avignon l interminable Source vive d Ivo van Hove Avignon The interminable Fountainhead by Ivo van Hove Telerama in French Retrieved December 22 2016 Perinn Vincent L 1990 Ayn Rand First Descriptive Bibliography Rockville Maryland Quill amp Brush ISBN 0 9610494 8 0 Phipps Keith January 13 2010 Mighty Mouse The New Adventures The Complete Series AV Club Retrieved August 6 2018 Powell Jim May 1996 Rose Wilder Lane Isabel Paterson and Ayn Rand Three Women Who Inspired the Modern Libertarian Movement The Freeman Ideas on Liberty 46 5 322 Retrieved April 15 2011 Powers Kirsten April 11 2016 Donald Trump s Kinder Gentler Version Kirsten Powers USA Today Archived from the original on April 12 2016 Retrieved June 9 2022 Prescott Orville May 12 1943 Books of the Times The New York Times p 23 Pruette Lorine May 16 1943 Battle Against Evil The New York Times p BR7 Reprinted in McGrath Charles ed 1998 Books of the Century New York Times Books pp 135 136 ISBN 0 8129 2965 9 Rand Ayn 1995 Berliner Michael S ed Letters of Ayn Rand New York Dutton ISBN 0 525 93946 6 Rand Ayn 1997 Harriman David ed Journals of Ayn Rand New York Dutton ISBN 0 525 94370 6 Rand Ayn 2005a 1943 The Fountainhead New York Plume ISBN 978 1 101 13718 5 Rand Ayn 2005b Mayhew Robert ed Ayn Rand Answers the Best of Her Q amp A New York New American Library ISBN 0 451 21665 2 Reidy Peter July 7 2010 Frank Lloyd Wright And Ayn Rand The Atlas Society Retrieved August 23 2016 Santi Agnes October 25 2016 Theatre Critique The Fountainhead Theater Review The Fountainhead La Terrasse in French Retrieved December 23 2016 Schleier Merrill 2009 Skyscraper Cinema Architecture and Gender in American Film Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press ISBN 978 0 8166 4281 6 Sciabarra Chris Matthew 1995 Ayn Rand The Russian Radical University Park Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State University Press ISBN 0 271 01440 7 Sciabarra Chris Matthew Fall 2004 The Illustrated Rand The Journal of Ayn Rand Studies 6 1 1 20 JSTOR 41560268 Shaw Helen December 1 2017 Ivo Van Hove Turns Ayn Rand s The Fountainhead Into a Gusher of Nonsense The Village Voice Retrieved December 3 2017 Siegel Tatiana March 17 2016 Batman v Superman Married Creative Duo on That R Rated DVD Plans for DC Superhero Universe The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved August 25 2016 Sylvester Rachel January 27 2019 Both Sides Now Inside the Rise of Sajid Javid Prospect Retrieved February 4 2019 Thomas William ed 2005 The Literary Art of Ayn Rand Poughkeepsie New York The Objectivist Center ISBN 1 57724 070 7 Thompson Anne July 2 2016 Remembering Michael Cimino Dead at 77 IndieWire Archived from the original on May 28 2022 Retrieved March 15 2021 Todd Andrew July 16 2014 The Fountainhead Review Ivo van Hove s Smouldering Take on Ayn Rand The Guardian Retrieved December 22 2016 Walker Jeff 1999 The Ayn Rand Cult La Salle Illinois Open Court Publishing ISBN 0 8126 9390 6 Weiss Gary 2012 Ayn Rand Nation The Hidden Struggle for America s Soul New York St Martin s Press ISBN 978 0 312 59073 4 Yannella Philip R 2011 American Literature in Context after 1929 Malden Massachusetts Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 1 4051 8599 8 Yim Seung hye April 1 2017 Fountainhead Put on Stage by Dutch Director Korea JoongAng Daily Retrieved November 30 2017 Yoon Min sik March 30 2017 Van Hove Asks Idealism or Practicality Via The Fountainhead The Korea Herald Retrieved November 30 2017 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to The Fountainhead Annual The Fountainhead essay contest Ayn Rand Institute CliffsNotes for The Fountainhead SparkNotes study guide for The Fountainhead Panel discussion about The Relevance of The Fountainhead in Today s World on May 12 2002 from C SPAN Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Fountainhead amp oldid 1219516550, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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