"And then chad thundercock pinned mary sue against the wall and said 'you're just my little plaything you fucking dirty slutty stinky bitch' and then he slapped her in the face and tore her clothes open and fucked her like a whore!"
Was she a lesbot? I cannae recall
>>24774444Close, but not quite accurate. Should be:>And then chad thundercock pinned mary sue against the wall and said 'thundercock steel will be used in everything across the nation' and then he slapped her in the face and she said 'and our trains will run from coast to coast using thundercock steel for the rails' then he tore her clothes open and fucked her like a whore!
>>24774444Ayn Rand was just writing contemporary smut, it only reads as political in hindsight. Perhaps the people of the future will look at the werewolf knotting novels of today and think them a bold political statement.
>>24774444Yes this is definitely "the author's barely-disguised fetish" at work.But really she's only doing what almost every female author does. Might be fun to compile a selection of passages from more well-respected figures to demonstrate this.A famous one to kick things off:—. . . Oh, if she could only reach her room! She turned her ankle and the slipper fell half off. As she stopped to kick it loose frantically, Rhett, running lightly as an Indian, was beside her in the dark. His breath was not on her face and his hands went round her roughly, under the wrapper, against her bare skin."You turned me out on the town while you chased him. By God, this is one night when there are only going to be two in my bed."He swung her off her feet into his arms and started up the stairs. Her head was crushed against his chest and she heard the hard hammering of his heart beneath her ears. He hurt her and she cried out, muffled, frightened. Up the stairs he went in the utter darkness, up, up, and she was wild with fear. He was a mad stranger and this was a black darkness she did not know, darker than death. He was like death, carrying her away in arms that hurt. She screamed, stifled against him and he stopped suddenly on the landing and, turning her swiftly in his arms, bent over and kissed her with a savagery and a completeness that wiped out everything from her mind but the dark into which she was sinking and the lips on hers. He was shaking, as though he stood in a strong wind, and his lips, traveling from her mouth downward to where the wrapper had fallen from her body, fell on her soft flesh. He was muttering things she did not hear, his lips were evoking feelings never felt before. She was darkness and he was darkness and there had never been anything before this time, only darkness and his lips upon her. She tried to speak and his mouth was over hers again. Suddenly she had a wild thrill such as she had never known; joy, fear, madness, excitement, surrender to arms that were too strong, lips too bruising, fate that moved too fast. For the first time in her life she had met someone, something stronger than she, someone she could neither bully nor break, someone who was bullying and breaking her. Somehow, her arms were around his neck and her lips trembling beneath his and they were going up, up into the darkness again, a darkness that was soft and swirling and all enveloping.— Margaret Mitchell, ‘Gone With The Wind’
>>24774497No but she has a very similar vibe for me and I think that's because she was one of those women who had a very masculine brain.Many of these are lesbians (Camille Paglia, Mary Renault) but many are not (Emily Bronte, Sylvia Plath).All these are writers but you see the type in other fields too (Florence Nightingale).Lesbian or not, they all have a lot in common:— a respect for traditionally masculine virtues, an impatience with traditional female weaknesses; often a preference for masculine company.Also, lesbian or not, they don't generally have much maternal instinct. (Plath is the only one who had children isn't she?) Ann Coulter is another (relatively) modern example and she said explictly that she thinks the normal female desire to be a mother just isn't in her. She isn't a lesbian though.
>>24774683Fun Margaret Mitchell factoid:—She was very interested in erotic / pornographic literature and amassed quite a collection. Many of her letters talk about it and discuss what she thinks is the good stuff.
>>24774444My understanding of Ayn Rand which is incredibly limited is that she charges a high rate for sex and she would call an ejaculation "the fountainheads surplus"
>>24774699That's literally just being intelligent.
>>24774794Not entirely. There are high-IQ women who are very feminine. Often they're actresses (Judy Holliday, Sharon Stone) or musicians (Bjork is clearly very bright). Queen Cleopatra of Egypt is another famous historical example.
>>24774444Every time I see Ayn Rand I remember some anon posting a rape copy pasta about her. It lives in my head to this day but I never found it again.
>>24774444Quads of truth.
>>24774840Well, everyone says Cleopatra was ugly as shit but I choose to align with you. I choose to firmly believe that she looked loke she does in the videogame rise and fall, civilizations at war
>>24774840Hedy Lamarr comes to my mind.
>>24774859Reminds me of the one about how she wrote all her inserts as delicate, feminine, and beautiful while she was an ugly blocky jewess being compared to anons who self-insert as seven foot hyperborean chads while being short weak sickly and brown.
>>24774699I'd add Katharine Hepburn as well.
>>24774444I'm glad he never transitioned. He looks cuter as a girl desu.
>>24774840Sharon Stone and Björk are borderline retarded.
>>24774444I see. Please continue.