“What is Ayn Rand’s Anthem About?” Wikipedia, Wikimedia Foundation, 17 November 2025, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthem_(novella)
In Anthem men are not permitted to think for themselves. The state controls people’s minds (not just their bodies) and “all first-person singular pronouns have been expunged from the language;” especially the word “I,” which becomes an “unmentionable word.” Since, discovering and speaking these prohibited words is strictly punished. By an agonizing death. For example, one of the novel’s characters is burned alive for saying “I”. Evidently, this character loses his life for speaking out against the regime; against Anthem’s fully collectivized dictatorship. Since, in this world, being different from one’s brothers is an unpardonable transgression. Since, men, in this society must think of themselves as “we.” As a mere cog in the novel’s collective machine.
In sum, Anthem is a novel that condemns collectivists of whatever variety. Particularly, when these autocrats seize control of human society.