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Revision as of 20:26, 23 December 2013
This article was nominated for deletion. The discussion was closed on 23 December 2013 with a consensus to merge the content into the article Murray Rothbard. If you find that such action has not been taken promptly, please consider assisting in the merger instead of re-nominating the article for deletion. To discuss the merger, please use the destination article's talk page. (December 2013) |
Mozart Was a Red was an unpublished one-act play written in the 1960s by libertarian economist Murray Rothbard. The morality play was written as a farce, inspired by the author's meetings with Ayn Rand. Based on Rothbard's allegation that the expectation by Rand's circle was that she and her Objectivist views were to be considered absolute, the play parodied Rand (through the character "Carson Sand") and her friends during a visit from Keith Hackley, a fan of Sand's novel The Brow of Zeus (a play on Rand's most famous novel, Atlas Shrugged).
The play was never officially published, although it was passed around various libertarian circles and on the internet following its original writing. It was performed for Rothbard's 60th birthday celebration at the Ludwig von Mises Institute in 1986.
References
- Excerpt from Chris Matthew Sciabarra's Total Freedom: Toward a Dialectical Libertarianism
- Ludwig von Mises Institute: Mozart Was a Red performance at Google Video. Uploaded by the Mises Institute.
- Brian Doherty, Radicals for Capitalism: A Freewheeling History of the Modern American Libertarian Movement. 2007, PublicAffairs. (ISBN 978-1586483500)
- Chris Matthew Sciabarra, Total Freedom: Toward a Dialectical Libertarianism. 2000, Penn State Press. (ISBN 0271020490)
External links
- Mozart Was a Red: A Morality Play in One Act by Murray N. Rothbard, with an introduction by Justin Raimondo.