Famous Figures
Historical and fictional figures mapped to the sixteen values.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Self-Reliance, his central philosophical essay, is an extended argument for the Integrity value, holding that adherence to one's own moral perception is the only legitimate basis for action.
Explore Integrity →Harriet Beecher Stowe
Her decision to write Uncle Tom's Cabin despite social pressure, and her insistence that moral conviction required public expression, reflects an Integrity orientation in which private principle demanded public articulation.
Explore Integrity →Whittaker Chambers
His public testimony against Alger Hiss, which he knew would destroy his career and reputation, based on the conviction that his moral obligation to truth outweighed his social interests, is a documented Integrity decision.
Explore Integrity →Solzhenitsyn
His refusal to suppress his account of the Gulag despite imprisonment and exile, and his later willingness to criticise Western materialism despite his status as a dissident hero, reflect an Integrity orientation that refused to adjust its positions to social convenience.
Explore Integrity →George Orwell
Orwell's documented practice of naming his influences honestly, acknowledging his own complicity in colonial systems, and his explicit statement that writing should be a deliberate act of honesty rather than a performance of it, reflect an Integrity orientation. He went to Catalonia when he didn't have to. He named names when it cost him.
Explore Integrity →Harper Lee
Lee published two books in her entire career and spent decades refusing to comment on To Kill a Mockingbird's cultural weight. Her refusal to capitalise on her fame, to write sequels, or to speak publicly as a literary celebrity reflects an Integrity orientation in which the work speaks and the author does not.
Explore Integrity →J.D. Salinger
Salinger's withdrawal from public life after the success of The Catcher in the Rye, his refusal to sell film rights, and his decades of private writing that he declined to publish all reflect an Integrity orientation in which the work's relationship to commerce is a moral question.
Explore Integrity →Ursula K. Le Guin
Le Guin's documented refusal to write fiction that violated her political convictions - her explicit critiques of capitalism, patriarchy, and American militarism embedded in speculative fiction - and her acceptance of commercial costs to maintain artistic integrity reflect the Integrity orientation applied to imaginative literature.
Explore Integrity →James Baldwin
Baldwin's refusal to make his experience of racism legible to white audiences by softening it, his documented insistence on telling the truth as he experienced it even when told the truth was too much, and his consistent willingness to challenge both white liberalism and Black nationalism when they fell short, reflect an Integrity orientation that subordinated belonging to honesty.
Explore Integrity →