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Famous Figures

Historical and fictional figures mapped to the sixteen values.

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Vitality · OECF
musician 20th century

Little Richard

Little Richard's documented physicality - the piano playing that left him drenched and ecstatic, the screaming that preceded screaming as a musical form - and his explicit statement that his music was meant to make audiences feel alive rather than merely entertained, reflect a Vitality orientation in its purest musical expression.

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Vitality · OECF
musician Contemporary

Frank Ocean

Ocean's music - luminous, emotionally unguarded, deliberately uncategorisable - and his documented belief that the purpose of his art is to make people feel the aliveness of their own experience, reflect a Vitality orientation applied to introspection rather than performance.

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Vitality · OECF
musician Contemporary

Billie Eilish

Eilish's documented use of her public presence to make teenage emotional experience legible and valid - depression, body image, the texture of being young and overwhelmed - and her consistent breaking of genre conventions to stay honest, reflect a Vitality orientation in which authenticity generates energy rather than depleting it.

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Mastery · SAJD
writer 20th century

Ernest Hemingway

Hemingway's documented practice of rewriting the ending to A Farewell to Arms forty-seven times, his stated principle of writing one true sentence and building from there, and his decades of systematic observation of craft in writers he admired reflect a Mastery orientation applied to prose with unusual self-consciousness.

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Mastery · SAJD
writer 20th century

William Faulkner

Faulkner's sustained technical experimentation - stream of consciousness, multiple unreliable narrators, non-linear chronology - and his documented belief that a novelist's obligation is to push the formal limits of what prose can do, reflect a Mastery orientation applied to narrative structure.

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Mastery · SAJD
writer Contemporary

Cormac McCarthy

McCarthy's documented decades of research for each novel, his refusal to publish until he was certain each sentence was as good as he could make it, and his systematic exploration of prose stripped of conventional punctuation to test what sentences could carry without external support reflect a Mastery orientation of unusual severity.

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Mastery · SAJD
writer 19th century

George Eliot

Eliot's systematic research for her historical novels, her documented correspondence tracking down period details, and her explicit belief that the novelist's obligation was to render human consciousness with complete accuracy reflect a Mastery orientation applied to psychological and historical truth.

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Integrity · SAJF
writer 20th century

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.

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Integrity · SAJF
writer 20th century

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.

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Integrity · SAJF
writer 20th century

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.

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Integrity · SAJF
writer Contemporary

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.

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Integrity · SAJF
writer 20th century

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.

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Security · SACD
writer 20th century

P.G. Wodehouse

Wodehouse's construction of a fictional world characterised by stable social order, recoverable situations, and reliable relationships - in which catastrophe always resolves into restored comfort - and his documented preference for consistency over experimentation reflect a Security orientation expressed as aesthetic commitment.

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Peace · SACF
writer Contemporary

Haruki Murakami

Murakami's documented daily practice - waking at four, writing for five or six hours, running ten kilometres, sleeping at nine - and his explicit description of the writing process as a meditation on the contents of his own interior, reflect a Peace orientation in which solitude is not privation but the condition of honest work.

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Peace · SACF
writer Contemporary

Wendell Berry

Berry's documented commitment to farming the same Kentucky land his family has farmed for generations, his refusal to use a computer, and his explicit belief that the local and the particular are more real than the global and abstract reflect a Peace orientation in which rootedness is understood as wisdom.

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Peace · SACF
writer Contemporary

Annie Dillard

Dillard's sustained attention to the particular - the detail of a weasel's grip, the quality of light on a creek - and her documented practice of paying such close attention to the immediate that the infinite becomes visible in it, reflect a Peace orientation applied to the act of perception.

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