Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- Part I Backgrounds and contexts
- Part II Dreiser and his culture
- 5 The matter of Dreiser’s modernity
- 6 Dreiser, class, and the home
- 7 Can there be loyalty in The Financier? Dreiser and upward mobility
- 8 Dreiser, art, and the museum
- 9 Dreiser and women
- 10 Sister Carrie, race, and the World’s Columbian Exposition
- 11 Dreiser’s sociological vision
- 12 Dreiser and crime
- Select bibliography
- Index
7 - Can there be loyalty in The Financier? Dreiser and upward mobility
from Part II - Dreiser and his culture
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2006
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- Part I Backgrounds and contexts
- Part II Dreiser and his culture
- 5 The matter of Dreiser’s modernity
- 6 Dreiser, class, and the home
- 7 Can there be loyalty in The Financier? Dreiser and upward mobility
- 8 Dreiser, art, and the museum
- 9 Dreiser and women
- 10 Sister Carrie, race, and the World’s Columbian Exposition
- 11 Dreiser’s sociological vision
- 12 Dreiser and crime
- Select bibliography
- Index
Summary
In his brief but resonant introduction to Sister Carrie, novelist E. L. Doctorow pauses to note that the young Dreiser arrived in Pittsburgh in “the aftermath of the Homestead strike in which armies of Pinkerton detectives and striking steelworkers had fought pitched battles.” The remark raises an interesting question about a scene in The Financier when there is another mention of the Pinkertons. Edward Malia Butler, who has been informed that his daughter Aileen is carrying on an illicit relationship with Frank Cowperwood, reluctantly decides to go to a detective. Seeking one not in Philadelphia but in New York, where he can pass unknown, he nevertheless hesitates to give his name at the Pinkerton office or “to take anyone into his confidence in regard to Aileen” (35). It’s not hard to see why. In practical terms, all the major players in this novel, Butler included, subscribe to Frank Cowperwood’s motto, “I satisfy myself.” And in a world of self-satisfiers, why should anyone have confidence in anyone else, confidence in other words that others will do anything other than satisfy the urge to make as large a profit as possible, if necessary at one’s expense?
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Theodore Dreiser , pp. 112 - 126Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2004