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An American Tragedy Study Guide

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by Theodore Dreiser
About 118 pages (35,348 words)
An American Tragedy Summary

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Theodore Dreiser's massive novel An American Tragedy was published in December 1925 in two volumes. Coming in the middle of Dreiser's long career, it was the first novel to earn him fame and wealth, though not the first to be controversial.

An American Tragedy is a detailed portrayal of the dark side of the American Dream—the story of what can happen when an ordinary man's desire for wealth and status overwhelms his moral sense. Dreiser built the novel around a real-life crime after spending years researching incidents in which men murdered women with whom they had been romantically involved but who had become inconvenient for one reason or another (often because of an unwanted pregnancy, as in the novel).

Dreiser chose as his starting point the case of Chester Gillette, who drowned his pregnant girlfriend in a New York lake in 1906. Like the novel's Clyde Griffiths, Chester Gillette was electrocuted for his crime.

An American Tragedy is widely considered Dreiser's best novel and an important work of American naturalism. Naturalism, which began in Europe and flowered in America, is a literary style that explores the premise that individuals' fates are determined by a combination of hereditary and environmental constraints that leave no room for free will or true individual choice. Some scholars and critics consider An American Tragedy one of the greatest American novels of any style or period.

This complete Introduction contains 230 words. This study guide contains 35,348 words (approx. 118 pages at 300 words per page).

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    Critical Essay by Shawn St. Jean
    SOURCE: St. Jean, Shawn. “Social Deconstruction and An American Tragedy.” Dreiser Studies 28, no... more

    Critical Essay by H. L. Mencken
    SOURCE: "Dreiser in 840 Pages," in the American Mercury, Vol. 7, No. 17, March, 1926, pp. 379-81. In... more


     
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    An American Tragedy from BookRags and Gale's For Students Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.



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