DREISER, THEODORE

drīˈsər, –zər, 1871–1945, American novelist, b. Terre Haute, Ind. A pioneer of naturalism in American literature, Dreiser wrote novels reflecting his mechanistic view of life, a concept that held humanity as the victim of such ungovernable forces as economics, biology, society, and even chance. In his works, conventional morality is unimportant, consciously virtuous behavior having little to do with material success and happiness. While his style and language tended to be clumsy and plodding, he played an important role in introducing a new realism and sexual candor into American fiction. Dreiser was born into a large and poor family. His education was irregular, but, with help from a sympathetic high school teacher, he spent the year 1889–90 at the Univ. of Indiana. After working as a journalist on several midwestern newspapers, in 1894 he went to New York City, where he began a career in publishing, eventually rising to the presidency of Butterick Publications.

His first novel, Sister Carrie (1900), the story of a country girl's rise to material success first as the mistress of a wealthy man and then as an actress, horrified its publisher, who gave it only limited circulation. Dreiser distributed it himself, but it was consistently attacked as immoral; it was reissued in 1982 with many passages from his revised typescript restored. Jennie Gerhardt (1911), again about a "fallen woman," met with a better response; its success allowed Dreiser to work as a writer full time. With these two works, Dreiser started his long battle for the right of the novelist to portray life as he sees it.

In The Financier (1912), he turned his attention more specifically to American social and economic institutions. This novel, the first of a trilogy that includes The Titan (1914) and The Stoic (1947), describes the rise to power of a ruthless industrialist. In both The Genius (1915) and in The Bulwark (1946), Dreiser explores the failings of an American artist. An American Tragedy (1925), often considered his greatest work, tells of a poor young man's futile effort to achieve social and financial success; the attempt ends in his execution for murder. In his later life Dreiser became interested in socialism, visiting the Soviet Union as a guest of the government and writing his perceptions: Dreiser Looks at Russia (1928) and Tragic America (1931). Among his other works are such collections of short stories as Free (1918), Chains (1927), and A Gallery of Women (1929).

See his memoirs, A Traveler at Forty (1913), A Book About Myself (1922; republished as Newspaper Days, 1931), and Dawn (1931); his letters, ed. by R. Elias (3 vol., 1959); biographies by W. A. Swanberg (1965) and R. Lingeman (2 vol., 1986–90); studies by E. Moers (1969), F. O. Matthiessen (1951, repr. 1973), J. Lundquist (1974), and L. E. Hussman (1983).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Dreiser Theodore  - 1513 results

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...Magazine, XXI May 1899 , 240. 28 Theodore Dreiser: "John Burroughs in His Mountain...XVI August 19, 1899 , 7. 29 Theodore Dreiser: "Carrier Pigeons in War Time...Magazine XXXlV July 1898 , 223 30 Theodore Dreiser: "The Descent of the Horse...
...384-92. Gerber, Philip L. Theodore Dreiser . Twaynes United States Authors...Victorian Vamp". Sister Carrie . Theodore Dreiser. New York: Norton, 1970...21-30. -----, ed. Theodore Dreiser: Beyond Naturalism . New York...
...Matthiessen, Dreiser , p. 198. 8. Theodore Dreiser, An American Tragedy New York...Randolph Bourne, "The Art of Theodore Dreiser," in Stature of Dreiser...20. John Chamberlain, "Theodore Dreiser Remembered," in Stature of...
...H. ed. Elias, Letters of Theodore Dreiser: A Selection, 3 vols. Philadelphia...Letters , 1:37. Chapter 2 Theodore Dreiser, "Fame Found in Quiet Nooks...comments on these articles. Theodore Dreiser , The Treasure House of Natural...
THEODORE DREISER CRITICAL: HIS PLACE ABOUT ten years before Theodore Dreiser was born--that is to say, roughly, about 1860---the whole economic and cultural aspect of the United States underwent a profound revolution. Not since the sinking...
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journal articles on: Dreiser Theodore  - 179 results

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...Sexualizing Power in Naturalism: Theodore Dreiser and Frederick Philip Grove. Calgary...While the comparison of Grove and Dreiser goes back as far as 1932, and...more illuminating of Grove than of Dreiser is no discredit to her book; rather...
The Last Titan: A Life of Theodore Dreiser. by Kevin McCarron The Last Titan: A Life of Theodore Dreiser. By Jerome Loving. Berkeley...German Catholic family, Hermann Theodore Dreiser was born on 27 August 1871 in...
Theodore Dreiser: beyond Naturalism by James R. Giles Miriam Gogol, ed. Theodore Dreiser: Beyond Naturalism. New York: New...by a generally overt argument that Theodore Dreiser was a writer of such depth and complexity...
...Garland, Norris, Dreiser, Wharton, and Cather...Although Frank Norris, Theodore Dreiser, and Edith Wharton...material to portray Theodore Dreisers shifting views...a point to which Dreiser returned in the 1930s...
...stamp on Algers paradigm. In Theodore Dreiser, F. O. Matthiessen concludes...New York: Penguin, 1980. Dreiser, Theodore. The Financier. New York...1983. Lingeman, Richard. Theodore Dreiser: An American Journey. 2 vols...
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magazine articles on: Dreiser Theodore  - 98 results

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...Matthiessens advocacy of Dreiser in Theodore Dreiser (1951), published the year...might have been a good idea. Theodore Dreiser, perhaps in spite of himself...him, and perhaps since. In Theodore Dreiser, F. O. Matthiessen wrote...
...awaited screen version of Theodore Dreisers An American Tragedy...leads him to commit murder. Dreiser portrays Griffiths as a victim...dramatic accident with which Dreiser had concerned himselF, yon...subsequently stated. When Dreiser read the new script of von...
...will put him "in a class with Hugo, Tolstoy and Dreiser". Theodore Dreiser, that is, author of An American Tragedy (1925...also answers a question in which Dos Passos, and Dreiser before him, would have taken some kind of interest...
...twentieth century without Farrell, Theodore Dreiser, Richard Wright, Nelson Algren...Side, to take up such a trade. Dreiser, the son of a German Catholic...changed it to Dresser.) Farrell and Dreiser met in 1936. Farrell, barely...
...Teachout is terribly hard on Theodore Dreiser, judgmental about him in ways...managed to avoid; to say that Dreiser "was an idiot savant, capable...presented to the public, was, as Dreiser put it with an exclamation point...
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newspaper articles on: Dreiser Theodore  - 32 results

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...them all in length, Theodore Dreisers "An American...general editor of the Dreiser Edition at the University...justify our still taking Dreiser seriously as a novelist...AMERICAN TRAGEDY By Theodore Dreiser. The Library of America...
...certainly not to the degree it is in Theodore Dreiser, James T. Farrell, Meyer Levin...early-20th century novels of Dreiser and Dos Passos and Farrell and...represented and robustly defended by Dreiser and the others. Moreover, he...
...oftenement life. It was this that caught the attention of Theodore Dreiser, thenediting periodicals, but soon to emerge as one of the most influentialnovelists of the age. THEODORE Dreiser may have brought gritty naturalism into modern fiction...
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encyclopedia articles on: Dreiser Theodore  - 10 results

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DREISER, THEODORE dri s r, z r, 1871 1945, American...of naturalism in American literature, Dreiser wrote novels reflecting his mechanistic...sexual candor into American fiction. Dreiser was born into a large and poor family...
...Paul Dresser (brother of Indiana-born novelist Theodore Dreiser ) for the song "On the Banks of the Wabash, Far...novels of Booth Tarkington . Another Indiana author, Theodore Dreiser, wrote more generally of American society in a changing...
...of naturalism , which reached heights in the hands of Theodore Dreiser and Jack London , the latter a fiery advocate of social...Kushner. The naturalism that governed the novels of Dreiser and the stories of Sherwood Anderson was intensified...
...lustiness, was also the center of Midwestern culture. Theodore Thomas and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra founded a...the early 20th cent. by such men as Carl Sandburg, Theodore Dreiser, Eugene Field, Edgar Lee Masters, and James T...
...War I ambulance driver in France and Italy. In his fiction, Dos Passos is said to have mingled the naturalism of Theodore Dreiser with the modernism of James Joyce . His first successful novel, Three Soldiers (1921), belonged to the group...
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