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Th. Dreiser
(1871—1945)
Theodore Dreiser was born in a poor family and after his school
years he had to support himself by doing odd jobs. He worked in a laun-
dry, was a rent collector for a rich owner of apartment houses. For
several years he worked as newspaper reporter in Chicago, St. Louis,
Cleveland and Pittsburg. Then he moved to New York, where he obtained
work as magazine editor.
From the very beginning of his literary work, he opposed the bour-
geois writers who idealized capitalist America, and he wrote his own
works to reveal the truth about it. Boycott by publishers, hostile criti-
cism, persecution by the law, all these Dreiser had to overcome in order
to reach his public. His life was a constant battle for realistic literature
against unfavourable conditions created by the American bourgeoisie.
The fate of two women described by Dreiser in his first two novels,
Sister Carrie (1900) and Jennie Gerhardt (1911) was a challenge to
the moral claims of the American bourgeoisie. The Financier (1912)
and The Titan (1914) together with The Stoic (published posthumously
in 1947) formed The Trilogy of Desire, a complete life story of an Amer-
ican capitalist, showing the unscrupulousness and brutality with which
the wealth of the big capitalists is amassed. The Genius (1915) dealt
with the fate of an artist, showing the destructive influence of bourgeois
environment upon the hero's creative abilities.
An American Tragedy (1925), Dreiser's masterpiece, is a story of a
life mutilated by the conditions of the American social system. The
significance of the novel was in the exposure of the tragic character
of American life with its contrast of poverty and wealth, social inequal-
ity, corrupt bourgeois morals and a reactionary political system, all
of which contribute to the ultimate fate of the hero who ends his life
in the electric chair.
In 1927 Dreiser was a guest of the Soviet Government. He described
his visit to the USSR in Dreiser Looks at Russia (1928) in which he greeted
enthusiastically the first proletarian state in the world and expressed
his love and admiration for the Soviet people. What Dreiser saw in Russia