C-SPAN's New History Series
A companion site for C-SPAN's special television series for 2001
Created by Cable.   Offered as a Public Service.


About    Schedule    Watch    Book Club    Search    Shop

« Go to American Writers II
   Video Archives

   Portrait Gallery

   Classroom

   Cable Affiliates

   Home
Schedule:
August 20, 2001
9am ET on C-SPAN
August 24, 2001
8pm ET on C-SPAN
Program Details

V







icon


Born: August 27, 1871 - Terre Haute, Indiana
Died: December 28, 1945 - Hollywood, California


The son of a German immigrant, Dreiser was the ninth of 10 children and grew up in poverty. He spent a year at Indiana University before becoming a newspaper reporter in 1892. His reading (especially of T. H. Huxley, John Tyndall, and Herbert
About C-SPAN & Merriam-Webster
Spencer) and personal experiences led him to a pessimistic view of human helplessness in the face of instinct and social forces.

The initial failure of his first novel, Sister Carrie (1900), the story of a kept woman whose behavior goes unpunished, plunged him into depression, but he recovered and achieved financial success as editor in chief of several women's magazines until he was forced to resign in 1910 because of his involvement with an assistant's daughter.

In 1911 his second novel, Jennie Gerhardt, was published. It was followed in 1912 by The Financier, and in 1914 by The Titan, two volumes in a projected trilogy based on the life of the transportation magnate Charles T. Yerkes. The 'Genius' (1915), a sprawling semiautobiographical chronicle of Dreiser's numerous love affairs, was censured by the New York Society for the Suppression of Vice. Its sequel, The Bulwark, appeared posthumously in 1946.

Works by Theodore Dreiser
Sister Carrie (1900)
Jennie Gerhardt (1911)
The Financier (1912)
The Titan (1914)
The 'Genius' (1915)
An American Tragedy (1925)
Dawn (1931)
The Bulwark (1946)
In 1925 he published his first novel in a decade, An American Tragedy. Based on a celebrated murder case, it brought him a degree of critical and commercial success he had never before attained. Its highly critical view of the American legal system made him the adopted champion of social reformers. Though a visit to the Soviet Union had left him skeptical about communism, the Great Depression caused him to reconsider his opposition. His autobiographical Dawn (1931) is one of the most candid self-revelations by any major writer. He completed most of The Stoic, the long-postponed third volume of his trilogy on Yerkes, in the weeks before his death. His other works include short stories, plays, and essays.

Web sites about Theodore Dreiser
International Theodore Dreiser Society
Theodore Dreiser



I   II   III   IV   V   VI   VII   VIII


This site is optimized for Internet Explorer 5.0+ and Netscape 4.0+ at a screen size of 800x600
C-SPAN.org    Book TV.org    Booknotes.org    Capitol Hearings.org
American Presidents.org    C-SPAN Alert!    Contact Us