231 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
231 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
ÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜ ÜÜÜ ÜÜÜÜ
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ÜÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛßÛßßßßßÛÛÜ ÜÜßßßßÜÜÜÜ ÜÛÜ ÜÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÜÜÜÜÜÛßß ßÛÛ
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ßÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÜ ßÛÛ ÜÛÛÛÜÛÛÜÜÜ ßÛÛÛÛÜ ßÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÜÛÛÜÜÜÛÛÝ Ûß
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ßßßÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÜ ÞÝ ÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛßßÛÜÞÛÛÛ ÛÛÛÛÛÜ ßßÛÛÛÞß
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Mo.iMP ÜÛÛÜ ßÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÝÛ ÞÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛ ÞÛÛÛÛ ÞÛÛÛÛÛÝ ßÛß
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ÜÛÛÛÛÛÛÛ ÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÝ ÞÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÝ ÛÛÛ ÛÛÛÛÛÛ
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ÜÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÝ ÞÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛ ÞÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛ ß ÞÛÛÛÛÛÛÜ ÜÛ
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ÜÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÝ ÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛ ÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÝ ÞÞÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛß
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ÜÛßÛÛÛÛÛÛ ÜÜ ÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÝ ÛÛÞÛÛÛÛÛÝ ÞÛÛÛÛÛÛßß
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ÜÛßÛÛÛÛÛÛÜÛÛÛÛÜÞÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛ ÞÛ ßÛÛÛÛÛ Ü ÛÝÛÛÛÛÛ Ü
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ÜÛ ÞÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛß ÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛ ßÛÜ ßÛÛÛÜÜ ÜÜÛÛÛß ÞÛ ÞÛÛÛÝ ÜÜÛÛ
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ÛÛ ÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛß ÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÜ ßÛÜ ßßÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛß ÜÜÜß ÛÛÛÛÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÛÛÛÛÛß
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ßÛÜ ÜÛÛÛß ßÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÜ ßßÜÜ ßßÜÛÛßß ßÛÛÜ ßßßÛßÛÛÛÛÛÛÛßß
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ßßßßß ßßÛÛß ßßßßß ßßßßßßßßßßßßß
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ARRoGANT CoURiERS WiTH ESSaYS
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Grade Level: Type of Work Subject/Topic is on:
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[ ]6-8 [ ]Class Notes [Essay on Dos Passos ]
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[ ]9-10 [ ]Cliff Notes [ ]
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[x]11-12 [x]Essay/Report [ ]
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[ ]College [ ]Misc [ ]
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Dizzed: 09/94 # of Words:2008 School: ? State: ?
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ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ>ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ>ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ>Chop Here>ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ>ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ>ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ>ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ
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Almost every one writer can say that they are influenced by
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their childhood and past. Memories flood back to them as they
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encounter a similar experience or similar situation in their
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earlier years. No doubt a significant factor in their writing,
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the past from a specific writer's life usually adds more depth
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and complexity to their works. Because these previous experiences
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are from the author's actual life, the scenes and subjects
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related to the theme are more accurate and realistic, and may
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even be more appealing to read. These past voices may appear
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either consciously through the author's works, or sometimes
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unconsciously, guided maybe by some early childhood memory. Well,
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whatever the case, John Dos Passos was such a man that appeared
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to have been significantly influenced by his past. Born un-rooted
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to any plot of land, his life was a mission to search for new
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ground on which to grow, which can be seen as an major theme
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throughout all his works.
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Dos Passos grew up to a turbulent childhood, being
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unconventionally born on January 14, 1896. His father, John
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Randalph Dos Passos, was a prominent attorney and his mother,
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Lucy Addison Sprigg, a housewife and an excellent mother. Because
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his parents were not officially married until in 1910, he was
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considered "illegitimate" for about 14 years; this theme of
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alienation is found in many of his writings. Most of the time
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spent during his childhood was with his mother, who travelled
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abundantly, and this was the time where he grew closer to his
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mother and started to drift away from the man he called "dad".
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His travels with his mom led him to places such as Mexico,
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Belgium, and England. Dos Passos's association with France began
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when he was very young, and his knowledge of the language was
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quite thorough. Much of his French expertise is showed off in his
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works, including Manhattan Transfer.
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Dos Passos first attended school in the District of
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Colombia. As he grew up, he spent some of his childhood in
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Tidewater Virginia. He began attending Choate School where his
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first published writings were articles for the Choate School
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News. Upon completing Choate School at the age of fifteen, he
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entered Harvard University in 1912. At Harvard, he continued his
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journalism by joining the Harvard Monthly. While at Harvard, he
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developed a close, long-lasting friendship with E.E. Cummings.
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During this time at Harvard, the spirit of idealism swept the
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country. Dos Passos was stirred by ideas of idealism and began to
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write short autobiographical tales for the Harvard Monthly, which
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showed vague idealism. He later graduated in June of 1916.
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Out of college now, Dos Passos choose to volunteer for
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ambulance duty overseas but his father rejected his idea. So
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instead, he decided to make his first long visit to Spain, a
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country which held fascination for him all his life, to study
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architecture. With the death of his father lather in 1917, he
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joined the Norton-Harjes Ambulance Group and sailed for France.
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During his tour of duty as an ambulance driver, he collaborated
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with a friend, Robert Hillyer, on alternate chapters of a novel,
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and after several revisions, it became One Man's Initiation -
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1917. This book was based largely on his own wartime experiences
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in France and Italy. His second novel, Three Soldiers, was
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published in 1920.
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In 1915, Harper published Manhattan Transfer, a city novel
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in which Dos Passos first began to use the experimental
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techniques he would develop more fully in his major contributions
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to American fiction. The themes of this novel are typical of Dos
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Passos's work: alienation, loneliness, frustration, and loss of
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individuality but Manhattan Transfer " was his first success at
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creating a 'collective novel' where a unifying theme is conveyed
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through multiple facets of character and situation." (Wrenn,32)
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He borrowed styles from Flaubert, Zola, Balzac, James Joyce, and
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T.S. Eliot and found many technical and artistic ideas in early
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twentieth century French literature.
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Taking segments of his life, Dos Passos intermingled it with
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his imagination to make Manhattan Transfer what it is. The
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autobiography is placed almost entirely within the life of a
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single fictional character, Jimmy Herf, a young newspaper
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reporter with ambitions to become a writer. The role of Herf was
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not simple to bring the author's experience into the novel, but
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probably instead to show him as being like a rebel, overcoming
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obstacles that success command, and finding values that counter
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what society feels important. But also representing Dos Passos,
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was Armand Duval, "Congo Jake", an anarchist and bootlegger who
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learns how to ridicule the law and get away with it. He
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illustrates Dos Passos's side that desired independence
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from his parents, producing a theme of individual liberty.
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The theme of Dos Passos not being born to any plot of land,
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with his life a mission to find new ground on which to grow is
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representative by Jimmy Herf's life. Jimmy arrives in Manhattan
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hopeful of a new life; to settle down with a beautiful wife and
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acquire a satisfying job. He eventually does win the heart of
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Ellen Thatcher and becomes a successful writer, but in the end he
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allows Ellen to divorce him, and on the last few lines of the
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book he says,
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At a cross-road where the warning light still winks and
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winks, is a gasoline station, opposite of the Lighting
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Bug lunchwagon. Carefully he spends his last quarter
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for breakfast. that leaves him three cents for good
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luck, or bad luck for that matter. A huge furniture
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truck, shiny and yellow, has drawn up outside.
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" 'Say will you give me a lift?' he asks the
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redhaired man at the wheel.
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" 'How fur ye going?'
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" 'I dunno... Pretty far.' "
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These last words of the novel suggest a optimistic point of view
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upon Herf, as he walks out of Manhattan as a homeless vagrant,
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without family, without money, on toward a new life.
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Dos Passos may have viewed New York as a place of entry upon
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U.S.A. Like a transit point where people enter and leave from.
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Thus, the first settings with Jimmy Herf and Congo are set aboard
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ocean liners entering the port of New York. We find Congo talking
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to one of his friends,
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I want to get somewhere in the world, that's what I
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mean. Europe's rotten and stinking. In America a fellow
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can get ahead. Birth don't matter, education don't
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matter. It's all getting ahead
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The book directs the readers attention to the fact that Manhattan
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is only a temporary place: " the emphasis on fire and
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destruction, the theme of 'The Burthen of Nineveh', and the
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recurring motif of the song,
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Oh it rained forty days
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And it rained forty nights
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And it didn't stop till Christmas
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And the only man that survived the flood
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Was longlegged Jack of the Isthmus" (Wrenn,122)
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Besides being the title of one of the chapters in book, the
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Isthmus may have been Manhattan Island, which was like a strip of
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land connecting Europe to mainland U.S.A.
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Although Jimmy Herf was the main character of the novel,
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when he ends up marrying Ellen Thatcher, a beautiful and talented
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young Broadway actress, the book shifts toward her direction and
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we are drawn into her life. "She grows up, becomes an actress,
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marries and divorces a homosexual actor, marries the
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observer-protagonist Jimmy Herf, becomes a successful editor,
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enters the world of the powerful, divorces Jimmy, and drifts
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toward another marriage." (DBLv9,44) She may have represent what
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Dos Passos believed the characteristics of his life, which were
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ruthless and unforgiving, could have been.
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Although the novel centers it's attention mainly around
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Jimmy and Ellen, Dos Passos produced it so that we also bare
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witness to the other fifty or sixty more characters in the novel
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to obtain the sense of " being intimate witnesses to a series of
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interwoven human dramas." (DLBv9,44) We witness the story of Stan
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Emory, the high-spirited but drunk architect who commits suicide;
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of Joe Harland, failed financier turned alcoholic; of Bud
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Korpening, a young boy looking for a job in the city but is
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driven to his death by the fear of it; of Anna Cohen, who dies
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sewing dresses for the wealthy.
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When Dos Passos's mother died in the April of 1916, it
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threatened to destroy whatever balance there was between his head
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and his heart. His father, being a stranger to him, was not there
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when he needed him, and instead, the only person he could trust
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in time of despair was his mother. He had known her intimately,
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and she had become a part of him. But this death was not the only
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that occurred for only a few months later, Dos Passos's father
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died too." It was the end of parental authority, of his feelings
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of moral responsibility to the ideals of class which his father
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presented, and his boyhood." (Wrenn,39) Dos Passos wrote
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prolifically and sought the literacy career to prove to his
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father that he was the man his father was, and worthy of his
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father's name. These deaths influenced him to write an upcoming
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novel called Rosinante to the Road Again, which portrays two
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characters, Telemachus and Lyaeus, who are made in the image of
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Dos Passos.
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Besides his parents deaths, he was " subject to a number of
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influences which might have developed in him the penchant for
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puzzling about the meaning of what people said an did."
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(Wrenn,35) From his grandfather, he may have acquired a certain
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Latin sensitiveness tending toward emotionalism. From his father,
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a keen mind alert for significant details, and from both a
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restlessness of spirit that would keep him ever searching for the
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better society, the better way of life. His stormy childhood may
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have induced his habit of first grasping details before he could
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comprehend the whole. And because he was born in hotel, his mind
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and attitude developed the influence of home, a place he never
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really knew. " The rootless existence of his childhood left him
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longing for something to belong to, something to believe in."
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(Wrenn,35)
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Some of the unique styles and techniques of writing used
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today were established by Dos Passos. He employed several
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features into his works, such as one called the "Newsreel", which
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used newspaper headlines, words from popular songs, and
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advertisements to surround the action and characters. Another
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technique was called "The Camera's Eye", which gave the author's
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view of his subject and sections of actual events, such as the
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Succo Vanzetti trial. " Dos Passos regarded his style as
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providing a social and historical background in which individual
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actions reflected larger patterns he saw in his society."
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(WBv5,313) Using these innovative techniques, Dos Passos was able
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to present a compare and contrast perspective that presents the
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reader with a multidimensional view of the first thirty years
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of American life in the twentieth century. More than any of his
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contemporaries, Dos Passos embraced the novel as a means to
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persuade - and to persuade in a political direction.
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When Dos Passos died in 1970, the world not only lost a
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great writer, but one ranked among the most important American
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writers of the century. " Dos Passos believed that his novels
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served as a catalyst that forced people to study their lives; man
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has the ability to recast his present in terms of the past while
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allowing the future to exert it's influence." (Patrick,346)
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Searching for a place to belong, Dos Passos made himself a
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environment in which he was accepted. As Jean-Paul Sartre
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declared in 1938,
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He is not, perhaps, " the greatest writer of our time "
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but as a political novelist and chronicler of American
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civilization from 1900 to the Great Depression, Dos
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Passos has an established place in American literary
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history (CLCv32,125)
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For years he did not enjoy the critical esteem that his
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contemporaries, Hemingway and Faulkner, had but today critics
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have begun to understand the importance of his writing, and
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finding them major works of fiction and time capsules of a
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critical period of U.S. history.
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