X

The Cambridge Companion to Theodore Dreiser (Cambridge Companions to Literature)

the novel’s start and finish – a rather different pattern emerges. Although,

170

Sister Carrie and race

somewhat melodramatically, Carrie imagines her flight from Chicago with

Hurstwood as the chance to “come out of bondage into freedom” (290),

she displays few of the “black” traits identified with him, and none of the

markers – cowardliness, laziness, irresponsibility, dishonesty, violence, and

so on – identified in Jehlen’s account of representations of the New Negro.

Instead, she has “no great passion” and, whereas Hurstwood is driven by

his overriding craving for her, feels only a “semblance of affection” for him

(301), and similar lack of emotion when she leaves Columbia City, then her

sister, and later Drouet.

A similar restraint is evident in Carrie’s attitude to sex. Although we must

assume that she is sexually active in her relationships with Hurstwood and

Drouet, this is not a subject that she reflects upon. Where Drouet’s interest

in Carrie is immediately identified as physical, and Hurstwood’s excessive

sexual desires are marked by his visits to brothels, Carrie herself shows

neither pleasure nor repugnance, and does not appear to think about sex.

This absence is representative of much of the thinking of the time, and is a

crucial index of her gendered racial identity. As Wendy Martin has illustrated

in a reading of female sexuality in Kate Chopin’s The Awakening (1899), a woman’s desires were widely believed to correspond to her color:

In general, proper women were not perceived as having sexual needs or as being

capable of experiencing erotic pleasure or orgasm. For a respectable woman

the sex act was one of self-sacrifice; the true woman was passionless . . .

Color charts that hung in drugstores and other public buildings [in the South]

provided an extremely complex key to the hierarchical ranking of racial ances-

try. Moral qualities were attributed to degrees of skin pigmentation, and black women were condemned as lustful she-devils while white women were praised

for ethereal purity akin to that of the angels.15

But, whereas Chopin’s Edna Pontellier becomes a kind of sexual freak within

her community in The Awakening, with her desires being read by her hus-

band and acquaintances as signs of moral and racial deviance, Carrie’s own

desires and actions only surface in her sister’s unconscious, and her own

performances on stage. At the very moment when Carrie is (as it seems)

making love to Drouet for the first time, Minnie is troubled by a dream of

Carrie entering a “deep pit” containing “curious wet stones far down where

the wall disappeared in vague shadows” (79). Predictably, Minnie’s dream

suggests a moral fall as well as a physical one, but its symbolic allusions to

sexual activity remain elliptical, representative of a gendered and racialized

unconscious that precludes the open discussion of the subject.

In order to understand Carrie’s subsequent rise, it is useful to recall the

layout of the World’s Columbian Exposition. The White City, representing

171

c h r i s to p h e r g a i r

the peaks of (white American) achievement was approached via the Mid-

way Plaisance, where a series of ethnological exhibits ranging from, at one

end, Native Americans and Africans, to, just outside the White City itself,

the German village, marked out an implicitly evolutionary model of human

progress. Other races, with the notable exception of the African American,

are represented on the same scale – though at different points – as white

Americans, with the promise that, in time, emulation of the educational

model on display will bring about an internalization of that idealized cul-

ture. Carrie’s own development both off stage and on suggests that her tra-

jectory embodies an individualized version of the same model, as she ascends

the evolutionary ladder – an ascension made possible by her ethnic identity,

though not guaranteed by it. At the start of the novel, being “white” is a

struggle for Carrie, whose unaccompanied walks through the city reverber-

ate with echoes of moral impropriety and prostitution. At a time when space

was still rigidly demarcated according to gender, Carrie’s wanderings sug-

gest that it is not only her economic status that is precarious. Nevertheless,

this stage in Carrie’s development is short-lived, since her imitative range

enables her to adapt to new environments. Thus, although her unwedded

sexual activities do imply a position that remains on the margins of official

white female identity – and it is notable that her rise to theatrical stardom

gathers pace once she has abandoned Hurstwood, and apparently embraced

chastity – there are signs that Carrie is becoming “whiter.”

The pattern is even clearer in the differences between her various acting

roles. In her first public performance, as Laura in Under the Gaslight, Carrie is expected to conform to the “most sacred traditions of melodrama,” in a

part where “the sorrowful demeanor, the tremolo music, the long, explana-

tory, cumulative addresses, were all there” (160–161). Although Carrie is

delighted with the part, her performance is on course to be a “wretched fail-

ure” until Hurstwood attempts to “hypnotize her into doing better” (182).

It is unclear whether this hypnosis – a process for unleashing the uncon-

scious – provokes the transformation, but Carrie subsequently exhibits the

“magic of passion,” what Hurstwood sees as “something extraordinarily

good” (185), in the remainder of the performance, in a display of animation

unlike anything else she does throughout the novel. It is at this moment,

with her passions on full display, that she generates the greatest desire in

Hurstwood, who “mastered himself only by a superhuman effort” (193).

In contrast, Carrie’s subsequent roles demand increasing restraint, in a

significant retreat from the emotional excesses of the melodrama. In what

becomes her first speaking part, as “one of a group of oriental beauties” in

a harem (430), Carrie’s new racial identity demands none of the extremes

drawn out in a melodramatic genre associated indelibly – as the unrivaled

172

Sister Carrie and race

popularity of stage versions of Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin

in the 1890s demonstrates – with blackface. Later still, in another clear

evolutionary rise, as the “silent little Quakeress,” Carrie arouses desire in

“the portly gentlemen in the front rows,” who wish to “force away” her

frown with kisses (446–447). At this moment, her new purity is emphasized

both by the religious nature of her role, and by the contrast between the

brightness of the space she occupies on stage and the darkened auditorium,

from where the lascivious glances of the men are directed. In a moment

encapsulating the links between light and moral worthiness and dark and

immorality that became increasingly common in the popular culture of the

turn-of-the century (especially with the emergence of movies), Dreiser focuses

on the relationship between the embodiment of white female virtue on stage

and the darkened male lust in the audience.16 Finally, following her encounter

with the down and out Hurstwood, there is a fusion of public and private

identities, with Carrie’s “lonely, self-withdrawing temper” making her an

“interesting figure in the public eye” (478). In abandoning the theatrical

excesses of melodrama, and increasingly coming to portray the desirable,

though unattainable, model of reserved white womanhood, Carrie increases

her market value beyond anything she had ever expected.

Ultimately, however, even this degree of success provides no satisfaction

for Carrie. Where once merely being offered the chance to act and, later,

being paid more than she can spend provoked “delighted” (434) responses,

her moments of satisfaction are always brief. Walter Benn Michaels has

argued that this is a good thing: that in Carrie’s world satisfaction is “never desirable; it is instead the sign of incipient failure, decay, and finally death”; and that the consumer capitalist America that she inhabits succeeds because

it forever generates new desires.17 But the introduction of Bob Ames steers

Carrie’s desires in a new direction: although Michaels sees Ames’s views as

anachronistic and argues that he is little different from the world he critiques, since he also awakens new desires in Carrie, this is to over-simplify both

Ames’s message and Carrie’s response.

Ames himself is in almost every way the opposite of Hurstwood. Where

Hurstwood is “dark,” Ames has a “clean, white brow” (484); where Hurst-

wood looks older than his years, Ames has “the least touch of boyishness

to Carrie” (333); where Hurstwood is “dressy,” Ames is “wholly free of af-

fectation” (329); and where Hurstwood is an adulterer and bigamist, Ames

“had respect for the married state” (330), and appears “innocent and clean”

(335). Indeed, in total contrast to Hurstwood’s characteristic excesses, Ames

is defined through his restraint, as we have seen, an emotional marker of

“whiteness.” His attitudes to art parallel his moral standpoint, as illustrated in his comments about fiction. For Ames, adopting a defense of emotional

173

c h r i s to p h e r g a i r

thriftiness that echoes those of the realist novelist and critic William Dean

Howells, the popular sentimental romances offer a poor role model to

Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71

Categories: Dreiser, Theodore
curiosity: