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The Titan Wiki Information
The Titan
is a novel written by Theodore Dreiser in 1914.
It is Dreiser's sequel to The Financier
. [1]
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THE TITAN TICKETS
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Plot summary
Cowperwood moves to Chicago with his new wife Aileen. He decides to take over the street-railway system. He bankrupts several opponents with the help of John J. McKenty and other political allies. Meanwhile, Chicago society finds out about his past in Philadelphia and the couple are no longer invited to dinner parties; after a while, the press turns on him too. Cowperwood is unfaithful many times. Aileen finds out about a certain Rita and beats her up. She gives up on him and has an affair with Polk Lynde, a man of privilege; she eventually loses faith in him. Meanwhile, Cowperwood meets young Berenice Fleming; by the end of the novel, he tells her he loves her and she accepts to live with him. However, the ending is bittersweet as Cowperwood has not managed to obtain the fifty-year franchise for his railway schemes that he wanted.
Allusions to other works
- Allusions to other works include Ishmael, Cesar, Euripides, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, John Milton's Masque of Comus
, William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet
and Macbeth
, Moliere's Les Femmes Savantes
, Richard Brinsley Sheridan's The Rivals
, Sophocles's Electra
, Robert Browning's The Ring and the Book
, John Keats's The Eve of St. Agnes
, and Cellini's autobiography.
- Cowperwood collects paintings; some painters mentioned include Lord Leighton, Gabriel Rossetti, James Abbott McNeill Whistler, Henry Raeburn, Jean-François Millet, Jan Steen, Jean-Louis-Ernest Meissonier, and Jean-Léon Gérôme.
- In Chapter XXIX, Florence Cochrane is said to read Christopher Marlowe and Ben Jonson.
- In Chapter LI, Braxmar says he has read George du Maurier's Trilby
.
- Music is mentioned with Sarah Bernhardt, Tchaikovsky's Francesca da Rimini
, and Puccini.
- Greek mythology is also mentioned with Chaldea, Circe, Helen, Troy, and Andromache.
Allusions to actual history
- Historical allusions include Andrew Jackson, Henry Clay, Davy Crockett, the Haymarket affair, Henry George, and Robert Owen.
References
- Hildergarde Hawthorne, 'MR. DREISER'S TRILOGY; "The Financier" Continued in "The Titan" -- Novels by Mr. Harris, W.L. Comfort and Others -- Latest Fiction THE TITAN. By Theodore Dreiser. New York: John Lane Co. LATEST FICTION LATEST FICTION', The New York Times, p. 55, May 24, 1914 [1]
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