E.L. Doctorow’s novel Ragtime, first published in 1975, presents a fictionalised account of early twentieth-century American society. The work interweaves the lives of fictional families with real historical figures such as Harry Houdini, Emma Goldman and Booker T. Washington. The principal themes explored are the erosion of the traditional American Dream and the persistence of racial and social inequality. These themes are established through the juxtaposition of characters’ aspirations against the realities of industrialisation, immigration and institutional discrimination. The following sections examine each theme with reference to specific textual episodes and character trajectories.
The Erosion of the American Dream
Doctorow depicts the American Dream as increasingly unattainable for both established citizens and new arrivals. The novel opens with the description of a prosperous white family living in New Rochelle, whose stability is gradually undermined by external forces. Father’s departure for the Arctic expedition and the subsequent breakdown of family relationships illustrate how economic and technological change disrupts domestic security. The character Tateh, a Jewish immigrant, initially embodies the hopeful pursuit of opportunity yet encounters repeated failure in the garment industry before achieving success through the invention of moving-picture books. This transformation occurs only after he abandons collective political action, suggesting that individual advancement in the new century often requires the rejection of earlier ideals of solidarity. Such narrative arcs indicate that upward mobility, once presented as a universal promise, is shown to depend upon chance and the surrender of communal values.
Racial and Social Inequality
Racial injustice forms a second, closely related theme. The story of Coalhouse Walker Jr. provides the most extended treatment of this issue. Walker, a skilled African-American musician, has his automobile vandalised by white firefighters. When legal and civic authorities refuse redress, Walker resorts to violence, occupying the Morgan Library and demanding the restoration of his vehicle and the dismissal of the fire chief. The episode echoes real historical tensions of the period, yet Doctorow presents Walker’s campaign as both justified and ultimately futile. The character’s death at the hands of police underscores the absence of due process for black citizens. Parallel episodes, such as the execution of the Jewish radicals and the marginalisation of immigrant workers, reinforce the pattern. These events demonstrate that institutional power remains aligned with white, native-born interests, thereby limiting the social mobility promised by the American Dream.
Intersections of History and Fiction
Doctorow’s method of inserting documented figures into invented situations further illuminates these themes. The appearances of Sigmund Freud and Theodore Dreiser, for example, serve less as celebrations of cultural achievement than as markers of an era in which personal identity is increasingly shaped by mass media and public spectacle. Houdini’s repeated escapes appear alongside scenes of labour unrest, implying that individual feats of skill offer only temporary evasion from collective pressures. By placing fictional characters in the same narrative space as historical ones, the novel suggests that private ambitions are always constrained by wider historical forces. This technique provides concrete illustration of the claim that personal agency is circumscribed by structural conditions of class and race.
Implications for Early Twentieth-Century America
The two themes do not operate in isolation; the narrative continually links the decline of the American Dream to the maintenance of racial hierarchies. Walker’s destruction of property is presented as a direct consequence of the same industrial and legal systems that enable Tateh’s eventual commercial success. Consequently, the novel offers a qualified view of progress: technological and economic development occurs alongside, and often at the expense of, equitable opportunity. While Doctorow avoids didactic resolution, the accumulation of failed aspirations across multiple social groups indicates a broader scepticism about the nation’s capacity for genuine reform.
Conclusion
In Ragtime, Doctorow expresses the intertwined themes of a compromised American Dream and entrenched racial and social inequality. These ideas are conveyed through the contrasting fortunes of the white middle-class family, the immigrant Tateh and the black musician Coalhouse Walker Jr., as well as through the strategic insertion of historical personages. The novel therefore presents early twentieth-century America as a society in which the promise of advancement remained conditional upon race, class and compliance with established power structures.
References
- Doctorow, E.L. (1975) Ragtime. New York: Random House.

