Sister Carrie: Dreiser's Reversal Of Male/Female
Roles
The novel, "Sister Carrie" seems to be the platform from which Dreiser
explores his unconventional views of the genders. In the world of Sister Carrie,
it would seem that the role of women as trusting, caring creatures, and men
as scheming victimizers is reversed; it is Carrie that uses the men around her
to get what she wants, and it is those men who are victimized by her. Thus Dreiser
uses this novel as a means of questioning the popular notions of gender and
the role that it plays in modern society.
In "Sister Carrie", it would seem that Carrie, while outwardly benign,
and possibly even deserving of her portrayal as sweet and innocent at the beginning,
soon emerges as a ruthless predator in the guise of a helpless woman. From her
relationship with Drouet, she manages to gain the experience and social skills
to pursue higher aspirations. She seems to stay with Drouet only long enough
to see that better things are available, comforts more extravagant than Drouet
can provide, and cultural experiences and social nuances whose existence Drouet
seems unaware of. Drouet, then, acts as a stepping stone for her. When he no
longer has anything he can offer her, she drops him in favor of Hurstwood. In
Hurstwood, Carrie sees all that lacks in Drouet--a more acute sense of culture
and worldliness, and the wealth to explore the new wonders of civilized Chicago
life. Hurstwood serves as yet another step in her ladder to success, and when
he sinks into poverty and self-disgrace after his divorce, she sees him as a
no longer being an asset, and leaves him in favor of striking out on her own,
leaving him to turn into a beggar, while she makes it big.
After she makes it big, and Drouet comes to see her, she can no longer see him as a friend worthy of her company, and in fact avoids ever seeing him again. The fact that she owes her success to Drouet and Hurstwood seems inconsequential to her. It would seem also at the end of her road to fame, when she is receiving social invitations from millionaires and famous figures, that she sees herself as being too good for any of them; she sees herself as being too good for the company of any man. This aggressive, self-centered nature, seems to be a departure from the traditional role of a woman in a such a novel.
It can be said, then, that Carrie's bullish nature is rather atypical of the
traditionally portrayed role of a woman. The fact that the men in this novel
are the ones being preyed upon, seems to make this a reversal of roles. It can
be argued that Dreiser's intention may have been in part to show how women do
not need increased liberties to succeed in the modern world, but rather that
they've been in control of their situations for as long as there have been men
in the world to prey upon. This would seem to be what Dreiser really intends
by this definite reversal of male-female roles.