
Theodore Dreiser's Jennie Gerhardt is a naturalistic novel about a young woman from a poor family whose life is shaped by duty, love, and social judgment. Dreiser follows her through the compromises demanded by respectability, money, and family obligation, and he never lets the pressure of class fade into the background.
The book suits readers who want an unsentimental portrait of class pressure and moral double standards. It is especially useful if you want to see how Dreiser links private feeling to the harsh economics of turn-of-the-century life, with every choice narrowing Jennie's freedom a little more. It lingers because it treats survival and tenderness as equally costly. It remains a brisk, useful classic for modern readers today.
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