Tateh works a machine in a large factory, doing the same skill-less labor for days along with other workers who are doing similar mundane jobs. Before this, Tateh was an optimistic artist, who thought he could make a living with his art. His dreams were crushed when he realized he needed a more steady income to support his daughter.
During the strike, Tateh made his own artistic pro-worker posters, but he was told that they didn't “stir the anger.” So he switched to word art. During all of this, after work, Tateh is making art for his daughter. This is the art that he enjoys making, the silhouettes, and the flip-books. He made these to make his daughter happy, because he could not make what was happening in the art happen in real life. “What if the truth was that he could do nothing more for her than make pictures? What if they just went on this way in varying degrees of unrealized hope?”
But, in a somewhat ironic twist, theses flip-books are what eventually lead him to his fortune. He abandons the strikers and focuses on his animation which eventually makes him very rich. He creates a fake baronship for himself to hide that he used to be a poor Jewish immigrant. He completely abandons his past life, and all the people and causes he believed in. Doctorow’s representation of the American Dream seems to be both positive and negative. Tateh did become rich and successful, but through luck and betrayal of his identity. There were many more immigrants in the book who stayed poor and true to their identity. Doctorow seems to be saying that in order to achieve the American dream, one must not only be lucky, but also betray their identity as an immigrant. There’s a contradiction between individual identity. In terms of the American dream, Identity is based on which groups you choose to associate yourself with. Tateh switched from associating with immigrants, to the rich. Even when he was working with the strikers, he changed his art to more align himself with that group.
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