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sea before city life swallows him up. Brissenden is
a committed socialist and
introduces Eden to a group of amateur philosophers he calls the "real dirt". His
final work, Ephemera, causes a literary sensation when Eden breaks his word and
publishes it upon Brissenden's death.
Social class
-
Social class, seen from Eden's point of view, is a very important
theme in the novel. Eden is a sailor from a working-class background who feels
uncomfortable but inspired when he meets the bourgeois Morse family. As he
improves himself, he finds himself increasingly distanced
from his working-class
background and surroundings, becoming repelled by Lizzie's hands. Eventually,
when Eden finds that his education has far surpassed that of the bourgeoisie he
looked up to, he feels more isolated than ever. Paul
Berman comments that Eden
cannot reconcile his "civilized and clean" self with the "fistfighting barbarian" of
the past, and that this inability causes his descent into a delirious ambivalence.
London conjures up a series of allusions to the workings of machinery. It is
machines that make Lizzie's hands rough. To Eden, the magazine editors operate a
machine that sends out seemingly endless rejection slips. When Eden works in a
laundry, he works with machines but feels himself to be a cog in a larger machine.
Eden's Blickensdorfer typewriter gradually becomes an extension of his body.
When he finally achieves literary success, Eden sets up his friends with machinery
of their own, and Lizzie tells him, "Something's wrong with your think-machine."
Although London was a socialist, he invested Eden with strong individualism.
Eden comes from a working-class background but
he seeks self-improvement
rather than improvement for his class as a whole. Quoting Nietzsche and Herbert
Spencer, he rejects the "slave morality" of socialism, even at socialist meetings.
London stresses that it is this individualism that leads to Eden's suicide. He
described the novel as a parable of a man who had to die "not because of his lack
of faith in God, but because of his lack of faith in men".
Background
-
When London wrote Martin Eden at age 33, he had already
achieved international acclaim with The Call of the Wild, The Sea-Wolf and White
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Fang. Despite the acclaim, he quickly became disillusioned with his fame and set
sail through the South Pacific on a self-designed ketch, the Snark. On the grueling
two-year voyage, as he struggled with
tiredness and bowel diseases, he
wrote Martin Eden, filling its pages with his frustrations, adolescent gangfights and
struggles for artistic recognition. London borrowed the name "Martin Eden" from
a working-class man, Mårten Edin, born in Ådalen (at Båtsmanstorpet in
Västgranvåg, Sollefteå), Sweden, but the character has more in common with
London than with Edin. Ruth Morse was modeled on
Mabel Applegarth, the first
love of London's life. Brissenden is modeled on London's friend and muse George
Sterling. Brissenden's posthumously successful poem "Ephemera" is based on
Sterling's "A Wine of Wizardry".
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