Ragtime

by

E. L. Doctorow

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Freedom, Human Dignity, and Justice Theme Analysis

Themes and Colors
The American Dream Theme Icon
Replication and Transformation Theme Icon
Freedom, Human Dignity, and Justice Theme Icon
The Cult of Celebrity Theme Icon
Women’s Roles Theme Icon
Social Inequities Theme Icon
LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in Ragtime, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.
Freedom, Human Dignity, and Justice Theme Icon

A chance encounter between escape artist Harry Houdini and Little Boy’s family sets the events in Ragtime in motion. Houdini’s art locates the idea of freedom at the heart of the book’s story. As they regularly punctuate the flow of other events, Houdini’s increasingly elaborate escapes echo and reflect the attempts of others to escape the various forms of bondage and oppression that characterized life for many people in the early 20th century. During this time, dangerous conditions and poverty trap poor factory workers. Immigrants, Black people, and Jewish people face racism, segregation, and violence. And social expectations offer women limited roles, labeling them as virtuous mothers or sinful temptresses. And although Houdini makes his escapes look effortless and magical, it’s very clear that a lot of hard work, ingenuity, practice, and resilience in the face of danger contribute to his success.

The book’s heroes—Emma Goldman, Younger Brother, and Coalhouse Walker Jr.—all engage themselves in the struggle for freedom, justice, and the recognition of human dignity. They refuse to measure human worth by the social and economic metrics of the elite. Coalhouse recognizes his own worth and insists that others—from Father to Willie Conklin to New York society as a whole—do the same. Goldman doesn’t just value and accept the poor workers who attend her meetings (like Tateh); she also welcomes those, like Evelyn Nesbit and Younger Brother, whose views are antithetical to her own. By welcoming them, she encourages them to liberate themselves and others from sexual exploitation, fame, middle-class propriety, and classism. This is a difficult task, especially because the elites often defend their privileges with violence. For example the textile mill owners call out the state militia to violently quell the workers’ strike. It’s in light of this fundamental asymmetry that the book’s revolutionaries themselves turn to violence, like when Alexander Berkman attempts to assassinate Henry Clay Frick or when, having exhausted the legal means of seeking restitution, Coalhouse turns to violence. Through its interwoven stories, Ragtime thus claims that justice and freedom are the birthright of all human beings and that true social progress requires struggle and sacrifice by any means necessary.

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Freedom, Human Dignity, and Justice Quotes in Ragtime

Below you will find the important quotes in Ragtime related to the theme of Freedom, Human Dignity, and Justice.
Chapter 1  Quotes

[Little Boy] felt that the circumstances of his family’s life operated against his need to see things and go places. For instance he had conceived an enormous interest in the works and career of Harry Houdini, the escape artist. But he had not been taken to a performance. Houdini was a headliner in the top vaudeville circuits. His audiences were poor people—carriers, peddlers, policemen, children. His life was absurd. He went all over the world accepting all kinds of bondage and escaping. He was roped to a chair. He escaped. He was chained to a ladder. He escaped. He was handcuffed, his legs were put in irons, he was tied up in a strait jacket and put in a locked cabinet. He escaped. He escaped form bank vaults, nailed-up barrels, sewn mailbags; he escaped from a zinc-lined Knabe piano case, a giant football, […] a rolltop desk, a sausage skin.

Related Characters: Father, Mother’s Younger Brother, Harry Houdini, Mother, Little Boy, Grandfather
Page Number: 6-7
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 6 Quotes

Millions of men were out of work. Those fortunate enough to have jobs were dared to form unions. Courts enjoined them, police busted their heads, their leaders were jailed and new men took their jobs. A union was an affront to God. The laboring man would be protected and cared for not by the labor agitators, said one wealthy man, but by the Christian men to whom God in his infinite wisdom had given the control of the property interests of this country. If all else failed the troops were called out. […] In the coal fields a miner made a dollar sixty a day if he could dig three tons. He lived in the company’s shacks and bought his food from the company stores. On the tobacco farms Negroes stripped tobacco leaves thirteen hours a day and earned six cents an hour, man, woman, or child.

Related Characters: Father, Tateh (Baron Ashkenazy), Harry K. Thaw, Little Girl, Stanford White , Mameh, Sigmund Freud
Page Number: 39
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 7 Quotes

This was the day Evelyn Nesbit considered kidnapping the little girl and leaving Tateh to his fate. The old artists had never inquired of her name and knew nothing about her. It could be done. Instead, she threw herself into the family’s life with redoubled effort, coming with food, linens, and whatever else she could move past the old man’s tormented pride. She was insane with the desire to become one of them and drew Tateh out in conversation and learned from the girl how to sew knee pants. For hours each day, each evening, she lived as a woman in the Jewish slums, and was driven home by the Thaw chauffeur form a prearranged place many blocks away, always in despair.

Related Characters: Tateh (Baron Ashkenazy), Harry K. Thaw, Evelyn Nesbit, Little Girl, Mameh
Page Number: 49-50
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 8 Quotes

So then Frick was able to get the government working for him and the state militia came in to surround the workers. At this point Berkman and I decided on our attentat. We would give the beleaguered workers heart. We would revolutionize their struggle. We would kill Frick. But we were in New York and we had no money. We needed money for a railroad ticket and a gun. And that’s when I put on embroidered underwear and walked 14th street. An old man gave me ten dollars and told me to go home. I borrowed the rest. But I would have done it if I had to. It was for the attentat. It was for Berkman and revolution.

Related Characters: Emma Goldman (speaker), Evelyn Nesbit, Alexander Berkman , Henry Clay Frick
Page Number: 59
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 9 Quotes

So the young black woman and her child were installed in a room on the top floor. Mother made numbers of phone calls. She cancelled her service league meeting. She walked back and forth in the parlor. She was very agitated. She felt keenly her husband’s absence and condemned herself for so readily endorsing his travels. There was no way to communicate with him any of the problems and concerns of her life. She would not hear from him till the following summer. She stared at the ceiling as if to see through it. the Negro girl and her baby had carried into the house a sense of misfortune, chaos, and now this feeling resided here like some sort of contamination. She was frightened.

Related Characters: Coalhouse Walker Jr. , Father, Mother, Sarah , Baby (Coalhouse Walker III)
Page Number: 71
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 16 Quotes

The mill owners in Lawrence realized that of all the stratagems devised by the workers this one, the children’s crusade, was the most damaging. If it was allowed to go on, national sentiment would swing to the workingmen and the owners would have to give in. This would mean an increase in wages that would bring some workers up to eight dollars a week. They would get extra pay for overtime and machine speed-ups. They would get off without any punishment for their strike. It was unthinkable. The mill owners knew who were the stewards of civilization and the source of progress and prosperity in the city of Lawrence. For the good of the country and the American democratic system they resolved there would be no more children’s crusades.

Related Characters: Tateh (Baron Ashkenazy), Little Girl
Page Number: 124-125
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 17 Quotes

Tateh shook his head. This country will not let me breathe. In this mood he slowly came to the decision not to go back to Lawrence, Massachusetts. His belongings, his rags, he would leave to the landlord. What do you have with you, he said to his daughter. She showed him the contents of her small satchel—things she had taken for her trip away from home. Her underthings, her comb and brush, a hair clasp, garters, stockings, and the books he had made for her of the trolley car and the skater. From this moment, perhaps, Tateh began to conceive of his life as separate from the fate of the working class. He stood and she stood and took his hand and together they looked for the exit. The I.W.W. has won, he said. But what has it won? A few more pennies in wages. Will it now own the mills? No.

Related Characters: Tateh (Baron Ashkenazy) (speaker), Little Girl
Page Number: 130-131
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 20 Quotes

Has it occurred to you that your assembly line is not merely a stroke of industrial genius but a projection of organic truth? After all, interchangeability of parts is a rule of nature. Individuals participate in their species and in their genus. All mammals reproduce in the same way and share the same designs of self-nourishment, with digestive and circulatory systems that are recognizably the same, and they enjoy the same senses […] shared design is what allows taxonomists to classify mammals as mammals. And within a species—man, for example—the rules of nature operate so that our individual differences occur on the basis of our similarity. So that individuation may be compared to a pyramid in that it is only achieved by the placement of the top stone.

Related Characters: John Pierpont Morgan (speaker), Henry Ford
Page Number: 146-147
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 24 Quotes

There is no question then that Younger Brother was fortunate to conceive a loyalty to the colored man. Standing at the pond he heard the lapping of the water against the front fenders of the Model T. He noted that the hood was unlatched, and lifting and folding it back, saw that the wires had been torn from the engine. The sun was now setting and it threw a reflection of blue sky on the dark water of the pond. There ran through him a small current of rage, perhaps one-hundredth, he knew, of what Coalhouse Walker must have felt, and it was salutary.

Related Characters: Coalhouse Walker Jr. , Father, Mother’s Younger Brother, Evelyn Nesbit, Willie Conklin
Related Symbols: Model T
Page Number: 182-183
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 25 Quotes

Nobody knew Sarah’s last name or thought to ask. Where had she been born, and where had she lived, this impoverished uneducated black girl with such absolute conviction of the way human beings ought to conduct their lives? In the few weeks of her happiness, between that time she accepted Coalhouse’s proposal and the first fears that her marriage would never happen, she had been transformed to the point of having a new, different face. Grief and anger had been a kind of physical pathology masking her true looks. Mother was awed by her beauty. She laughed and spoke in a mellifluous voice. […] She laughed in joy of her own being. Her happiness flowed in the milk of her breasts and her baby grew quickly. […] She was a girl of perhaps eighteen or nineteen years, now satisfied that the circumstances of life gave reason to live.

Related Characters: Coalhouse Walker Jr. , Father, Mother, Sarah , Baby (Coalhouse Walker III)
Page Number: 187
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 30 Quotes

He’d always thought of himself as progressive. He believed in the perfectability of the republic. He thought, for instance, there was no reason the Negro could not with proper guidance carry every burden of human achievement. He did not believe in aristocracy except of the individual effort and vision. He felt his father’s loss of fortune had the advantage of saving him from the uncritical adoption of the prejudices of his class. But the air in this ball park open under the sky smelled like the back room of a saloon. Cigar smoke filled the stadium and, lit by the oblique rays of the afternoon sun, indicated the voluminous cavern of air in which he sat pressed upon as if by a foul universe, with the breathless wind of a ten-thousand-throated chorus in his ears shouting its praise and abuse.

Related Characters: Coalhouse Walker Jr. , Father, Mother’s Younger Brother, Mother, Little Boy
Page Number: 231
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 31 Quotes

But now the authorities were embarrassed. The Ford stood as tangible proof of the Black man’s grievance. Waterlogged and wrecked, it offended the sensibilities of anyone who respected machines and valued what they could do. After its picture was published people began to come see it in such numbers that the police had to cordon off the area. Feeling that they had compromised themselves the Mayor and the Board of Aldermen issued a new series of condemnations of the colored madman and said that to negotiate with him in any way at all, to face him with less than an implacable demand to surrender himself, would be to invite every renegade and radical and black man in the country to flout the law and spit upon the American flag.

Related Characters: Coalhouse Walker Jr. , Willie Conklin
Related Symbols: Model T
Page Number: 237
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 32 Quotes

Coalhouse Walker was never harsh or autocratic. He treated his followers with courtesy and only asked if they thought something ought to be done. He dealt with them out of his constant sorrow. His controlled rage affected them like the force of a magnet. He wanted no music in the basement quarters. No instrument of any kind. They embraced every discipline. They had brough in several cots and laid out a barracks. They shared kitchen chores and housecleaning chores. They believed they were going to die in a spectacular manner. This belief produced in them a dramatic, exalted self-awareness. Younger Brother was totally integrated in their community. He was one of them. He awoke every day into a state of solemn joy.

Related Characters: Coalhouse Walker Jr. , Mother’s Younger Brother
Page Number: 245
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 37 Quotes

He was against all Negro agitation on questions of political and social equality. He had written a best-selling book about his life, a struggle up from slavery to self-realization, and about his ideas, which called for the Negro’s advancement with the help of his white neighbor. He counseled friendship between the races and spoke of promise for the future. His views had been endorsed by four Presidents and most of the governors of Southern states. Andrew Carnegie had given him money for his school and Harvard had awarded him an honorary degree.

Related Characters: Coalhouse Walker Jr. , Father, Charles S. Whitman , Booker T. Washington
Page Number: 279
Explanation and Analysis:

It is a great honor for me to meet you, sir, [Coalhouse] said. I have always stood in admiration for you. He looked at the marble floor. It is true I am a musician and a man of years. But I would hope this might suggest to you the solemn calculation of my mind. And that therefore, possibly, we might both be servants of our color who insist on the truth of our manhood and the respect it demands. Washington was so stunned by this suggestion that he began to lose consciousness. Coalhouse led him from the hall into the West Rom and sat him down in one of the red plush chairs. Regaining his composure Washington […] gazed at the marble mantle of the fireplace as big as a man. He lanced upward at the polychrome ceiling that had originally come from the palace of Cardinal Gigli in Lucca.

Related Characters: Coalhouse Walker Jr. (speaker), John Pierpont Morgan , Willie Conklin, Booker T. Washington
Page Number: 282
Explanation and Analysis: