Trust

by

Hernan Diaz

U.S. Foundational Myths Theme Analysis

Themes and Colors
U.S. Foundational Myths Theme Icon
Gender and Subjugation Theme Icon
Wealth Theme Icon
Power and Morality Theme Icon
Self-Interest vs. the Common Good Theme Icon
LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in Trust, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.
U.S. Foundational Myths Theme Icon

In Trust, Andrew hires Ida to ghostwrite his autobiography in an attempt to rehabilitate his public image, which was tarnished when he profited from the 1929 Wall Street crash. Andrew conceives of himself as a “Great Man” and only becomes satisfied with Ida’s ghostwriting when she cribs her style from other autobiographies of “Great American Men.” Those men—including Benjamin Franklin and Andrew Carnegie—are U.S. politicians or entrepreneurs. Through their autobiographies, each one positions himself as an example of resounding success who lived a “faultless life” and is responsible for shaping the U.S. into what it has become (and which these men see as wholly good), which is exactly what Andrew intends to do with his autobiography. 

Through Ida’s memoir and Mildred’s diary, though, the novel dismantles Andrew’s self-conception as a “Great Man” to show that he is a fraud in two senses. First, he’s a fraud because he took credit for Mildred’s business acumen and success. He’s also fraudulent in the sense that he glosses over the fact that his family gained wealth by profiting from the labor of enslaved people. The idea that Andrew is responsible for his own success is a myth based on a falsification of history. The novel juxtaposes the fictional account of Andrew’s drafted autobiography with the nonfiction accounts of Ida’s memoir and Mildred’s diary, showing how the myth of Andrew’s success is established before gradually dismantling that myth. That deconstruction of Andrew’s myth of greatness casts doubt not just on Andrew’s idea that he is a “Great Man” but on the idea of “Great Men” in general. The novel suggests that those “Great American Men” whose autobiographies Ida consults—including the “founding fathers” of the U.S. like Benjamin Franklin—have mythologized themselves in the same way that Andrew tries to. They have distorted the facts of history to tell a fictional story in which they are responsible for their own successes. With that in mind, the novel argues that the foundational myths of the U.S., including the idea that the country was founded by “Great Men,” are fraudulent. Like Andrew’s autobiography, those myths are fictions that cover up a much more complicated reality in which the “Great Men” are anything but, as they repeatedly exploited and abused others for their own gain.

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U.S. Foundational Myths Quotes in Trust

Below you will find the important quotes in Trust related to the theme of U.S. Foundational Myths.
Book 1, Part 1 Quotes

Because he had enjoyed almost every advantage since birth, one of the few privileges denied to Benjamin Rask was that of a heroic rise: his was not a story of resilience and perseverance or the tale of an unbreakable will forging a golden destiny for itself out of little more than dross. According to the back of the Rask family Bible, in 1662 his father’s ancestors had migrated from Copenhagen to Glasgow, where they started trading in tobacco from the Colonies.

Related Characters: Benjamin/Andrew, Harold Vanner
Page Number: 7
Explanation and Analysis:

Those who accused him of being excessively frugal failed to understand that, in truth, he had no appetites to repress.

Related Characters: Benjamin/Andrew, Helen/Mildred, Harold Vanner
Page Number: 11
Explanation and Analysis:

He became fascinated by the contortions of money—how it could be made to bend back upon itself to be force-fed its own body. The isolated, self-sufficient nature of speculation spoke to his character and was a source of wonder and an end in itself, regardless of what his earnings represented or afforded him.

Related Characters: Benjamin/Andrew, Harold Vanner
Page Number: 16
Explanation and Analysis:

His coup during the panic had turned him into a different person. What was truly surprising, even to himself, was that he had started to look for signs of acknowledgment in everyone he met. He was hungry to confirm that people noticed the hum enveloping him, the quiver, the very thing that estranged him from them. However paradoxical, this desire to confirm the distance separating him from others was a form of communion with them. And he was new to this feeling.

Related Characters: Benjamin/Andrew
Page Number: 21
Explanation and Analysis:
Book 1, Part 3 Quotes

Intimacy can be an unbearable burden for those who, first experiencing it after a lifetime of proud self-sufficiency, suddenly realize it makes their world complete. Finding bliss becomes one with the fear of losing it. They doubt their right to hold someone else accountable for their happiness; they worry that their loved one may find their reverence tedious; they fear their yearning may have distorted their features in ways they cannot see. Thus, as the weight of all these questions and concerns bends them inward, their newfound joy in companionship turns into a deeper expression of the solitude they thought they had left behind.

This was the sort of dread Helen sensed in her husband shortly after their wedding.

Related Characters: Benjamin/Andrew, Helen/Mildred
Page Number: 57
Explanation and Analysis:

As the city sank into the depression that followed the crash, Helen found it harder to leave the house. She knew that looking away from the destitute families, the breadlines, the shuttered stores, and the despair in every thinning face was a gross form of self-indulgence, but she also understood that the anguish she felt when confronted by this bleak reality was yet another of her luxuries. Helen had to acknowledge this paradox each time she went for a walk—until what would become her last excursion south of the park. She experienced something different that afternoon. It started with a concave oppression in her chest. A disturbance in the air. She was unable to understand what brought about that dread until she realized she felt watched. Stares. Scowls. Whispers. Everywhere. Smirks. Slurs. Hisses. Everywhere. It was plausible, even expected, that some people would recognize and despise her. But everyone?

Related Characters: Benjamin/Andrew, Helen/Mildred, Harold Vanner
Page Number: 80-81
Explanation and Analysis:
Book 1, Part 4 Quotes

In the years following Helen’s death, [Benjamin’s] fascination with the incestuous genealogies of money—capital begetting capital begetting capital—remained intact. He was still an effective investor, and he was still, now and then, capable of some creative flair. Yet despite the continued growth of his portfolio, there was a widespread perception that he was in frank decline, that there was something stale about his approach. Nothing came close to the margins of his golden days. After all, everyone concurred, it did not take extraordinary talent to make money from so much money.

Related Characters: Benjamin/Andrew, Helen/Mildred
Page Number: 124
Explanation and Analysis:
Book 2 Quotes

For about a decade now I have witnessed a woeful decline not only in the business of our country but also in the spirit of its people. Where perseverance and ingenuity once dwelled, apathy and despair now loiter. Where self-reliance reigned, beggarly submission now squats. The working man is reduced to a panhandler. A vicious circle has taken hold of our able-bodied men: they increasingly rely on the government to alleviate the misery created by that same government, not realizing that this dependency only perpetuates their sorry state of affairs.

Related Characters: Benjamin/Andrew (speaker), Ida
Page Number: 132
Explanation and Analysis:

Rather than tobacco, which he would have been unable to store properly, he purchased non-perishable goods, especially cotton from farther south and sugar from the newly acquired Louisiana. This venture was based on the assumption that he would be able to sell the merchandise in Europe once the embargo was lifted and clear his debt while making a profit.

Producers everywhere were struggling just to keep their estates in the family. William, a mere twenty-six-year-old, was welcomed as a savior. Prices dropped sharply as plantation owners fought one another to secure a deal with him. And for as long as possible he did his best to assist as many of them as he could, bringing much-needed relief to countless families.

Related Characters: Benjamin/Andrew (speaker), William
Page Number: 138
Explanation and Analysis:

Self-interest, if properly directed, need not be divorced from the common good, as all the transactions [William] conducted throughout his life eloquently show. These two principles (we make our own weather; personal gain ought to be a public asset) I have always striven to follow.

Related Characters: Benjamin/Andrew (speaker), Ida, William
Page Number: 140
Explanation and Analysis:

The trials of her tender years and her always delicate health had given her the innocent yet profound wisdom of those who, like young children or the elderly, are close to the edges of existence.

She was too fragile, too good for this world and slipped away from it much too soon. Words are not enough to say how dearly I miss her. The greatest gift I have ever received was my time by her side. She saved me. There is no other way to put it. She saved me with her humanity and her warmth. Saved me with her love of beauty and her kindness. Saved me by making a home for me.

Related Characters: Benjamin/Andrew (speaker), Helen/Mildred, Ida
Page Number: 157-158
Explanation and Analysis:

She would narrate a whole book back to me, footnoted with conjectures and predictions. I must say I learned to enjoy those little mysteries. But only in her passionate rendition. It was so lovely to look at her, lit up, lost in her storytelling. She was so captivated by the plot and I was so captivated by her that the food on our plates would grow cold. How we would laugh when we noticed! She always asked me to guess who the killer was, but I had been too distracted looking at her, and it was never the butler or the secretary I offered up as prime suspects. This made us laugh even harder, while I pretended to reprimand her for having made our food cold.

Related Characters: Benjamin/Andrew (speaker), Helen/Mildred, Ida
Page Number: 165
Explanation and Analysis:

If neither my ancestors nor I had understood that a healthy economy, prosperous for all, had to be safeguarded, our careers would have been very brief indeed. A selfish hand has a short reach.

This is why I find the baseless, libelous accusations directed at my business practice incensing. Should not our very success be convincing enough evidence of everything we have done for this country? Our prosperity is proof of our good deeds.

Related Characters: Benjamin/Andrew (speaker), Ida, William, Solomon/Edward, Clarence
Page Number: 173-174
Explanation and Analysis:

I have always shunned politics and declined all the positions offered to me. But I am proud to say that during this time I helped to steer the official monetary and trade policies in the right direction by providing informal advice whenever requested. This amicable relationship with the government started in 1922, when President Warren G. Harding summoned me and other businessmen to the White House to help him fulfill his campaign promise to bring prosperity to our people by putting “America First.”

Related Characters: Benjamin/Andrew (speaker), Ida
Page Number: 177
Explanation and Analysis:

Everyone was playing finance with toy money. Even women got in on the market! The tabloids gave investing “hints” and “tips” mixed in with sewing patterns, recipes and gossip about Hollywood’s latest heartthrobs. The Ladies’ Home Journal ran editorials penned by financiers. Widows and scrubwomen, flappers and mothers alike “played the stocks.” Although most reputable brokerage houses adhered to a strict policy banning lady customers, trading rooms for females sprang up all over New York, and in smaller towns housewives with a “hunch” neglected their domestic duties to follow the market at the local wire house and phone in their transactions at the end of the day. Women represented only 1.5 per cent of the dilettantish speculators at the beginning of the decade. At the end they neared 40 per cent. Could there have been a clearer indicator of the disaster to come?

Related Characters: Benjamin/Andrew (speaker), Helen/Mildred
Page Number: 182
Explanation and Analysis:

Every single one of our acts is ruled by the laws of economy. When we first wake up in the morning we trade rest for profit. When we go to bed at night we give up potentially profitable hours to renew our strength. And throughout our day we engage in countless transactions. [...]

All of us aspire to greater wealth. The reason for this is simple and can be found in science. Because nothing in nature is stable, one cannot merely keep what one has. Just like all other living creatures, we either thrive or fade. This is the fundamental law governing the entire realm of life. And it is out of an instinct of survival that all men desire.

Smith, Spencer, etc.

Related Characters: Benjamin/Andrew (speaker), Helen/Mildred
Page Number: 189-190
Explanation and Analysis:
Book 3, Part 2 Quotes

“Do you truly understand what my job is about?”

“No.”

“Thank you for not attempting a response. My job is about being right. Always. If I’m ever wrong, I must make use of all my means and resources to bend and align reality according to my mistake so that it ceases to be a mistake.”

Related Characters: Benjamin/Andrew (speaker), Ida (speaker), Helen/Mildred
Page Number: 266
Explanation and Analysis:
Book 3, Part 3 Quotes

I think of my father. He would always say that every dollar bill had been printed on paper ripped off a slave’s bill of sale. I can still hear him today. “Where does all this wealth here come from? Primitive accumulation. The original theft of land, means of production and human lives. All throughout history, the origin of capital has been slavery. Look at this country and the modern world. Without slaves, no cotton; without cotton, no industry; without industry, no finance capital. The original, unnamable sin.” I keep reading through the draft. Of course, not a single mention of slavery.

Related Characters: Ida (speaker), Benjamin/Andrew, Ida’s Father, William
Page Number: 299-300
Explanation and Analysis:

It seems that more than vindicating Mildred [Andrew] wanted to turn her into a completely unremarkable, safe character—just like the wives in the autobiographies of the Great Men I read during that time to come up with Bevel’s voice. Put her in her place.

Perhaps this is what Harold Vanner tried to do in his way as well. Why present that broken image of Mildred in his novel? This is a question I have asked myself again and again since first reading Bonds. Why make her mad when she was obviously so lucid? […] He broke her mind and her body simply because it made for a better story (a story he could not resist telling, even if it debased her and, in the end, destroyed him). He forced her into the stereotype of fated heroines throughout history, made to offer the spectacle of their own ruin. Put her in her place.

Related Characters: Ida (speaker), Benjamin/Andrew, Helen/Mildred, Harold Vanner
Page Number: 300
Explanation and Analysis:

“What I’ve made, I’ve made on my own. Alone. Completely by myself. And that, in part, is what I proved to everyone during the crash. Regardless of the circumstances there is always room for individual action.”

“Well . . . You weren’t completely by yourself. Your ancestors . . . And your wife was at your side. You did say that Mrs. Bevel saved you.”

At once he lost the impetus his brief speech had given him. “That I did.” He made the salt shaker rotate between his fingers. “And how true it is. Nothing gives me more satisfaction than restoring her image. Thank you, again, for that lovely paragraph with the bouquets.”

Related Characters: Benjamin/Andrew (speaker), Ida (speaker), Helen/Mildred
Page Number: 345
Explanation and Analysis:
Book 4 Quotes

We complemented each other. He understood he’d never be able to uphold the myth forming around him without my help. I understood I’d never be allowed to operate at such heights if it wasn’t through him. For a while, we both enjoyed this alliance.

Related Characters: Helen/Mildred (speaker), Benjamin/Andrew
Page Number: 381
Explanation and Analysis:

After ’29 devastation, I tried to organize a recovery plan. Give most of money away. But was too sick. Dimming. Consumed by failed treatment after failed treatment. Andrew made a number of contributions: a sprinkle of libraries, hospital wings + univ. halls. Mortified to learn he’d given away these crumbs in my name, I asked him never to use it again.

Related Characters: Helen/Mildred (speaker), Benjamin/Andrew
Page Number: 399
Explanation and Analysis: