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CHAPTER II. ABOUT JACK LONDON'S MARTEN IDEN AND


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CHAPTER II. ABOUT JACK LONDON'S MARTEN IDEN AND 
THE NORSE STORIES.
2.1 Details about Jack London's Marten Eden and the problems it 
presents. 
Martin Eden is a 1909 novel by American author Jack London about a young 
proletarian autodidact struggling to become a writer. It was first serialized in The 
Pacific Monthly magazine from September 1908 to September 1909 and then 
published in book form by Macmillan in September 1909. Eden represents writers' 
frustration with publishers. The central theme of Eden's developing artistic 
sensibilities places the novel in the tradition of the Künstlerroman, which narrates 
an artist's formation and development. Eden differs from London in 
rejecting socialism, 
attacking 
it 
as 
"slave 
morality" and 
relying 
on Nietzschean individualism. Nevertheless, in the copy of the novel which he 
inscribed for Upton Sinclair, London wrote, "One of my motifs, in this book, was 
an attack on individualism (in the person of the hero). I must have bungled it, for 
not a single reviewer has discovered it."
Plot summary - Living in Oakland at the beginning of the 20th century, Martin 
Eden struggles to rise above his destitute, proletarian circumstances through an 
intense and passionate pursuit of self-education, hoping to achieve a place among 
the literary elite. His principal motivation is his love for Ruth Morse. Because 
Eden is a rough, uneducated sailor from a working-class background
and the 
Morses are a bourgeois family, a union between them would be impossible unless 
and until he reached their level of wealth and refinement. Over a period of two 
years, Eden promises Ruth that success will come, but just before it does, Ruth 
loses her patience and rejects him in a letter, saying, "if only you had settled down 
... and attempted to make something of yourself". By the time Eden attains the 
favor of the publishers and the bourgeoisie who had shunned him, he has already 
developed a grudge against them and become jaded by toil and unrequited love. 


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Instead of enjoying his success, he retreats into a quiet indifference, interrupted 
only to rail mentally against the gentility of bourgeois society or to donate his new 
wealth to working-class friends and family. He feels that people do not value him 
for himself or for his work but only for his fame. 

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