Arrowsmith: Analysis of Setting
"Arrowsmith: Analysis of Setting" explores the various fictional locations that shape the life and career of Martin Arrowsmith, the novel's protagonist. Central to the narrative is Winnemac, an imagined Midwestern state where Martin's formative experiences take place, particularly in the town of Elk Mills, where he is introduced to the field of medical science. The University of Winnemac, characterized as a progressive institution, serves as a backdrop for Martin's academic pursuits and his passion for bacteriology under the mentorship of Max Gottlieb.
The text also highlights Wheatsylvania, North Dakota, where Martin struggles to establish his medical practice, facing resistance from the local community despite his efforts to improve health standards. Following this, Nautilus, Iowa, represents a more progressive environment where Martin finds professional success but also faces opposition due to his health initiatives. The setting shifts again to New York City, where Martin engages in groundbreaking research at the McGurk Institute, grappling with the pressures of military research during World War I. Additional locations, such as the fictional island of St. Hubert in the West Indies and a quiet residence in Vermont, indicate the diverse contexts in which Martin's career unfolds, each contributing to his development as a doctor and scientist. This analysis provides insights into how the settings influence the narrative and Martin's character, ultimately reflecting broader themes of ambition, societal expectations, and the quest for scientific truth.
Arrowsmith: Analysis of Setting
First published: 1925
Type of work: Novel
Type of plot: Social realism
Time of work: Early twentieth century
Asterisk denotes entries on real places.
Places Discussed
Winnemac
Winnemac. Imaginary midwestern state—bordered by Michigan, Ohio, Illinois, and Indiana—in which many of Lewis’s novels are set. Martin spends his boyhood in the small Winnemac town of Elk Mills, where he is introduced to medical science and treatment by Doc Vickerson, whose practice is above his father’s New York Clothing Bazaar. He attends the University of Winnemac at Mohalia on the Chaloosa River, fifteen miles from the state capital Zenith; it is a progressive institution, the first in America to offer extension courses via radio, which Lewis likens to a Ford Motor factory of the intellect. There Martin finds a spiritual home in Max Gottlieb’s bacteriology laboratory, imagining a future life spent amid labyrinths of glass tubing and Bunsen burners. His first visit to Zenith General Hospital brings him into contact with Leora; after his graduation Martin becomes an intern there. An excursion to the Dodsworth Theatre and Martin’s brief meeting with George F. Babbitt, the real estate king, embed the novel firmly within the Lewis canon.
Wheatsylvania
Wheatsylvania. Leora’s North Dakota hometown, located in Crynssen County in the Pony River valley, twenty-four miles from Leopolis. Martin marries Leora there after traveling across the country on a whim to see her; after his internship they return so that he may set up his medical practice, for which he initially rents a one-story shack a half block from Main Street. Martin never fits in there, however, as he is always regarded with suspicion in spite and because of his efforts to improve local standards of hygiene and medical treatment.
Nautilus
Nautilus. Iowa city with a population of 70,000, where Martin goes to work for the Department of Public Health on the rebound from Wheatsylvania. He finds this town more progressive, although the agricultural technology whose manufacture drives its economy is a trifle hidebound, as indicated by the prominence of the Steel Windmill Company and the fact that Nautilus is the headquarters of Cornbelt Co-operative Insurance. Martin thrives there, becoming director of public health when Almus Pickerbaugh becomes the first scientist ever elected to the U.S. Congress; however, he makes enemies when he demolishes a block of tenements as a health hazard.
*New York City
*New York City. Location of the McGurk Institute, where Martin goes to work after spending a year in the Rouncefield Clinic in Chicago. The institute allows him freedom to do the fundamental research he has always craved, alongside his old teacher Max Gottlieb, who came there after an unsatisfying stint with the pharmaceutical company Dawson T. Hunziker & Company of Pittsburgh. Martin and Leora rent a three-room apartment overlooking Gramercy Park and are gradually absorbed into the society of the institute via McGurk Scientific Dinners. After the institute takes up military research in World War I, Martin becomes increasingly disaffected in the face of pressure to direct his work to more immediately practical ends. Although his experiments with bacteriophages get positive results, he is not the same man when he returns to New York—without Leora—after testing the efficacy of his methods in the field. Although his second marriage to Joyce Lanyon anchors him in New York for a while, his new work on pneumococcus is subject to so many tribulations that his departure becomes as inevitable as his abandonment of Wheatsylvania and Nautilus.
St. Hubert
St. Hubert. Fictional island south of Barbados in the West Indies, with a population of about 100,000; an outpost of the British Empire. When the Pendown Castle imports plague to Point Carib and the capital, Blackwater, the colonial governor and the feud-riven house of assembly are slow to react, thus turning the crisis into a disaster and providing a perfect natural laboratory for Martin to test the efficacy of his bacteriophages.
Birdies’ Rest
Birdies’ Rest. Mean residence beside a Vermont lake where Martin and Terry Wickett eke out the latter stages of their careers.
Bibliography
Bucco, Martin, ed. Critical Essays on Sinclair Lewis. Boston: G. K. Hall, 1986. Begins with early interviews and goes on to contemporary critics. Articles include discussion of Arrowsmith; one article shows how the book developed from Lewis’ unfinished novel about labor.
Dooley, D. J. The Art of Sinclair Lewis. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1967. Chapter 4 discusses the genesis, development, strengths, weaknesses, and reputation of Arrow-smith. Investigates the novel’s central theme and characters.
Grebstein, Sheldon Norman. Sinclair Lewis. Boston: Twayne, 1962. Excellent chapter on the heroic Arrowsmith in the context of American society. Sees the novel as more artistic and inspired than its predecessors.
Griffin, Robert J., ed. Twentieth Century Interpretations of “Arrowsmith.” Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1968. Only book-length study of Arrowsmith. Includes early reviews and important essays by leading Lewis scholars.
Schorer, Mark. Sinclair Lewis: An American Life. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1961. Indispensable. Includes an examination of Arrowsmith from its beginnings to its critical reception. Also includes discussion of the men and women who were the prototypes for the character in Arrowsmith.