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A Business Career

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everything else on her own. Miss Weddburn and Truscott have known each other forever, but their courtship intensifies as they engage in activities together such as going to the theater. Matilda says Wendell is as close to her perfect man that she has ever met. She invites him to her home for dinner hoping that he will ask her to marry him there. Wendell has the same feelings for Miss Wedderburn so he writes a response to Matilda’s invitation that implies that he is planning on asking her to marry him that night; however, Truscott notices that his stenographer Miss Smith (Stella) is a beautiful young lady. He changes his mind when, "It occurred to him as he sat there, that perhaps a woman might be young in years, and yet not immature in mind, and that youth might possess a charm that maturity would lack." Truscott tears up the letter and instead writes a less passionate response. When that night comes the two are in an intimate setting in which Matilda expects Wendell to ask her to marry her, but instead he abruptly leaves crushing her hopes of marriage. Later on Miss Wedderburn visits the office of The Truscott Refining Company where she recognizes Miss Smith as the Merwin’s daughter, and she suspects that the young stenographer is the reason Truscott has a change of heart.
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special trust in her. She looks through the safe without success, but she knows there is a special compartment with an additional lock. She gets the key from Truscott's desk and successful finds the papers in the locked compartment. At the same time Stella is in the office, Truscott goes to a dinner at the Country Club hosted by General Farwell. At the dinner the wealthy guests receive news from Wall Street that a bank in London collapsed and a financial crisis is imminent. Truscott is hit hard by the crisis and as a result cannot get banks to lend him money for the big project he has been working on thereby putting it on the verge of failure. Stella reviews the papers in her boarding house that night. The papers show the scheme that her father was planning that is very similar to Truscott's current endeavor revolutionizing the oil refining industry. The papers show $ 2 million in
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financially by his profitable investments. He directed them to see his most trusted employee, Wendell Truscott for assistance in the matter, as Merwin had given him related papers. With the loss of their wealth, the Merwins must change their lives. They move from the city to a small town where they lived off a small annual income produced by the estate and additional money earned from Mrs. Merwin’s writing career. This was enough money to give Stella a strong education, but a far cry from what the family was used to during their good times. Mrs. Merwin blames the family’s financial difficulties on Wendell Truscott because she believes that he ruined her husband and, stole money from him, and took over his company.
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to swift judgments about her employer. She concludes that he is a cold-hearted boss who does not care about establishing relationships with his employees, but also that he is a very smart, savvy businessman who efficiently gets missions accomplished. Stella quickly takes a liking to her job, which starts out with her transcribing letters dictated by Truscott. Impressed with her performance, Truscott increases her responsibilities; he entrusts her to write letters according to his direction. instead of copying what the proprietor says, she gains his trust enough to write letters on her own, and gives her the charge of reviewing the financial books daily.
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Truscott's files to find evidence that he committed fraud against Henry Merwin to restore the family to their previous position of wealth. Stella struggles slightly with the moral implications of betraying her boss, but she will do anything to help her family leading to her decision to find the incriminating documents. The mother visits her daughter and as they walk around the city she comments on how the rich residents made their money insisting that they did so in a dishonorable fashion. The only people that Mrs. Merwin believes amassed their fortune nobly are her husband and her friend Matilda Wedderburn.
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escape by climbing through the roof of the wardrobe so she can go alert Mr. Truscott about Mr. Ross’s transgression. Truscott is very pleased that she discovers this crime, but by the time they inform the authorities Ross leaves town and makes it all the way to a South American country where there is no
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The major theme of this novel is the emergence of the new woman in American society at the turn of the century. Mrs. Merwin exemplifies the traditional female role as a mother and wife, but Stella Merwin pursues higher education. Her schooling allows her to get a job in the business world that pays a
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Because of the complicated history between Wendell Truscott and the Merwin family, Stella Merwin takes her job under the false name Miss Smith. She wants the job in order to lean more about Truscott, whom she has been told to despise as the man who caused her family's financial downfall. Stella comes
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in the early 1900s, Chesnutt said he was "Not a Negro writing about Negroes, but a human being writing about other human beings." He did not see color in his writing. But, many critics considered African Americans to be inferior writers who had to stay in their own "league". At the time, books about
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Stella moves back to Cloverdale leaving Groveland in her rear-view mirror because she wants to forget about her experience working for Wendell Truscott as much as possible. She soon receives a letter from Truscott asking her to come back to work because he cannot find anyone who did as good a job as
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Mr. Ross has stolen $ 20,000 from the company. While Stella is still there Ross comes in and finds the ledger on his desk along with a piece of paper that Stella had written on. Mr. Ross finds Stella hiding in the closet and knocks her out. Stella wakes up locks in a wardrobe; luckily she is able to
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but it was among his six unpublished manuscripts found at the time of his death. In his introduction to this novel, editor Mathew Wilson says, "African American writers have had no right to represent white-life exclusively because to grant that right would be to acknowledge the permeability of the
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went further, featuring a range of white characters, who included an elite white family, as well as a black family of mixed race. Young women in the two families were half-sisters who had the same white father, a man of the elite class. Chesnutt also addressed competition among classes of whites by
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The novel follows the form of a romance, as Matilda Wedderburn and Wendell Truscott engage in a courtship. This fails after he falls for his young stenographer. The courtship is highlighted by nights out at the theatre and dinner parties with the family. It omits the sexual component prevalent in
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The Truscott Refining Company is at the brink of collapse because the company needs $ 200,000 that it owes to its creditors. Luckily Matilda Wedderburn comes to Truscott’s rescue, even though he put their romance to an end, by offering her good friend the money that he desperately needs therefore
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that features the life of a "new woman" of the late 19th century; she enters the world of business instead of embracing the traditional roles of women. It explores a failed romance between two successful upper-class members. A family’s vendetta against the man who allegedly destroyed the family's
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The next Sunday Stella again visits the office in order to search for the documents believed to because this time in search of the documents that will restore her family's wealth. Stella believes the necessary papers are in the safe in Truscott's private office that she access to because of his
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Besides for being Mrs. Merwin's old friend, Matilda Wedderburn is the love interest of Wendell Truscott. Matilda inherited great wealth from her father, and is a leader in literary and musical circles. She is a very independent woman whose only reason to marry is for true love because she has
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Mrs. Merwin is thrilled that Stella is working for The Truscott Refining Company. She does not care that Stella is getting great experience in the business world and her schooling in shorthand is being put to good use; instead, she wants Stella to use her position in the office to infiltrate
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and a life of wealth. At the peak of his success, he hit financial troubles. These led to the loss of the family fortune as well as his death, attributed to heart disease. Before his death, Merwin assured his family: his wife, daughter Stella and son George, that they would be taken care of
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of society and prevent Mrs. Merwin's dream of returning to their previous life impossible. She also learns that the income the family has been receiving was not generated by the Merwin estate but actually is Truscott's charity for the family. Stella returns the stolen papers to Mr. Truscott
311:: Stella’s brother, who also lives and works in Groveland. George has a gambling problem and falls into debt, leading to his arrest. He is saved by a stranger, revealed to be Wendell Truscott, whom the Merwin family considers an enemy. He is sent to a ranch in the West for rehabilitation. 372:, portraying society, as was the major form of his time. He did not use a high style of elaborate language or refer to the mythical characters popular in an earlier generation. The novel effectively captures the business world by describing The Truscott Refining Company’s inner workings. 193:
has just been fired. Stella Merwin fills in temporarily; she has already learned shorthand. When an opportunity opens up, she stays in the job longer than intended. The company is owned by the man whom her family believes has destroyed its reputation and honor.
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that her father has investment in his new company Universal Subterranean Development Company. She believes that this is the evidence that will prove their wealth; however, Stella then sees through the documents how her father's plan failed because of an
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and the failures of his unscrupulous business partners. This proves that Wendell Truscott never stole from her father; it was Henry Merwin’s own fault that the family lost its fortune. Stella's findings cement the family's place outside the
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advised Chesnutt, "You will doubtless be able to find a publisher, and my advice to you is decidedly to keep trying till you do find one." Page encouraged Chesnutt in his career, and later Houghton Mifflin published other works by him.
26: 275:: The wealthy proprietor of the Truscott Refining Company whom the Merwin family blames for their financial ruin. He is a crafty businessman. It is revealed that he never betrayed his mentor Henry Merwin, but provided for his family. 250:
accompanied by a letter explaining her true identity as well as giving him her reason for resignation of the position. She thanks him for his generosity to the family and apologizes for taking advantage of the trust he showed her.
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While reviewing the daily reports Stella notices that something is inconsistent in the books, so she decides to look into the matter on a Sunday when nobody will be in the office. After reviewing the books she concludes that the
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she did, but more importantly he wants her to come back because she loves him. In the letter Truscott says, "Come back to me, dear child, or let me come to you, and we will part no more forever, as long as we both shall live."
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The book was completed in 1890 but Chesnutt, who had published only a few short stories by then, was unable to interest a publisher in it. The book's depiction of white society may have contributed to that failure. Editor
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When Chesnutt completed his novel in 1890, he was unable to find a publisher for it. At the time he had published only a few short stories set in the South, recounting the culture of slave life on plantations. Although
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the antebellum South were popular. It was a time of reconciliation between the North and South, and members of the Northern literary establishment were interested in black writers who portrayed the slavery years.
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to thrive without relying on a husband. During this period, the number of women working in offices, previously limited to men, was on the rise. Gradually women replaced men as clerks and stenographers.
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Twenty-first century scholar Matthew Wilson believes Chesnutt may have been trying to appeal in this work to white readers, who made up most of the market for literature. Chesnutt, along with
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The story takes place in 1890s in the Midwest city of Groveland (critics consider this a fictional stand-in for Cleveland, where Chesnutt lived). At the Truscott Refining Company, the male
299:: A beautiful, wealthy woman being courted by Wendell Truscott. Her hopes of marrying him end when he "falls for" Stella Merwin. As a friend, she loans Truscott money to save the company. 483:
color line". Wilson believes that Chesnutt has still not received the recognition he deserves for this pioneering effort in crossing the color line to write about white society.
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Since the late 20th century, there has been a revival of interest in Chesnutt. This novel was published posthumously in 2005 with an introduction and editing by Matthew Wilson.
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struggled through life by working long hours in a factory or office. The Merwins family's drastic decline in financial standing is similar to that of the title character in
466: 305:: The mother of Stella and George, and wife of Henry Merwin. The widow has trouble dealing with her decline in status and yearns to return to her high place in society 293:: The bookkeeper of Truscott Refining, who steals $ 20,000 from the company, but escapes to South America. Stella Merwin's judgment of him is proved true by events. 648: 360:, now considered a literary classic. Chesnutt explores Mrs. Merwin's difficulty as a beleaguered widow, no longer in the upper class. 462: 461:
the late 19th century, as some lower-class men achieved new wealth and political power. Based on the background to North Carolina's
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Charles Chesnutt viewed his work differently than most in terms of its racial implications. After receiving an award from the
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received little attention from critics or readers. One of the first of its kind, the novel has faded to the edge of
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fortune is revealed to be mistaken. The novel was unusual for its time as Chesnutt wrote only about white society.
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modern courtship and portrayed in current literature. The romantic plot was also featured in Howells' novel,
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in the structure of society. This era was known for the vast disparity in wealth between the classes, as the
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of the elected city government, the novel was described by William Dean Howells as "bitter."
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He describes Chesnutt and Dunbar as pushing the prescribed limits of race in their writings.
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ed. Matthew Wilson and Marjan Van Schaik, Jackson: University of Mississippi, 2005. Print.
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Matthew Wilson says about African-American authors at the turn of the 20th century:
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lived in luxurious mansions with many servants and enjoyed the theatre, but the
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It is not known whether Chesnutt tried to find another publisher for
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When it was published in 2005 over a century after it was written,
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Stella Merwin's father, Henry, was a very successful man in the
435: 413: 236: 158: 114: 420:, was published in 1901, but failed to sell successfully. 140: 535: 533: 609:. Jackson: University of Mississippi. p. ix. 798: 656: 530: 517:Whiteness in the Novels of Charles W. Chesnutt 465:of blacks in the late 1890s and events of the 642: 544:. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi. 607:Whiteness in the Novels of Charles Chesnutt 519:, Jackson: University of Mississippi, 2004. 201:business, providing the Merwin family with 649: 635: 25: 564: 539: 400:chose not to publish the novel, editor 799: 604: 630: 558: 486: 565:Chesnutt, Charles W. (3 June 2005). 325:substantial salary. Stella has the 13: 14: 843: 319: 502: 184: 65:University Press of Mississippi 598: 583: 569:. Univ. Press of Mississippi. 469:, in which whites conducted a 442:Chesnutt published his novels 1: 832:Novels by Charles W. Chesnutt 817:Novels published posthumously 523: 261: 16:Novel by Charles W. Chesnutt 7: 719:The House Behind the Cedars 10: 848: 540:Chesnutt, Charles (2005). 390: 375: 368:Chesnutt wrote a novel of 363: 745: 668: 467:1898 Wilmington Race Riot 444:A House Behind the Cedars 333: 314: 138: 126: 112: 100: 92: 80: 70: 56: 46: 36: 24: 822:Fiction set in the 1890s 687:The Passing of Grandison 605:Wilson, Matthew (2004). 384:The Rise of Silas Lapham 357:The Rise of Silas Lapham 827:English-language novels 812:African-American novels 727:The Marrow of Tradition 458:The Marrow of Tradition 456:and racial mixing. But 449:The Marrow of Tradition 747:Published posthumously 695:The Sheriff's Children 508:Chesnutt, Charles W., 429: 338:Chesnutt explores the 327:financial independence 761:Paul Marchand, F.M.C. 679:The Wife of His Youth 425: 807:2005 American novels 410:Paul Laurence Dunbar 352:William Dean Howells 340:financial inequality 254:saving the company. 735:The Colonel's Dream 662:Charles W. Chesnutt 595:, Gutenberg Project 497:American Literature 31:First edition cover 21: 711:Frederick Douglass 567:A Business Career 510:A Business Career, 487:Critical reception 480:A Business Career, 297:Matilda Wedderburn 20:A Business Career 19: 794: 793: 776:A Business Career 703:The Conjure Woman 542:A Business Career 515:Wilson, Matthew. 493:A Business Career 454:racial inequality 402:Walter Hines Page 242:economic collapse 176:Walter Hines Page 154:A Business Career 150: 149: 107:978-1-5780-6761-9 71:Publication place 839: 784:Evelyn's Husband 651: 644: 637: 628: 627: 621: 620: 602: 596: 587: 581: 580: 562: 556: 555: 537: 463:disfranchisement 398:Houghton Mifflin 273:Wendell Truscott 167:Charles Chesnutt 163:African-American 142: 116: 41:Charles Chesnutt 29: 22: 18: 847: 846: 842: 841: 840: 838: 837: 836: 797: 796: 795: 790: 741: 664: 655: 625: 624: 617: 603: 599: 588: 584: 577: 563: 559: 552: 538: 531: 526: 505: 489: 393: 378: 366: 336: 322: 317: 264: 187: 131: 81:Media type 32: 17: 12: 11: 5: 845: 835: 834: 829: 824: 819: 814: 809: 792: 791: 789: 788: 780: 772: 764: 758: 755:Mandy Oxendine 751: 749: 743: 742: 740: 739: 731: 723: 715: 707: 699: 691: 683: 674: 672: 670:Selected Works 666: 665: 654: 653: 646: 639: 631: 623: 622: 615: 597: 582: 575: 557: 550: 528: 527: 525: 522: 521: 520: 513: 504: 501: 488: 485: 392: 389: 377: 374: 365: 362: 335: 332: 321: 318: 316: 313: 263: 260: 186: 183: 148: 147: 144: 136: 135: 132: 127: 124: 123: 118: 110: 109: 104: 98: 97: 94: 90: 89: 82: 78: 77: 72: 68: 67: 58: 54: 53: 48: 44: 43: 38: 34: 33: 30: 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 844: 833: 830: 828: 825: 823: 820: 818: 815: 813: 810: 808: 805: 804: 802: 786: 785: 781: 778: 777: 773: 770: 769: 765: 762: 759: 756: 753: 752: 750: 748: 744: 737: 736: 732: 729: 728: 724: 721: 720: 716: 713: 712: 708: 705: 704: 700: 697: 696: 692: 689: 688: 684: 681: 680: 676: 675: 673: 671: 667: 663: 659: 652: 647: 645: 640: 638: 633: 632: 629: 618: 612: 608: 601: 594: 592: 586: 578: 572: 568: 561: 553: 551:1-57806-761-8 547: 543: 536: 534: 529: 518: 514: 511: 507: 506: 500: 498: 494: 484: 481: 476: 474: 473: 468: 464: 459: 455: 451: 450: 445: 440: 437: 432: 428: 424: 421: 419: 415: 411: 406: 403: 399: 388: 387: 385: 373: 371: 361: 359: 358: 353: 349: 345: 341: 331: 328: 320:The new women 312: 310: 309:George Merwin 306: 304: 300: 298: 294: 292: 288: 286: 282: 280: 276: 274: 270: 268: 267:Stella Merwin 259: 255: 251: 248: 243: 238: 232: 230: 225: 219: 215: 211: 207: 204: 200: 195: 192: 182: 179: 177: 171: 168: 164: 160: 156: 155: 145: 143: 141:LC Class 137: 133: 130: 129:Dewey Decimal 125: 122: 119: 117: 111: 108: 105: 103: 99: 95: 91: 87: 83: 79: 76: 75:United States 73: 69: 66: 62: 59: 55: 52: 49: 45: 42: 39: 35: 28: 23: 782: 775: 774: 766: 760: 754: 746: 733: 725: 717: 709: 701: 693: 685: 677: 669: 606: 600: 591:The Uncalled 590: 585: 566: 560: 541: 516: 509: 503:Bibliography 492: 490: 479: 477: 470: 457: 447: 443: 441: 433: 430: 426: 422: 418:The Uncalled 417: 407: 394: 382: 379: 367: 355: 337: 323: 308: 307: 302: 301: 296: 295: 290: 289: 284: 283: 278: 277: 272: 271: 266: 265: 256: 252: 233: 220: 216: 212: 208: 199:oil refining 196: 191:stenographer 188: 185:Plot summary 180: 172: 153: 152: 151: 472:coup d'Ă©tat 446:(1900) and 348:lower class 344:upper class 303:Mrs. Merwin 279:Mrs. Paxton 247:upper class 229:extradition 801:Categories 768:The Quarry 616:1578066670 576:1578067618 524:References 285:Mr. Peters 262:Characters 224:bookkeeper 146:PS1292.C6 57:Published 354:' novel 291:Mr. Ross 121:57002305 86:Hardback 47:Language 391:Context 376:Romance 370:Realism 364:Realism 165:author 84:Print ( 51:English 787:(2005) 779:(2005) 771:(1999) 763:(1998) 757:(1997) 738:(1905) 730:(1901) 722:(1900) 714:(1899) 706:(1899) 698:(1899) 690:(1899) 682:(1898) 613:  593:(1901) 573:  548:  334:Status 315:Themes 203:status 96:218 pp 37:Author 658:Works 436:NAACP 414:genre 237:stock 159:novel 157:is a 134:813.4 93:Pages 611:ISBN 571:ISBN 546:ISBN 115:OCLC 102:ISBN 61:2005 660:by 161:by 63:by 803:: 532:^ 499:. 231:. 650:e 643:t 636:v 619:. 579:. 554:. 386:. 88:)

Index

Cover of the book showing title in white letters against a black background in a banner above a painting of a portion of a tree against a red background
Charles Chesnutt
English
2005
University Press of Mississippi
United States
Hardback
ISBN
978-1-5780-6761-9
OCLC
57002305
Dewey Decimal
LC Class
novel
African-American
Charles Chesnutt
Walter Hines Page
stenographer
oil refining
status
bookkeeper
extradition
stock
economic collapse
upper class
financial independence
financial inequality
upper class
lower class
William Dean Howells

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