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    • Martin Arrowsmith

      • Martin Arrowsmith The novel's title character and protagonist, Martin is a curious young man whose life in the medical profession makes up the plot of the book. He is stubborn and inclined toward laboratory science, rather than the practice of being a physician.
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  2. Martin Arrowsmith The novel's title character and protagonist, Martin is a curious young man whose life in the medical profession makes up the plot of the book. He is stubborn and inclined toward laboratory science, rather than the practice of being a physician.

    • Full Book Summary

      Martin Arrowsmith, the novel's protagonist, is born and...

    • Quick Quiz

      SparkNotes Plus subscription is $4.99/month or $24.99/year...

    • Motifs

      A summary of motifs in Sinclair Lewis's Arrowsmith. ......

    • Chapters 37–40

      A summary of Chapters 37–40 in Sinclair Lewis's Arrowsmith....

    • Important Quotes Explained

      Then there is the word "hero" to assess. Martin Arrowsmith...

  3. Martin Arrowsmith. Love him or hate him, Martin is our main man. From the beginning, we watch him as he struggles to negotiate between his core values and the compromises he makes in order to live some semblance of a family-centric domestic life.

  4. The book contains considerable social commentary on the state and prospects of medicine in the United States in the 1920s. Arrowsmith is a progressive, even something of a rebel, and often challenges the existing state of affairs when he finds it wanting. This novel has been inspirational for several generations of pre-medical and medical students.

    • 1925
  5. Private practice, public policy, original scientific medical research- our protagonist Martin Arrowsmith tracks through these fields and we get to follow him. Lewis captures the true labor, pitfalls, pratfalls and snarkiness of practitioners and observers so that it still feels fresh and modern; proof that human nature doesn’t really change.

  6. Book Summary. Martin Arrowsmith, of pioneer descent and unflagging spirit, begins his medical training by reading Gray's Anatomy at the age of fourteen in the office of Doc Vickerson, of Elk Mills. In 1904, he enters Winnemac University, where during his career as a student he becomes assistant to Max Gottlieb, a German scientist, whom Martin ...

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