Ragtime

by

E. L. Doctorow

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Ragtime: Chapter 35 Summary & Analysis

Summary
Analysis
Coalhouse’s strategy looks insane to most everyone following the story, and indeed, taking over the library wasn’t exactly what he intended. The band had hoped to hold J. P. Morgan himself for ransom—but Morgan is halfway across the Atlantic, heading toward Egypt. Moreover, the Black youths Coalhouse sent to case the mansion mistook the library for the residence. By the time Younger Brother realized this critical mistake, it was too late, so they occupied the library. When the police arrive on scene, Morgan’s aides have already cabled his ship asking for instructions. The police set up a temporary command post on the ground floor of a nearby mansion and as more and more people arrive on the scene, authority switches hands until New York District Attorney Charles S. Whitman is in charge.
Coalhouse may not have intended to occupy Morgan’s library. But doing so makes an eloquent statement about who and what is—and isn’t—valued in his society. Because while the authorities couldn’t have cared less about the vandalism of Coalhouse’s car, the mere thought of harm coming to Morgan’s priceless collection energizes practically the whole city. In more blunt terms, the value of Coalhouse’s human life falls below Morgan’s lifeless artifacts because Morgan is white and wealthy, and Coalhouse is Black.
Themes
Freedom, Human Dignity, and Justice Theme Icon
Whitman has political ambitions and, although he’s supposed to be spending the weekend at Mrs. Stuyvesant Fish’s upstate cottage, he considers it important for his prospects to put on a good show in this crisis. He sends a police officer to infiltrate the garden, climb up to the roof, and reconnoiter the number of militants inside. But the militants have mined the garden, and the police officer dies as soon as he sets foot inside it.
The lives of the beat police officers are apparently expendable, too, especially for well-connected authorities with political aspirations.
Themes
Freedom, Human Dignity, and Justice Theme Icon
Social Inequities Theme Icon