Sinclair Lewis, author of Babbitt, designed several important literary elements to explain the full role and purpose of his writing novel. Babbit is a satire as well as people, society as a whole. He exposed the hypocrisy and mechanization of American society in the 1920s. In the novel, Lewis is focusing on his protagonist, Babbit The majority of his book is the hero, and he is a businessman with a desire to climb high targets and social class ladders.
Sinclair Lewis 'Babbit Sinclair Lewis' The Republican Party of Babbit depicts a man who wants to obey his party; his behavior seems to be faithful to this, and today's Republican version is Lewis and our version Prove it. Not too far, the time is long. The main character of the Lewis novel, George Babbit, is seeing the world with the eyes of businessmen. He thinks immigrants are a waste of social, commercial and means of survival, and the ability to make the latest and greatest inventions a top priority in life.
Buckbit (1922), Sinclair Lewis is a satirical novel about American culture and society, criticizing the emptiness of middle class living and the pressure of society to obey. The controversy caused by Babbit influenced the decision of the 1930 Nobel Prize for Literature to award Lewis. After World War I social unrest and serious economic depression many Americans in the 1920s saw business and urban development as the foundation of stability and development. Middle class citizen boosters and self-made people represent a depiction of the success of Americans in particular, it is essential to raise American identity as fear of Communism increases. At the same time, the growth of the Midwestern city, often associated with the emergence of large-scale production and consumption society, is also seen as a sign of progress in the United States.