Much of the Swede’s popularity hinges on what his success represents to his community of immigrants and their descendants. To immigrants to America, their children, and their children’s children, the Swede is proof that the American Dream is attainable to anyone with enough ambition and work ethic. His fair complexion, however problematically, symbolizes his total assimilation into the American (White, Protestant) mainstream despite his working-class, Jewish background. Roth’s fiction regularly features the stereotype of the Jewish father who hails from a working-class background, clings tightly to tradition, and values duty and responsibility above all else.