Friday, April 10, 2020
Herman Essays (1635 words) - Moby-Dick, Herman Melville, Bartleby
  Herman    Melville    Melville, Herman (1819-91), an American Novelist, is widely regarded as one of    America's greatest and most influential novelists; known primarily as the author  of Moby Dick. He belonged to a group of eminent pre-Civil War writers-American    Romantics or members of the American Renaissance-who created a new and vigorous  national literature. He is one of the notable examples of an American author  whose work went largely unrecognized in his own time and died in obscurity.    American novelist, a major literary figure whose exploration of psychological  and metaphysical themes foreshadowed 20th-century literary concerns but whose  works remained in obscurity until the 1920s, when his genius was finally  recognized. Melville was born August 1, 1819, in New York City, into a family  that had declined in the world. The Gansevoorts were solid, stable, eminent,  prosperous people; the (Hermans Fathers side) Melvilles were somewhat less  successful materially, possessing an unpredictable. erratic, mercurial strain. (Edinger    6). This difference between the Melvilles and Gansevoorts was the beginning of  the trouble for the Melville family. Hermans mother tried to work her way up the  social ladder by moving into bigger and better homes. While borrowing money from  the bank, her husband was spending more than he was earning. It is my conclusion  that Maria Melville never committed herself emotionally to her husband, but  remained primarily attached to the well off Gansevoort family. (Humford 23)    Allan Melville was also attached financially to the Gansevoorts for support.    There is a lot of evidence concerning Melvilles relation to his mother Maria    Melville. Apparently the older son Gansevoort who carried the mother's maiden  name was distinctly her favorite. (Edinger 7) This was a sense of alienation the    Herman Melville felt from his mother. This was one of the first symbolists to  the Biblical Ishamel. In 1837 he shipped to Liverpool as a cabin boy. Upon  returning to the U.S. he taught school and then sailed for the South Seas in    1841 on the whaler Acushnet. After an 18 month voyage he deserted the ship in  the Marquesas Islands and with a companion lived for a month among the natives,  who were cannibals. He escaped aboard an Australian trader, leaving it at    Papeete, Tahiti, where he was imprisoned temporarily. He worked as a field  laborer and then shipped to Honolulu, Hawaii, where in 1843 he enlisted as a  seaman on the U.S. Navy frigate United States. After his discharge in 1844 he  began to create novels out of his experiences and to take part in the literary  life of Boston and New York City. Melville's first five novels all achieved  quick popularity. Typee: A Peep at Polynesian Life (1846), Omoo, a Narrative of    Adventures in the South Seas (1847), and Mardi (1849) were romances of the South    Sea islands. Redburn, His First Voyage (1849) was based on his own first trip to  sea, and White-Jacket, or the World in a Man-of-War (1850) fictionalized his  experiences in the navy. In 1850 Melville moved to a farm near Pittsfield,    Massachusetts, where he became an intimate friend of Nathaniel Hawthorne, to  whom he dedicated his masterpiece Moby-Dick; or The White Whale (1851). The  central theme of the novel is the conflict between Captain Ahab, master of the  whaler Pequod, and Moby-Dick, a great white whale that once tore off one of    Ahab's legs at the knee. Ahab is dedicated to revenge; he drives himself and his  crew, which includes Ishmael, narrator of the story, over the seas in a  desperate search for his enemy. The body of the book is written in a wholly  original, powerful narrative style, which, in certain sections of the work,    Melville varied with great success. The most impressive of these sections are  the rhetorically magnificent sermon delivered before sailing and the soliloquies  of the mates; lengthy flats, passages conveying nonnarrative material, usually  of a technical nature, such as the chapter about whales; and the more purely  ornamental passages, such as the tale of the Tally-Ho, which can stand by  themselves as short stories of merit. The work is invested with Ishmael's sense  of profound wonder at his story, but nonetheless conveys full awareness that    Ahab's quest can have but one end. And so it proves to be: Moby-Dick destroys  the Pequod and all its crew save Ishmael. There is a certain streak of the  supernatural being projected in the writings of Melville, as is amply obvious in    Moby Dick. The story revolves around the idea of an awesome sea mammal, which  drives the passions of revenge in one man and forces him to pursue a course of  action which leads    
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)
 
