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Herman Melville 1819-1891. Is the sea our cradle or our grave ?. Generally ignored in his own time and almost forgotten in the years after his death, Melville has since then emerged as one of the giants of American literature.
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Herman Melville 1819-1891 Is the sea our cradle or our grave?
Generally ignored in his own time and almost forgotten in the years after his death, Melville has since then emerged as one of the giants of American literature. “So God created the great sea monsters…the fifth day.” ---Genesis
Herman Melville, the creator of Moby Dick • 1. Born in a New York family of Boston Calvinist and New York Dutch ancestry, into an atmosphere of security and comfort, well educated and socially happy. • 2. His parents accustomed to a comfortable and refined way of life: his mother Maria Gansevoort and his father Allan Melville, educated in the College of New Jersey ( Princeton University) • 3. Taught by a family governess, and went to New York Male High School • 4. His father died early in 1832 ( overwork, nervous exhaustion, becoming insane, leaving heavy debts behind) • 5. Tried his hand at clerking, farming, teaching and writing
Herman Melville, the Big Questioner • 1. A common sailor on a merchant ship, and working on three whale ships to the South Seas, jumped ship in the Marquesas Islands and Hawaii • 2. The whale ship was “ my Yale and my Harvard” • 3. Lived a life of genteel poverty as a customs inspector in the port of New York ( earning 4 dollars a day) • 4. Married on August4, 1847 to Elizabeth Shaw. The daughter of a chief justice turning him from a world wanderer to a respectable family man • 5. Died in obscurity • 6. In 1924, his manuscript of the novella, Billy Budd was discovered and published, arousing public interest in him
Typee( 1846) • Melville’s first novel. The narrator and his friend desert their whaling ship in the Marquesas Islands and spend three months with the Yypee cannibals. The narrator admires the easy primitive life of the islanders and especially fond of the lovely Fayaway.
Omoo (1847) • A sequel to Typee • The narrator and the crew desert their whaler because of an eccentric captain and bad living conditions. They are jailed in Tahiti, and later the narrator ships aboard another whaler, leaving his friend Captain Long Ghost in Tahiti.
Fishermen of the South Sea
Men and the sea
His early romances: the beautiful and the ugly the civilized and the savage
Moby Dick (1851) • It is the Hamlet of American literature, and Captain Ahab is one of the few characters in literature who is “ formed for noble tragedies”, as while writing Moby Dick, Melville was reading Hawthorne and Shakespeare, and found in both a great sense of evil.
What do these masters of tragedy create? Tragic Heroes A victim of love A victim of love A victim of hatred
Call me Ishmael. Some years ago---never mind how long precisely—having little or no money in my purse, and nothing particular to interest me on shore, I thought I would sail about a little and see the watery part of the world.
And God created great sea monsters. ---Genesis • The five conflicts man suffers from: • 1. Man and God • 2. Man and nature • 3. Man and society • 4. Man and man • 5. Man and himself
Two great archetypes in American literature • Ahab---a tragic figure who dares to seek • and challenge the supernatural power • while knowing that he is doomed to die. 2. The white whale---the symbol of nature both good and evil as the color indicates.
Ahab---a man of action Ishmael---a man of thought
Pequod, the world of men trying their best to catch the white whale
American literary tradition Natty Bumppo, a civilized man going into the woods ,trying to know himself and society and nature with native Indians Ahab, a civilized man going to the deep ocean trying to challenge a power mightier than him and his crew of different races to “realize his Dream”. Huckleberry Finn, a white boy going down the Mississippi River to find his Place in the world.
Questions to ponder: What does the white whale symbolize? In what way is Moby Dick a tragedy? Are we Ahab or Ishmael?