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Herman Melville

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Herman Melville Moby-Dick Herman Melville Born: 1 August 1819 Birthplace: New York, New York Died: 28 September 1891 (heart failure) Best Known As: The author of Moby ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Herman Melville


1
Herman Melville
  • Moby-Dick

2
Herman Melville
  • Born 1 August 1819
  • Birthplace New York, New York
  • Died 28 September 1891 (heart failure)
  • Best Known As The author of Moby-Dick

3
Herman Melville
  • Born to a wealthy New York family that suffered
    great financial losses, Melville had little
    formal schooling and began a period of wanderings
    at sea in 1839. In 1841 he sailed on a whaler
    bound for the South Seas the next year he jumped
    ship in the Marquesas Islands.

4
Herman Melville
  • His adventures in Polynesia were the basis of his
    successful first novels, Typee (1846) and Omoo
    (1847). After his allegorical fantasy Mardi
    (1849) failed, he quickly wrote Redburn (1849)
    and White-Jacket (1850), about the rough life of
    sailors.

5
Herman Melville
  • Moby-Dick (1851), his masterpiece, is both an
    intense whaling narrative and a symbolic
    examination of the problems and possibilities of
    American democracy it brought him neither
    acclaim nor reward when published. Increasingly
    reclusive and despairing, he wrote Pierre (1852),
    which, intended as a piece of domestic "ladies"
    fiction, became a parody of that popular genre,
    Israel Potter (1855), The Confidence-Man (1857),
    and magazine stories, including "Bartleby the
    Scrivener" (1853) and "Benito Cereno" (1855).

6
Herman Melville
  • After 1857 he wrote verse. In 1866 a
    customs-inspector position finally brought him a
    secure income. He returned to prose for his last
    work, the novel Billy Budd, Foretopman, which
    remained unpublished until 1924. Neglected for
    much of his career, Melville came to be regarded
    by modern critics as one of the greatest American
    writers.

7
Major works
  • Typee A Peep at Polynesian Life (1846)Omoo A
    Narrative of Adventures in the South Seas (1847)
  • Moby-Dick or, The Whale (1851)
  • Mardi And a Voyage Thither (1849)
  • White-Jacket or, The World in a Man-of-War
    (1850)
  • Bartleby the Scrivener A Story of Wall Street
    (1853)
  • Billy Budd (1924)

8
Moby-Dick
  • Moby Dick is a novel of epic proportions with
    characteristics of Greek and Elizabethan stage
    tragedies. Melville completed the book at
    Arrowhead, Mass., where he lived for a while.
    Moby Dick is arguably the greatest sea novel ever
    written. Some critics also maintain that is the
    greatest American novel ever written.

9
Moby-Dick
  • Moby Dick was published in October 1851 in London
    by Richard Bentley and November 1851 in New York
    by Harper Brothers. Melville dedicated the
    novel to fellow American author Nathaniel
    Hawthorne. 
  • 1) a very philosophical metaphysical novel2) a
    story of revenge3) a Shakespearean tragedy

10
Moby-Dick
  • 1. Settings 
  • The action early in the novel takes place in New
    Bedford and Nantucket, Mass. Later, the action
    takes place at sea on the Pequod, a
    weather-beaten ship, and on whaling boats sent
    out from the Pequod. The novel ends when the
    whale destroys the Pequod and another ship, the
    Rachel picks up Ishmael, who survived by floating
    on a coffin.

11
Moby-Dick
  • 2. Major characters 
  • Protagonist Ahab --- Captain of the
    Pequod  Antagonist Moby-Dick --- the Whale,
    symbolizing the forces working against Ahab 
    Ishmael Pequod seaman and narrator of the
    action  

12
Moby-Dick
  • 3. Plot summary
  • Moby-Dick is the enormous white whale who
    torments Captain Ahab in the novel Moby-Dick
    (1851). Ahab is obsessed with finding and killing
    Moby-Dick, having lost a leg in a previous
    encounter with the whale, and Ahab's burning
    desire for revenge really is the center of the
    story. At novel's end, Ahab finds and attacks
    Moby-Dick, but the terrible whale takes Ahab, his
    ship Pequod, and nearly all its crew down to a
    watery grave with him. Melville based his tale,
    in part, on the sinking of the real-life whaling
    ship Essex in 1820.

13
Moby-Dick
  • The first mate Starbuck in Moby-Dick was the
    inspiration for the name of the Starbucks coffee
    chain... The musician Moby is a descendant of
    Melville -- hence his wry nickname... Moby-Dick's
    first line is famously short "Call me Ishmael."
    Ishmael is the book's narrator and the only
    survivor of the Pequod's encounter with Moby-Dick.

14
Moby-Dick
  • 4. CharacterizationIshmaelan outcast to look
    for truththe only intelligentthe only one to
    have a belief in humanitythe only
    survivor---the way of Ishmael, the way of life
  • Ahab the captain of the whaling ship, Pequoda
    Greek or Shakespearean heroa devil, with a
    strong desire for revenge---the way of Ahab, the
    way of death

15
Moby-Dick
  • 5. Symbolism
  • Pequod --- inevitable death
  • The voyage --- the search for the ultimate
    truth
  • Moby Dick---Nature---evil / evil force
    ---human destiny---American capitalism

16
Moby-Dick
  • 6. Major themes 
  • 1) Man cannot penetrate to the heart of the great
    power, the primal (???, ???) force, that controls
    the world and appears to manipulate the destinies
    of its inhabitants. Moby Dick represents this
    inscrutable, mysterious powerGod to some Satan,
    Fate, or another force to others. Ahab and other
    seamen may harpoon the whale, but they cannot
    harvest it.

17
Moby-Dick
  • In attempting to kill the great whale, Ahab is
    like Adam attempting to harvest unrevealed
    knowledge by eating the apple in the Garden of
    Eden. Ahab has also been compared to the Greek
    god Prometheus, who defied Zeus by stealing fire
    from heaven and giving it to man.

18
Moby-Dick
  • 2) The whiteness of Moby Dick
  • White produces all the colors of the spectrum
    when it passes through a prism, suggesting that
    Moby Dick embodies all the subtle huesin their
    millions of variationsof knowledge. How can a
    man hope to separate and process these hues?
    Ishmael reflects this theme in his frequent
    narrative digressions that define and describe
    whales.

19
Moby-Dick
  • Though these digressions are long and exhaustive,
    full of technical detail, they never completely
    capture the nature of the whale and its meaning
    to, and impact on, human beings. The whiteness
    also suggests doom, as did the albatross, a white
    bird, in "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner."  

20
Moby-Dick
  • 3) Pequod as Microcosm  In literature a
    microcosm is a small worlda family, a workplace,
    a town, a schoolwith people of varying
    personalities and backgrounds, like the world at
    large. The Pequod is a microcosm, for its crew is
    made up of blacks and whites, heathens and
    Christians, the weak and the strong, the humble
    and the proud, the cowardly and the courageous.
    Melville apply the qualities and characteristics
    of the crew of this small worldbigotry, piety,
    greed, tolerance, and so onto the world in
    general.  

21
Moby-Dick
  • 4) Noble Savages a major literary motif  since
    ancient times, writers have often depicted
    aboriginal or uncivilized people as
    nobleuntainted by the corrupt ways of
    civilization. Greek and Latin authors, such as
    Homer and Ovid, were sympathetic to some
    primitive peoples in their writings. In 1672, the
    English poet, critic and dramatist John Dryden
    coined the term noble savage in a play called The
    Conquest of Granada.

22
Moby-Dick
  • Between 1760 and 1780, the French writer and
    philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau popularized the
    concept of the noble savage in his writings. In
    Moby Dick, Melville developed this motif with
    three noble savages the harpooners Queequeg,
    Tashtego, and Daggoo. For example, he depicts
    Queequega tattooed (???, ??) savage who sells
    shrunken headsas being more tolerant and
    benevolent than the civilized Christian
    whalers.  

23

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