Moby Dick or The White Whale

(...) In the fervor of his desire to engage just such issues as were finally to elevate the narrative of Moby-Dick into cosmic drama, however, Melville was unfair to the preceding novels when he dismissed them us jobs since, in fact, they are novels of power that spoke tellingly to readers in their...

Πλήρης περιγραφή

Λεπτομέρειες βιβλιογραφικής εγγραφής
Κύριοι συγγραφείς: Melville, Herman, Paul, Sherman, prefacer
Μορφή:
Γλώσσα:eng
Έκδοση: Dent & Dutton 1961
Θέματα:
Διαθέσιμο Online:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moby-Dick
id OAI-LARISA:45596
spelling OAI-LARISA:455962022-08-05T09:19:12ZMoby Dick or The White WhaleMelville, HermanPaul, Sherman, prefacerDent & Dutton1961eng(...) In the fervor of his desire to engage just such issues as were finally to elevate the narrative of Moby-Dick into cosmic drama, however, Melville was unfair to the preceding novels when he dismissed them us jobs since, in fact, they are novels of power that spoke tellingly to readers in their day and speak even more powerfully today to readers with a modern perception of psychological reality. And especially unfair because in them he matured the craftsmanship that opened the way to the literary form he failed to find in Mardi when he constructed that novel as allegory. As Newton Arvin wrote in his biography of Melville, the leading images of Moby-Dick are 'symbols in the strict sense, not allegorical devices or emblems; symbols in the sense that their primal origins are in the unconscious, however consciously they have been organized and controlled; that on this account they transcend the personal and local and become archetypal in their range and depth; that they are inexplicit, polysemantic, and never quite exhaustible in their meanings'. Far from hack work, Redburn and White-Jacket had led their author to the mastery of such symbolic technique. Moreover, these two novels compelled Moby-Dick by exhausting all of Melville's remaining nautical experiences save the central one - whaling. If he were to continue in his novel-writing to draw upon his years at sea, then Ishmael had to go a-whaling. (...) (from the publisher)Εφηβική λογοτεχνία, ΑμερικάνικηΑμερικάνικο μυθιστόρημαhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moby-Dick45596
institution Δημόσια Κεντρική Βιβλιοθήκη Λάρισας "Κωνσταντίνος Κούμας"
collection Κατάλογος
language eng
topic Εφηβική λογοτεχνία, Αμερικάνικη
Αμερικάνικο μυθιστόρημα
spellingShingle Εφηβική λογοτεχνία, Αμερικάνικη
Αμερικάνικο μυθιστόρημα
Melville, Herman
Paul, Sherman, prefacer
Moby Dick or The White Whale
description (...) In the fervor of his desire to engage just such issues as were finally to elevate the narrative of Moby-Dick into cosmic drama, however, Melville was unfair to the preceding novels when he dismissed them us jobs since, in fact, they are novels of power that spoke tellingly to readers in their day and speak even more powerfully today to readers with a modern perception of psychological reality. And especially unfair because in them he matured the craftsmanship that opened the way to the literary form he failed to find in Mardi when he constructed that novel as allegory. As Newton Arvin wrote in his biography of Melville, the leading images of Moby-Dick are 'symbols in the strict sense, not allegorical devices or emblems; symbols in the sense that their primal origins are in the unconscious, however consciously they have been organized and controlled; that on this account they transcend the personal and local and become archetypal in their range and depth; that they are inexplicit, polysemantic, and never quite exhaustible in their meanings'. Far from hack work, Redburn and White-Jacket had led their author to the mastery of such symbolic technique. Moreover, these two novels compelled Moby-Dick by exhausting all of Melville's remaining nautical experiences save the central one - whaling. If he were to continue in his novel-writing to draw upon his years at sea, then Ishmael had to go a-whaling. (...) (from the publisher)
format
author Melville, Herman
Paul, Sherman, prefacer
author_facet Melville, Herman
Paul, Sherman, prefacer
author_sort Melville, Herman
title Moby Dick or The White Whale
title_short Moby Dick or The White Whale
title_full Moby Dick or The White Whale
title_fullStr Moby Dick or The White Whale
title_full_unstemmed Moby Dick or The White Whale
title_sort moby dick or the white whale
publisher Dent & Dutton
publishDate 1961
url https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moby-Dick
work_keys_str_mv AT melvilleherman mobydickorthewhitewhale
AT paulshermanprefacer mobydickorthewhitewhale
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