The Will and the Whale: Glory and the Horizon of Defiance in Herman Melville’s Moby Dick

Hanaà Berrezoug

Abstract


This article proposes a reading of Man’s challenge to nature’s grandeur. It is furthermore designed to delineate the insatiable desire of the American man to attain glory at all costs. As the title suggests, I shall try to highlight the horizon of defiance to nature’s rules through the American classic Moby Dick (1851). In sum, I shall be discussing the American man’s penchant for defying failure throughout Ahab, the vengeful character who is in the tradition of the evil man of fiction who strives to annihilate “evil” with evil. By so doing, I will shed light on how Ahab’s will cannot surpass Nature’s will and how this engages Ahab in a Schopenhaueran pessimistic disappointment.

Full Text:

PDF

References


Blumenthal, Rachel. (2006). Herman Melville’s Politics of Imperialism: Colonizing

and De-colonizing Spaces of Ethnicity, Vanderbilt Undergraduate Research

Journal. Vol. 2: (pp 1-9).

Cope, David. (1999). Melville/ Shakespeare, available from https://cms.grcc.edu/sites/default/files/docs/shakespeare/contemporary/melville_s hakespeare.pdf (1-15).

Matthiessen, F.O. (1968). American Renaissance: Art and Expression in the Age of

Emerson and Whitman. New York. Oxford University Press.

Melville, Herman. (1994). Moby Dick, Prentice Hall. Penguin Popular Classics (first

published in 1851).

Moseley, Gabriel. (2009). Ahab’s Splintered Self. ECLS Student Scholarship.

Occidental College: (pp 1-27).

Muir, Kenneth. (1979). Shakespeare’s Tragic Sequence, New York, Barnes & Noble.

Mumford, Lewis et al. (1970). The Human Prospect, Carbondale and Edwardsville.

Southern Illinois University Press.

Pritchard, Greg. (2003). Moby Dick and the Philosopher of Pessimism, Australian

Journal of American Studies. Vol 22 N°1 electronic version: (34-48).

Schopenhauer, Arthur. (1923). Studies in Pessimism, Trans. T. B. Saunders. London.

George Allen and Unwin.

Schopenhauer, Arthur. (1969). The World as Will and Representation, Trans. E. F. J.

Payne, 2 vols. New York. Dover Publications.

Tanner, Tony. (2000). The American Mystery: American Literature from Emerson to

Delillo, Cambridge. Cambridge University Press.




DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.17951/lsmll.2014.38.1.77
Date of publication: 2015-05-20 17:37:11
Date of submission: 2015-04-22 01:31:41


Statistics


Total abstract view - 827
Downloads (from 2020-06-17) - PDF - 499

Indicators



Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


Copyright (c) 2015 Lublin Studies in Modern Languages and Literature

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.