Melville's Later Novels

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University of Georgia Press, 1986 - Literary Criticism - 430 pages
Herman Melville wrote out of a strong creative impulse closely tied to an even more imperative will to survive, to resist the ravages of despair and the urge toward self-annihilation that grew out of an all-too-clear vision of the world he saw around him. In his novels Melville wrote of this struggle to survive in a harsh, unyielding world, creating characters such as Ahab and Pierre, who thrash about blindly because of self-ignorance, and characters such as Ishmael and the confidence man, who seek instead the calm and the power that lie at the center of man's being.

The final work in his critical trilogy on Melville's fiction, William Dillingham's study of the later novels delves into the writer's deepest and most vital concerns to trace the search for self-knowledge that guided the creation of Moby-Dick, Pierre, Israel Potter, The Confidence-Man, and Billy Budd, Sailor. Dillingham shows how Melville used the novels as a workshop for his own salvation by investing his characters with the ideas and philosophies that he found compelling or attractive.

In Ahab, Melville located the Gnostic vision of life--a vision of alienation and isolation--that he felt powerfully drawn to yet knew would lead to his own destruction, while in Ishmael he created a character who pursues an alchemic quest for the purity to be found at the core of all men, of all nature. The blinding egotism that fueled Ahab's pursuit of his own destruction would in different ways afflict Pierre, Israel Potter, Claggart, and Vere, while Ishmael's determination not to separate himself from life and his search for self-understanding would be reflected in the transformations of the confidence man and in the luminescent purity of Billy Budd.

Linking Melville's enigmatic narratives with the artist's own epic of self-exploration, Melville's Later Novels presents a rounded, deeply original portrait of a life sustained by art.

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Contents

Chapter 2 page
36
Chapter 3 page
63
Chapter 4 page
91
Chapter 5 page
125
Chapter 6 page
147
Chapter 7 page
173
Chapter 8 page
244
Chapter 9 page
297
Chapter 10 page
338
Chapter II page
365
Page
400
Page
409
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About the author (1986)

William B. Dillingham is Charles Howard Candler Professor of American Literature, Emeritus, at Emory University. His books include four studies of Herman Melville: Melville’s Short Fiction, 1853-1856; An Artist in the Rigging: The Early Work of Herman Melville; Melville’s Later Novels; and Melville and His Circle: The Last Years (all Georgia).

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