Dick as just a fish. And Ishmael accepts both of them. 5. Why did Melville choose to write about whaling? Why was the industry significant? Melville choose to write about whaling because he was n the industry. 6. What did Melville do when he was 21? He went on a whaler ship for about 4 years and wrote about his trip to the south pacific. 7. What established writer did Melville befriend while he was writing Moby Dick? Melville became friends with Nathaniel Hawthorne while living at Arrowhead
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story? 2. What is the significance of the information that the narrator provides about himself and his employees at the beginning of the story? How does it prepare us to understand Bartleby and the narrator’s attitude toward him? 3. Why does Melville tell the story from the point of view of the employer rather than of the office staff or of Bartleby himself? What effect does this narrative strategy have on the reader? 4. How reliable is the narrator? Are there any indications that he might
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law-copyists‚ or scriveners"(Melville 153). Even though the Lawyer knows many interesting stories of such scriveners‚ “he waive the biographies of all the other scriveners” (Melville 158) in favor of telling the story of Bartleby‚ whom he finds to be the strangest of all the scriveners he has ever known. Bartleby is‚ according to the Lawyer‚ "one
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Scrivener" is very difficult to interpret. However‚ I am going to interpret what I believe the reader should know for certain about Bartleby and why Melville provides so little explicit information about Bartleby. II. About Bartleby A. Bartleby is very complex character B. He is passively stubborn C. He looses interest in his work III. Why Melville provides little information about Bartleby? A. To connect with the reader B. To leave room for interpretation IV. Conclusion: A. Restate
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LITERATURE TIMELINE Date | Literary Period | Authors/Works | 800-400 BC | This period was dominated by Homer and other Greek tragedians | The Iliad and The Odyssey by HomerOedipus the King by SophoclesMedea by Euripedes | 250 BC - AD 150 | Writers of the Roman Empire are most noted in this time period | Famous authors from this period: Virgil‚ Horace‚ and Ovid | 450-1066 | Old English (Anglo-Saxon) Period | Beowulf The rise of haiku poetry Tale of Genji by Japanese writer Murasaki
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University of Bouzareah Faculty of Letters and Languages Departement of English RESEARCH PAPER PREPARED ON : An Overview of the American Literary Periods Submited by : YAHIAOUI HAMDOUD ALANE Academic Year: 2012 / 2013 Early American Fiction (1492-1789) Literature is told through the oral tradition. Works largely consist of origin myths‚ legends‚ chants‚ and other stories. Spiritual forces show up in water‚ land‚ animals‚ etc. which shows a major theme in
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You have saved and waited for what seems like an eternity for that one special vacation of your lifetime. But are you really ready for the trip? Traveling outside of the United States can be (and most of the time is) quite different. But it doesn’t necessarily need to be stressful. First things first. Make sure that your plans are well thought out and that you can afford not only the trip itself‚ but also for any emergency that might arise during your time outside of the U.S. Most people are so
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Many people would look at Moby Dick as a monstrosity of a book filled with nothing but nonsense. When I first started this novel‚ I had the same mindset. I viewed the book from a material angle‚ whereas there is a much deeper meaning intended by Melville. As I continued reading‚ these themes and symbols began to pop out and finally make sense. The author progresses the plot and adds depth to the novel by using symbolism. These symbols are either objects or things to the regular reader‚ however‚ to
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employees‚ Turkey‚ Nippers‚ and Ginger Nut. Throughout the story‚ Melville relates motifs of walls‚ food‚ and death to the theme of isolation. For example‚ the name of the story includes the name Wall Street‚ which is further established by the description of the walls that surround the Narrator’s office. The walls around him are what he focuses on most of the time‚ which the Narrator describes as “a dead-wall reverie” (Melville). “Only Bartleby faces the stark problem of perception presented by
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