This thesis evaluates the different images of the Other appearing in Herman Melville’ famous novel, Moby Dick. Herman Melville lived in nineteenth century America, in a time when the theme of otherness and othering was a very current issue. This was the time of growth and economic development that resulted in population increase and the exploitation of resources. In 1819, when Melville was born, the nation only consisted of 22 states, when die din 1891 it doubled to 44. These were the times of Westward expansion and the popular image of the doctrine of manifest destiny, the belief that the US should control all of North America, which resulted in the conquest of wilderness, the legitimization of the institution of slavery and of col...
This thesis compares three film adaptations of Herman Melville�s Moby Dick. The study is conducted...
This thesis examines Herman Melville's representations of the material text and the literary marketp...
© 2018 Dr David MenceThis thesis examines the political thought of nineteenth-century American autho...
Moby-Dick, or The Whale is a novel famed for its multifaceted nature, due to the myriad of both lite...
Abstract: American Literature is considered to have gained its independence from the dominance of Br...
This thesis investigates the spectrality of Moby-Dick; or, the Whale and proposes that\ud through th...
Mardi, Moby-Dick, and Pierre share striking parallels in form and content: each is narrated by an in...
Abstract The main work of Herman Melville, the final work of the literature of American Romanticism...
In the years following Melville’s induction into the literary canon during the mid-twentieth century...
This dissertation examines four important early works by Herman Melville with the aim of discovering...
The article actualizes the necessity to specify methodological, historical and literary priorities, ...
This paper investigates the themes and symbols of evil, pain, and suffering in the novel, Moby Dick ...
This paper discusses the question of the expression of alterity as “faces” in Herman Melville’s two ...
In this upcoming undergraduate research showcase, we will investigate several predominant themes fol...
In fascinating new contextual readings of four of Herman Melville's novels - Typee , White-Jacket, M...
This thesis compares three film adaptations of Herman Melville�s Moby Dick. The study is conducted...
This thesis examines Herman Melville's representations of the material text and the literary marketp...
© 2018 Dr David MenceThis thesis examines the political thought of nineteenth-century American autho...
Moby-Dick, or The Whale is a novel famed for its multifaceted nature, due to the myriad of both lite...
Abstract: American Literature is considered to have gained its independence from the dominance of Br...
This thesis investigates the spectrality of Moby-Dick; or, the Whale and proposes that\ud through th...
Mardi, Moby-Dick, and Pierre share striking parallels in form and content: each is narrated by an in...
Abstract The main work of Herman Melville, the final work of the literature of American Romanticism...
In the years following Melville’s induction into the literary canon during the mid-twentieth century...
This dissertation examines four important early works by Herman Melville with the aim of discovering...
The article actualizes the necessity to specify methodological, historical and literary priorities, ...
This paper investigates the themes and symbols of evil, pain, and suffering in the novel, Moby Dick ...
This paper discusses the question of the expression of alterity as “faces” in Herman Melville’s two ...
In this upcoming undergraduate research showcase, we will investigate several predominant themes fol...
In fascinating new contextual readings of four of Herman Melville's novels - Typee , White-Jacket, M...
This thesis compares three film adaptations of Herman Melville�s Moby Dick. The study is conducted...
This thesis examines Herman Melville's representations of the material text and the literary marketp...
© 2018 Dr David MenceThis thesis examines the political thought of nineteenth-century American autho...