In this thesis I investigate Herman Melville’s sea novel Moby-Dick (1851), its depiction of the first same-sex marriage in American literature, and the way scholars have been unable to define the relationship of Queequeg and Ishmael as romantic, sexual or queer. Even though Melville writes that Ishmael and Queequeg, a white man from New England and a prince from an imaginary Polynesian island, get “married,” the relationship is often regarded as a buddy narrative. Queequeg, regardless of the ways in which he avoids the stereotypical noble savage characteristics and remains his own man, is seen as inferior to Ishmael, which seems to suggest that the relationship cannot be equal enough to be romantic. Although defining the relationship is see...
This thesis evaluates the different images of the Other appearing in Herman Melville’ famous novel,...
textThis dissertation traces the historical emergence of what I call the romance with Melville durin...
In Moby-Dick, the sailor Ishmael expresses exhaustion with the totalizing philosophical systems of K...
Over the last half century, the analysis of homoerotic themes present in the author’s novels has bee...
Many contemporary critics read Ishmael, Moby-Dick\u27s loquacious narrator, as a queer character. Th...
Herman Melville’s Moby Dick has been scrutinized for the imperialistic constructs within its multicu...
As arguably one of the most famous literary works produced by any American writer (often deemed as t...
This paper explores the lived philosophy of Ishmael in Herman Melville’s epic, Moby-Dick, particular...
Thesis (M.A.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2002'Call me Ishmael.' This opening line has confronte...
In American LGBTQ+ communities, questions continually arise about what it means to live in a post-ga...
My dissertation reorients the prevailing understanding that the gay and lesbian novel came into view...
This dissertation deeply explores characterization within Herman Melville’s novel Moby-Dick. Specifi...
This thesis attempts to answer the following questions: What is the relationship between the America...
This dissertation examines the problem of women, marriage, and sexuality in Melville's work. The gen...
"Man Enough" construes mid-nineteenth-century literary representations of sameness as corollaries of...
This thesis evaluates the different images of the Other appearing in Herman Melville’ famous novel,...
textThis dissertation traces the historical emergence of what I call the romance with Melville durin...
In Moby-Dick, the sailor Ishmael expresses exhaustion with the totalizing philosophical systems of K...
Over the last half century, the analysis of homoerotic themes present in the author’s novels has bee...
Many contemporary critics read Ishmael, Moby-Dick\u27s loquacious narrator, as a queer character. Th...
Herman Melville’s Moby Dick has been scrutinized for the imperialistic constructs within its multicu...
As arguably one of the most famous literary works produced by any American writer (often deemed as t...
This paper explores the lived philosophy of Ishmael in Herman Melville’s epic, Moby-Dick, particular...
Thesis (M.A.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2002'Call me Ishmael.' This opening line has confronte...
In American LGBTQ+ communities, questions continually arise about what it means to live in a post-ga...
My dissertation reorients the prevailing understanding that the gay and lesbian novel came into view...
This dissertation deeply explores characterization within Herman Melville’s novel Moby-Dick. Specifi...
This thesis attempts to answer the following questions: What is the relationship between the America...
This dissertation examines the problem of women, marriage, and sexuality in Melville's work. The gen...
"Man Enough" construes mid-nineteenth-century literary representations of sameness as corollaries of...
This thesis evaluates the different images of the Other appearing in Herman Melville’ famous novel,...
textThis dissertation traces the historical emergence of what I call the romance with Melville durin...
In Moby-Dick, the sailor Ishmael expresses exhaustion with the totalizing philosophical systems of K...