This essay is not, strictly speaking, about Melville's reception in the nineteenth century, but rather about the discourses constituting that reception and what those discourses have to say about certain fundamental aspects of antebellum culture and Melville's relation to them. Labor is the crucial category which organizes readers' responses to Melville as well as Melville's replies to his readers. I should like to begin with two brief examples that illustrate the symbiotic relations between labor and reception in Melville's writing: the first, an unsigned Boston Post review (though we know Charles Gordon Greene to be the author) of White-Jacket (1850), and the second, a letter written by Melville to his father-in-law, Lemuel Shaw. Greene's...
This dissertation examines the problem of women, marriage, and sexuality in Melville's work. The gen...
Although a good deal of recent critical attention to Melville's writing has followed the lead of Rob...
Analyzes two of the short stories in Herman Melville\u27s The Piazza Tales, Bartleby the Scrivener:...
This essay is not, strictly speaking, about Melville's reception in the nineteenth century, but rath...
This essay intervenes in conversations about mid-nineteenth-century authorship and print culture by ...
This thesis examines Herman Melville's representations of the material text and the literary marketp...
\u27A Change of Occupation\u27 studies three of Melville\u27s most highly regarded tales through th...
This thesis investigates the spectrality of Moby-Dick; or, the Whale and proposes that\ud through th...
This essay makes a pair of interrelated claims about apathy. One of these is literaryhistorical, the...
This essay discusses two works by American writer Herman Melville: Moby-Dick (1851) and Pierre (1852...
This thesis re-evaluates the radical humanism and political consciousness of Melville and London, as...
Melville's densely allusive prose is the stylistic signature of his fiction. The onrush of prolific ...
Herman Melville is widely considered to be one of America's greatest authors, and countless literary...
ArticleThis is the final version of the article. Available from Johns Hopkins University Press via t...
See the above abstract.In my 4,150-word review essay "Henry A. Murray on Melville's 1852 Novel Pierr...
This dissertation examines the problem of women, marriage, and sexuality in Melville's work. The gen...
Although a good deal of recent critical attention to Melville's writing has followed the lead of Rob...
Analyzes two of the short stories in Herman Melville\u27s The Piazza Tales, Bartleby the Scrivener:...
This essay is not, strictly speaking, about Melville's reception in the nineteenth century, but rath...
This essay intervenes in conversations about mid-nineteenth-century authorship and print culture by ...
This thesis examines Herman Melville's representations of the material text and the literary marketp...
\u27A Change of Occupation\u27 studies three of Melville\u27s most highly regarded tales through th...
This thesis investigates the spectrality of Moby-Dick; or, the Whale and proposes that\ud through th...
This essay makes a pair of interrelated claims about apathy. One of these is literaryhistorical, the...
This essay discusses two works by American writer Herman Melville: Moby-Dick (1851) and Pierre (1852...
This thesis re-evaluates the radical humanism and political consciousness of Melville and London, as...
Melville's densely allusive prose is the stylistic signature of his fiction. The onrush of prolific ...
Herman Melville is widely considered to be one of America's greatest authors, and countless literary...
ArticleThis is the final version of the article. Available from Johns Hopkins University Press via t...
See the above abstract.In my 4,150-word review essay "Henry A. Murray on Melville's 1852 Novel Pierr...
This dissertation examines the problem of women, marriage, and sexuality in Melville's work. The gen...
Although a good deal of recent critical attention to Melville's writing has followed the lead of Rob...
Analyzes two of the short stories in Herman Melville\u27s The Piazza Tales, Bartleby the Scrivener:...