This essay makes a pair of interrelated claims about apathy. One of these is literaryhistorical, the other critical-literary. During the turbulent middle decades of the nineteenth century, a number of US writers resorted to the emotionless state of apathy even as the wider culture normalized the possession and display of feelings. The antebellum writings of author Herman Melville are hardly alone in demonstrating apathy\u27s hermeneutic and aesthetic uses; they nevertheless suggest a concentrated encounter with apathy, given how the author thematically foregrounds unfeeling in his work. In Melville\u27s writings, we discover an alternative affective register for the characteristic emotionalism of US literary culture in the decades surroundi...
This study traces the development of Herman Melville's prose by means of a continuously present symb...
ArticleThis is the final version of the article. Available from Johns Hopkins University Press via t...
Herman Melville (1819-1891) lived during the height of the Romantic period in literature. Because he...
This essay makes a pair of interrelated claims about apathy. One of these is literaryhistorical, the...
This essay is not, strictly speaking, about Melville's reception in the nineteenth century, but rath...
The American Civil War(1861-1865) marked the initiation of Herman Melville one of Americas Most pote...
The essay addresses Melville\u2019s use and abuse of the sentimental literature of the day through a...
Melancholy is a distinctive feature of many of Melville\u2019s characters, apparent from his first b...
This dissertation examines the influence of romantic aesthetics on the development of literary writi...
Herman Melville\u27s poetry was rejected by a readership that demanded a countenanced rhyme and mete...
This thesis explores Herman Melville’s relationship to sceptical philosophy. By reading Melville’s f...
This dissertation brings together four books-Herman Melville\u27s Moby-Dick, Henry James\u27s The Pr...
In this study, I argue that in Robert Montgomery Bird’s Sheppard Lee (1836), Edgar Allan Poe’s “More...
In the 1850s, the United States considered itself to be moving towards a new future, a democratic id...
Melville's densely allusive prose is the stylistic signature of his fiction. The onrush of prolific ...
This study traces the development of Herman Melville's prose by means of a continuously present symb...
ArticleThis is the final version of the article. Available from Johns Hopkins University Press via t...
Herman Melville (1819-1891) lived during the height of the Romantic period in literature. Because he...
This essay makes a pair of interrelated claims about apathy. One of these is literaryhistorical, the...
This essay is not, strictly speaking, about Melville's reception in the nineteenth century, but rath...
The American Civil War(1861-1865) marked the initiation of Herman Melville one of Americas Most pote...
The essay addresses Melville\u2019s use and abuse of the sentimental literature of the day through a...
Melancholy is a distinctive feature of many of Melville\u2019s characters, apparent from his first b...
This dissertation examines the influence of romantic aesthetics on the development of literary writi...
Herman Melville\u27s poetry was rejected by a readership that demanded a countenanced rhyme and mete...
This thesis explores Herman Melville’s relationship to sceptical philosophy. By reading Melville’s f...
This dissertation brings together four books-Herman Melville\u27s Moby-Dick, Henry James\u27s The Pr...
In this study, I argue that in Robert Montgomery Bird’s Sheppard Lee (1836), Edgar Allan Poe’s “More...
In the 1850s, the United States considered itself to be moving towards a new future, a democratic id...
Melville's densely allusive prose is the stylistic signature of his fiction. The onrush of prolific ...
This study traces the development of Herman Melville's prose by means of a continuously present symb...
ArticleThis is the final version of the article. Available from Johns Hopkins University Press via t...
Herman Melville (1819-1891) lived during the height of the Romantic period in literature. Because he...