Typee is not a mere travelogue but has a symbolically created theme. The argument of this paper is that Melville is telling an allegory of the Fall of Man through the pilgrimage of the narrator from the corrupt civilized world to the innocent Typee and also through the change of peaceful Typees to ferocious savages
Melville's densely allusive prose is the stylistic signature of his fiction. The onrush of prolific ...
I hold that Melvillean society consists of paradoxical relationships between civilization and barbar...
In the years following Melville’s induction into the literary canon during the mid-twentieth century...
The rudiments of the Typee plot are two escapes: the narrator’s flight from a whaling ship, and his ...
Taking issue with the most significant modern interpretations of "Typee", I have attempted to illust...
"This paper examines the way Typee represents the Western colonialism of the 18th and 19th centuries...
Herman Melville\u27s poetry was rejected by a readership that demanded a countenanced rhyme and mete...
Three of Herman Melville's works (Redburn, Moby-Dick, Pierre) are approached as related works of art...
Melancholy is a distinctive feature of many of Melville\u2019s characters, apparent from his first b...
In fascinating new contextual readings of four of Herman Melville's novels - Typee , White-Jacket, M...
Herman Melville’s novel, Typee: A Peep at Polynesian Life, is said to depict common travel writing t...
Herman Melville’s first novel Typee, published in 1846, is an intriguing South Sea adventure based o...
On January 3, 1841, Herman Melville boarded the whaler Acushnet and left the harbor of New Bedford. ...
Recent research in ritual studies argues that the pattern of pilgrimage qualifies as trans-historica...
Melville's theological contexts in his first book, Typee, hane not been duly discussed, since critic...
Melville's densely allusive prose is the stylistic signature of his fiction. The onrush of prolific ...
I hold that Melvillean society consists of paradoxical relationships between civilization and barbar...
In the years following Melville’s induction into the literary canon during the mid-twentieth century...
The rudiments of the Typee plot are two escapes: the narrator’s flight from a whaling ship, and his ...
Taking issue with the most significant modern interpretations of "Typee", I have attempted to illust...
"This paper examines the way Typee represents the Western colonialism of the 18th and 19th centuries...
Herman Melville\u27s poetry was rejected by a readership that demanded a countenanced rhyme and mete...
Three of Herman Melville's works (Redburn, Moby-Dick, Pierre) are approached as related works of art...
Melancholy is a distinctive feature of many of Melville\u2019s characters, apparent from his first b...
In fascinating new contextual readings of four of Herman Melville's novels - Typee , White-Jacket, M...
Herman Melville’s novel, Typee: A Peep at Polynesian Life, is said to depict common travel writing t...
Herman Melville’s first novel Typee, published in 1846, is an intriguing South Sea adventure based o...
On January 3, 1841, Herman Melville boarded the whaler Acushnet and left the harbor of New Bedford. ...
Recent research in ritual studies argues that the pattern of pilgrimage qualifies as trans-historica...
Melville's theological contexts in his first book, Typee, hane not been duly discussed, since critic...
Melville's densely allusive prose is the stylistic signature of his fiction. The onrush of prolific ...
I hold that Melvillean society consists of paradoxical relationships between civilization and barbar...
In the years following Melville’s induction into the literary canon during the mid-twentieth century...