Melville's theological contexts in his first book, Typee, hane not been duly discussed, since critics have considered the issue proper to his later books. The intent of this study is to show that Melville ingeniously insinuates Biblical episodes in the beginning part of the book so as to give the described incidents additional quality and depth which relate to the perspective of Ishmael in Moby-Dick. Here we also discuss the idea of the Covenant of God with man, the central doctrine of New England Puritan theology. This thesis concludes that the narrator's flight form the "arbitrary and violent" captain of the ship signifies Melville's metaphorical assertion that the narrator annuls the covenant with orthodox Puritan God
This thesis considers Herman Melville's Moby-Dick as a textual strategy of possible, alternative mod...
Recent research in ritual studies argues that the pattern of pilgrimage qualifies as trans-historica...
Taking issue with the most significant modern interpretations of "Typee", I have attempted to illust...
Melville\u27s theological contexts in his first book, Typee, hane not been duly discussed, since cri...
The rudiments of the Typee plot are two escapes: the narrator’s flight from a whaling ship, and his ...
Moby Dick is a work strikingly rich in terms of religous symbolism and references (especially ;>Olto...
Melville presents various pagan characters and pagan gods in his sixth novel Moby Dick. Though a goo...
In The Sermon, Chapter 9 of Moby-Dick, the hymn sung by the congregation of Whaleman’s Chapel cont...
This paper defends a reading of Hennan Melville's Moby-Dick that elevates Ishmael's status...
Thesis Abstract The objective of this thesis is to map the narrative strategies of Herman Melville's...
This thesis explores the major religious themes of repentance, redemption, and expiation in Moby-Dic...
“A Bosom Friend,” Chapter 10 of Moby-Dick, concludes with a literary travesty on the Golden Rule, a ...
Although Herman Melvilleʼs Moby-Dick is often viewed as a philosophical work, the paper argues that...
Three of Herman Melville's works (Redburn, Moby-Dick, Pierre) are approached as related works of art...
This paper investigates the themes and symbols of evil, pain, and suffering in the novel, Moby Dick ...
This thesis considers Herman Melville's Moby-Dick as a textual strategy of possible, alternative mod...
Recent research in ritual studies argues that the pattern of pilgrimage qualifies as trans-historica...
Taking issue with the most significant modern interpretations of "Typee", I have attempted to illust...
Melville\u27s theological contexts in his first book, Typee, hane not been duly discussed, since cri...
The rudiments of the Typee plot are two escapes: the narrator’s flight from a whaling ship, and his ...
Moby Dick is a work strikingly rich in terms of religous symbolism and references (especially ;>Olto...
Melville presents various pagan characters and pagan gods in his sixth novel Moby Dick. Though a goo...
In The Sermon, Chapter 9 of Moby-Dick, the hymn sung by the congregation of Whaleman’s Chapel cont...
This paper defends a reading of Hennan Melville's Moby-Dick that elevates Ishmael's status...
Thesis Abstract The objective of this thesis is to map the narrative strategies of Herman Melville's...
This thesis explores the major religious themes of repentance, redemption, and expiation in Moby-Dic...
“A Bosom Friend,” Chapter 10 of Moby-Dick, concludes with a literary travesty on the Golden Rule, a ...
Although Herman Melvilleʼs Moby-Dick is often viewed as a philosophical work, the paper argues that...
Three of Herman Melville's works (Redburn, Moby-Dick, Pierre) are approached as related works of art...
This paper investigates the themes and symbols of evil, pain, and suffering in the novel, Moby Dick ...
This thesis considers Herman Melville's Moby-Dick as a textual strategy of possible, alternative mod...
Recent research in ritual studies argues that the pattern of pilgrimage qualifies as trans-historica...
Taking issue with the most significant modern interpretations of "Typee", I have attempted to illust...