Exiled Royalties: Melville and the Life We Imagine

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Oxford University Press, 2006 - 290 ページ
Exiled Royalties is a literary/biographical study of the course of Melville's career from his experience in Polynesia through his retirement from the New York Custom House and his composition of three late volumes of poetry and Billy Budd, Sailor. The ten essays in the book are rooted in a belief that "Melville's work," as Charles Olson said, "must be left in his own 'life, '" which for Milder means primarily his spiritual, psychological, and vocational life. The title essay takes its origin from Ishmael's account of "the larger, darker, deeper part of Ahab," Melville's mythic projection of his own feelings of emotional and ontological disinheritance. How to live nobly in spiritual exile-to be godlike in the perceptible absence of God-was a lifelong preoccupation for Melville, who, in lieu of positive belief, transposed the drama of his spiritual life to literature. Exiled Royalties explores the ways in which Melville satisfied this impulse throughout his forty-five year career, how it shaped the matter and manner of his work, and how his writing, in turn, reflexively bore upon his private life and upon the life of the nation.

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Melville and Polynesia
3
Melville and PostRomanticism
27
Melvilles Metaphysics of Democracy Hawthorne and His Mosses
50
Ishmaels Grand Erections
72
5 Exiled Royalties
97
Melville Hawthorne and the Varieties of Homoerotic Experience
118
Melville and the Mediterranean 185657
149
8 Uncivil Wars
168
Agnostic Spirituality in Clarel
192
10 Alms for Oblivion
221
Notes
249
Index
285
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著者について (2006)

Robert Milder is Professor of English at Washington University, St. Louis.

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