Call#: Van Pelt Library PS2387 .H44 1987
Call#: Van Pelt Library PS153.N5 S9 1993
Call#: Van Pelt Library PR830.L69 B6 1987
Call#: Van Pelt Library PS88 .W7 1990
Call#: Van Pelt Library PS374.S7 A37 1989
moby-dick Balzac Golden Bowl Jane Austen Faulkner
Avoiding the reduction of the psychological and sexual to the ideological and the economic, Ahearn deals with three pairs of novels--Pride and Prejudice and Madame Bovary; The Golden Bowl and Ulysses; and Old Goriot and Absalom, Absalom! and Moby-Dick as an attempt at liberation from the "mutual joint-stock world" of modern capitalism. Ahearn's reading of these novels looks at narrative form, racial and sexual themes, and the primal or unconscious (even the religious) dimensions of these novels. Never losing the link between fiction and history, however Ahearn sees Moby-Dick's "impulse to leave the realm of the sociohistorical" as impossible and argues that Melville's attempted transformations of ideology and economics into other spheres of life are never complete. Fascinating readings emerge--e.g., linking Vautrin's rebellious dream of power with the activity of Faulkner's Sutpen
| Person, Leland S., Jr. |
Call#: Van Pelt Library PS2384.M62 S59 1995
Call#: Van Pelt Library PS208 .R49 1988
Moby Dick and Antebellum popular culture. Melville as immersed in issues and life of his times
Call#: Van Pelt Library PS2388.T4 P67 1996
Moby Dick as a "mixed-form" novel


