Melville's fair maidens/dark ladies victims, and vixens.
Herman Melville will surely be remembered as the author of that epic of whaling, Moby Dick, with its savage harpooneers, loyal mates, and the monomaniac Captain Ahab grimly pursuing the white whale. His accounts of trips to the South Seas (Typee, Omoo), to England (Redburn), and around Cape Horn (Wh...
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California State University, Fresno
1976
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ftcalifstateuniv:oai:scholarworks:3f462870x 2024-09-30T14:45:52+00:00 Melville's fair maidens/dark ladies victims, and vixens. Kurihara, Martha Haruko. 1976 https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12680/3f462870x English eng California State University, Fresno Arts and Humanities English California State University, Fresno. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12680/3f462870x http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/?creator Masters Thesis 1976 ftcalifstateuniv https://doi.org/20.500.12680/3f462870x 2024-09-10T17:06:16Z Herman Melville will surely be remembered as the author of that epic of whaling, Moby Dick, with its savage harpooneers, loyal mates, and the monomaniac Captain Ahab grimly pursuing the white whale. His accounts of trips to the South Seas (Typee, Omoo), to England (Redburn), and around Cape Horn (White-Jacket) deal primarily with young men aboard sailing vessels. It may come as a surprise to the casual reader to realize that, besides the native girls in his South Seas stories, Melville wrote about women of his own society and time. He portrayed several such feminine characters, for instance, in his sentimental novel Pierre. His "romance of Polynesian adventure," as he styled Mardi in his preface, introduced his first use of the Fair Maiden/Dark Lady pair that reappeared in Pierre with certain changes. Melville's shorter works intended for magazine publication, often presented women as either victims of circumstance or as vixens in the battle of the sexes. Master Thesis White whale Scholarworks from California State University Ahab ENVELOPE(-62.178,-62.178,-65.434,-65.434) Cape Horn ENVELOPE(-135.021,-135.021,61.583,61.583) Captain Ahab ENVELOPE(-57.617,-57.617,-62.000,-62.000) |
institution |
Open Polar |
collection |
Scholarworks from California State University |
op_collection_id |
ftcalifstateuniv |
language |
English |
description |
Herman Melville will surely be remembered as the author of that epic of whaling, Moby Dick, with its savage harpooneers, loyal mates, and the monomaniac Captain Ahab grimly pursuing the white whale. His accounts of trips to the South Seas (Typee, Omoo), to England (Redburn), and around Cape Horn (White-Jacket) deal primarily with young men aboard sailing vessels. It may come as a surprise to the casual reader to realize that, besides the native girls in his South Seas stories, Melville wrote about women of his own society and time. He portrayed several such feminine characters, for instance, in his sentimental novel Pierre. His "romance of Polynesian adventure," as he styled Mardi in his preface, introduced his first use of the Fair Maiden/Dark Lady pair that reappeared in Pierre with certain changes. Melville's shorter works intended for magazine publication, often presented women as either victims of circumstance or as vixens in the battle of the sexes. |
format |
Master Thesis |
author |
Kurihara, Martha Haruko. |
spellingShingle |
Kurihara, Martha Haruko. Melville's fair maidens/dark ladies victims, and vixens. |
author_facet |
Kurihara, Martha Haruko. |
author_sort |
Kurihara, Martha Haruko. |
title |
Melville's fair maidens/dark ladies victims, and vixens. |
title_short |
Melville's fair maidens/dark ladies victims, and vixens. |
title_full |
Melville's fair maidens/dark ladies victims, and vixens. |
title_fullStr |
Melville's fair maidens/dark ladies victims, and vixens. |
title_full_unstemmed |
Melville's fair maidens/dark ladies victims, and vixens. |
title_sort |
melville's fair maidens/dark ladies victims, and vixens. |
publisher |
California State University, Fresno |
publishDate |
1976 |
url |
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12680/3f462870x |
long_lat |
ENVELOPE(-62.178,-62.178,-65.434,-65.434) ENVELOPE(-135.021,-135.021,61.583,61.583) ENVELOPE(-57.617,-57.617,-62.000,-62.000) |
geographic |
Ahab Cape Horn Captain Ahab |
geographic_facet |
Ahab Cape Horn Captain Ahab |
genre |
White whale |
genre_facet |
White whale |
op_relation |
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12680/3f462870x |
op_rights |
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/?creator |
op_doi |
https://doi.org/20.500.12680/3f462870x |
_version_ |
1811646255643754496 |