Tall-fins and tale-ends in Taiwan: cetacean exploitation, oil refineries and Moby-Dick

This paper addresses the nineteenth-century novel Moby-Dick (1851) as a “cetacean text” and as a text that can be taught to question the animal/human binary that both separates and draws attention to bonds between humans and cetaceans. Herman Melville’s novel, belonging to the period of American lit...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ralph, Iris /
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Journal of Ecocriticism 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.unbc.ca/index.php/joe/article/view/553
id ftunivnbcolumojs:oai:cpsr.unbc.ca:article/553
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivnbcolumojs:oai:cpsr.unbc.ca:article/553 2023-05-15T16:36:07+02:00 Tall-fins and tale-ends in Taiwan: cetacean exploitation, oil refineries and Moby-Dick Ralph, Iris / Asia Pacific region 19th-21st centuries 2014-01-25 application/pdf https://ojs.unbc.ca/index.php/joe/article/view/553 eng eng Journal of Ecocriticism https://ojs.unbc.ca/index.php/joe/article/view/553/482 https://ojs.unbc.ca/index.php/joe/article/view/553 Journal of Ecocriticism; Vol 6, No 1 (2014): Journal of Ecocriticism (Spring 2014); 1-12 1916-1549 Literature American Literature animal studies cetacean species ecocriticism Melville Moby-Dick naphtha cracker plants oil industry Taiwan whale industry posthumanism info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion literary and cultural ecocritical analysis 2014 ftunivnbcolumojs 2022-02-28T16:04:30Z This paper addresses the nineteenth-century novel Moby-Dick (1851) as a “cetacean text” and as a text that can be taught to question the animal/human binary that both separates and draws attention to bonds between humans and cetaceans. Herman Melville’s novel, belonging to the period of American literature that F. O. Matthiessen first famously distinguished as the “American Renaissance” in a study so-titled published in 1941, is being reevaluated today by ecocritics as well as posthumanism and animal studies scholars as a writing that is a cultural record of the North American whaling industry in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries and raises questions about understandings of and assumptions about cetacean slaughter. I tie these concerns to an industry today that threatens cetaceans: the fossil fuel industry, the industry that largely replaced the whaling industry after the twentieth century. I focus mostly on environmental efforts in Taiwan to raise awareness about the fossil fuel industry in Taiwan, namely its petrochemical plants or so called naphtha cracker plants and the deleterious impact these plants have on coastal wetland areas that are home to many species of cetaceans including the endangered species of humpback whale or pink dolphin. Moby-Dick ties to ecocriticism in the eastern regions of the globe not the least by reason of the final scenes of the novel, set in the far western waters of the Pacific. Article in Journal/Newspaper Humpback Whale University of Northern British Columbia: Open Journal Systems Pacific Slaughter ENVELOPE(-85.633,-85.633,-78.617,-78.617)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Northern British Columbia: Open Journal Systems
op_collection_id ftunivnbcolumojs
language English
topic Literature
American Literature
animal studies
cetacean species
ecocriticism
Melville
Moby-Dick
naphtha cracker plants
oil industry
Taiwan
whale industry
posthumanism
spellingShingle Literature
American Literature
animal studies
cetacean species
ecocriticism
Melville
Moby-Dick
naphtha cracker plants
oil industry
Taiwan
whale industry
posthumanism
Ralph, Iris /
Tall-fins and tale-ends in Taiwan: cetacean exploitation, oil refineries and Moby-Dick
topic_facet Literature
American Literature
animal studies
cetacean species
ecocriticism
Melville
Moby-Dick
naphtha cracker plants
oil industry
Taiwan
whale industry
posthumanism
description This paper addresses the nineteenth-century novel Moby-Dick (1851) as a “cetacean text” and as a text that can be taught to question the animal/human binary that both separates and draws attention to bonds between humans and cetaceans. Herman Melville’s novel, belonging to the period of American literature that F. O. Matthiessen first famously distinguished as the “American Renaissance” in a study so-titled published in 1941, is being reevaluated today by ecocritics as well as posthumanism and animal studies scholars as a writing that is a cultural record of the North American whaling industry in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries and raises questions about understandings of and assumptions about cetacean slaughter. I tie these concerns to an industry today that threatens cetaceans: the fossil fuel industry, the industry that largely replaced the whaling industry after the twentieth century. I focus mostly on environmental efforts in Taiwan to raise awareness about the fossil fuel industry in Taiwan, namely its petrochemical plants or so called naphtha cracker plants and the deleterious impact these plants have on coastal wetland areas that are home to many species of cetaceans including the endangered species of humpback whale or pink dolphin. Moby-Dick ties to ecocriticism in the eastern regions of the globe not the least by reason of the final scenes of the novel, set in the far western waters of the Pacific.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Ralph, Iris /
author_facet Ralph, Iris /
author_sort Ralph, Iris /
title Tall-fins and tale-ends in Taiwan: cetacean exploitation, oil refineries and Moby-Dick
title_short Tall-fins and tale-ends in Taiwan: cetacean exploitation, oil refineries and Moby-Dick
title_full Tall-fins and tale-ends in Taiwan: cetacean exploitation, oil refineries and Moby-Dick
title_fullStr Tall-fins and tale-ends in Taiwan: cetacean exploitation, oil refineries and Moby-Dick
title_full_unstemmed Tall-fins and tale-ends in Taiwan: cetacean exploitation, oil refineries and Moby-Dick
title_sort tall-fins and tale-ends in taiwan: cetacean exploitation, oil refineries and moby-dick
publisher Journal of Ecocriticism
publishDate 2014
url https://ojs.unbc.ca/index.php/joe/article/view/553
op_coverage Asia Pacific region
19th-21st centuries
long_lat ENVELOPE(-85.633,-85.633,-78.617,-78.617)
geographic Pacific
Slaughter
geographic_facet Pacific
Slaughter
genre Humpback Whale
genre_facet Humpback Whale
op_source Journal of Ecocriticism; Vol 6, No 1 (2014): Journal of Ecocriticism (Spring 2014); 1-12
1916-1549
op_relation https://ojs.unbc.ca/index.php/joe/article/view/553/482
https://ojs.unbc.ca/index.php/joe/article/view/553
_version_ 1766026421726085120