A More Complete Ahab: Into the Darkness of Moby-Dick

Over 100 years after its publication, Herman Melville’s Moby-Dick occupies the rare position of true cultural icon, one of those important novels that people know about without ever having read it. References to the white whale and the captain who chases him surface in an almost endless stream of hi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Modarres, Andrea, Bayer, Ellen
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: UW Tacoma Digital Commons 2019
Subjects:
Moe
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.tacoma.uw.edu/ias_pub/1041
http://reconstruction.digitalodu.com/issues/contents_172/172_bayer_modarres/
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spelling ftuniwashingtaco:oai:digitalcommons.tacoma.uw.edu:ias_pub-2043 2023-09-05T13:23:57+02:00 A More Complete Ahab: Into the Darkness of Moby-Dick Modarres, Andrea Bayer, Ellen 2019-01-01T08:00:00Z https://digitalcommons.tacoma.uw.edu/ias_pub/1041 http://reconstruction.digitalodu.com/issues/contents_172/172_bayer_modarres/ unknown UW Tacoma Digital Commons https://digitalcommons.tacoma.uw.edu/ias_pub/1041 http://reconstruction.digitalodu.com/issues/contents_172/172_bayer_modarres/ SIAS Faculty Publications text 2019 ftuniwashingtaco 2023-08-21T14:17:12Z Over 100 years after its publication, Herman Melville’s Moby-Dick occupies the rare position of true cultural icon, one of those important novels that people know about without ever having read it. References to the white whale and the captain who chases him surface in an almost endless stream of high art and pop culture artifacts and references. A list of just a few of the many Moby-Dick-inspired texts includes operatic, film, comic, and graphic novel adaptations; New Yorker and television cartoons (Tom and Jerry’s “Dicky Moe” is one of the more obvious); references in film (Zelig, Heathers, Fried Green Tomatoes, The Life Aquatic, Jaws) and television shows (The Simpsons, The X Files, Parks and Recreation); and musical tributes (Mastodon, Led Zeppelin, Moby Grape, Ahab). The names from the novel and images of the whale appear as marketing aids (seafood and kabob restaurants, a full-page Microsoft advertisement), while the text turns up in politics (prosecutor Kenneth Starr pursuing Bill Clinton), in football (Peyton Manning as Ahab seeking his White Whale—the New England Patriots), and on late-night comedy shows (Stephen Colbert’s recent rollercoaster interview with scholar Andrew Delbanco about what makes Moby-Dick the Great American Novel). Susan Weiner argues that “the white whale has become one of the few unifying symbols that Americans share. In a dazzling reversal of fortune, a complex artifact of high culture has transcended that category to become a popular icon. A classic text has crossed a border to forge a new frontier” (85). Despite this apparent cultural familiarity with the novel, however, most public and artistic references to Moby-Dick reduce it down to Ahab’s hunt for the white whale, reproducing instead a figure of the obsessed Captain Ahab stomping angrily on his peg leg and raving about the beast upon whom he desires revenge. Building on Richard Brodhead’s observation that American culture has “absorbed” Melville’s novel to the point that even those who have not read it are familiar with ... Text White whale University of Washington: UW Tacoma Digital Commons Ahab ENVELOPE(-62.178,-62.178,-65.434,-65.434) Captain Ahab ENVELOPE(-57.617,-57.617,-62.000,-62.000) Moe ENVELOPE(-45.683,-45.683,-60.733,-60.733)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Washington: UW Tacoma Digital Commons
op_collection_id ftuniwashingtaco
language unknown
description Over 100 years after its publication, Herman Melville’s Moby-Dick occupies the rare position of true cultural icon, one of those important novels that people know about without ever having read it. References to the white whale and the captain who chases him surface in an almost endless stream of high art and pop culture artifacts and references. A list of just a few of the many Moby-Dick-inspired texts includes operatic, film, comic, and graphic novel adaptations; New Yorker and television cartoons (Tom and Jerry’s “Dicky Moe” is one of the more obvious); references in film (Zelig, Heathers, Fried Green Tomatoes, The Life Aquatic, Jaws) and television shows (The Simpsons, The X Files, Parks and Recreation); and musical tributes (Mastodon, Led Zeppelin, Moby Grape, Ahab). The names from the novel and images of the whale appear as marketing aids (seafood and kabob restaurants, a full-page Microsoft advertisement), while the text turns up in politics (prosecutor Kenneth Starr pursuing Bill Clinton), in football (Peyton Manning as Ahab seeking his White Whale—the New England Patriots), and on late-night comedy shows (Stephen Colbert’s recent rollercoaster interview with scholar Andrew Delbanco about what makes Moby-Dick the Great American Novel). Susan Weiner argues that “the white whale has become one of the few unifying symbols that Americans share. In a dazzling reversal of fortune, a complex artifact of high culture has transcended that category to become a popular icon. A classic text has crossed a border to forge a new frontier” (85). Despite this apparent cultural familiarity with the novel, however, most public and artistic references to Moby-Dick reduce it down to Ahab’s hunt for the white whale, reproducing instead a figure of the obsessed Captain Ahab stomping angrily on his peg leg and raving about the beast upon whom he desires revenge. Building on Richard Brodhead’s observation that American culture has “absorbed” Melville’s novel to the point that even those who have not read it are familiar with ...
format Text
author Modarres, Andrea
Bayer, Ellen
spellingShingle Modarres, Andrea
Bayer, Ellen
A More Complete Ahab: Into the Darkness of Moby-Dick
author_facet Modarres, Andrea
Bayer, Ellen
author_sort Modarres, Andrea
title A More Complete Ahab: Into the Darkness of Moby-Dick
title_short A More Complete Ahab: Into the Darkness of Moby-Dick
title_full A More Complete Ahab: Into the Darkness of Moby-Dick
title_fullStr A More Complete Ahab: Into the Darkness of Moby-Dick
title_full_unstemmed A More Complete Ahab: Into the Darkness of Moby-Dick
title_sort more complete ahab: into the darkness of moby-dick
publisher UW Tacoma Digital Commons
publishDate 2019
url https://digitalcommons.tacoma.uw.edu/ias_pub/1041
http://reconstruction.digitalodu.com/issues/contents_172/172_bayer_modarres/
long_lat ENVELOPE(-62.178,-62.178,-65.434,-65.434)
ENVELOPE(-57.617,-57.617,-62.000,-62.000)
ENVELOPE(-45.683,-45.683,-60.733,-60.733)
geographic Ahab
Captain Ahab
Moe
geographic_facet Ahab
Captain Ahab
Moe
genre White whale
genre_facet White whale
op_source SIAS Faculty Publications
op_relation https://digitalcommons.tacoma.uw.edu/ias_pub/1041
http://reconstruction.digitalodu.com/issues/contents_172/172_bayer_modarres/
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