Death in Herman Melville's Fiction

About The Book

<p><span style=color: rgba(51 51 51 1)>Literary critics have aptly noted that death is arguably the most frequent topic theme or occurrence in all of American literature. Naturally the works of such authors as Charles Brockden Brown Nathaniel Hawthorne Edgar Allan Poe Kate Chopin Shirley Jackson and Stephen King among countless others go to great lengths to support this observation; however the renowned nineteenth-century American literary giant Herman Melville most famous as the author of Moby Dick has been frequently overlooked. In this book seasoned literary scholar Corey Evan Thompson seeks to remedy this oversight. Death in Herman Melville's Fiction: Melville's Memento Mori is the first full-length study to examine the ubiquity and implications of death in Melville's prose fiction. As Thompson shows death occurs in all of Melville's novels and much of his shorter fiction by various means. Not only is death a frequent occurrence in Melville's fiction but his characters die regardless of age health social status or moral character. Drawing from his father's death Melville's fiction provides his readers with the difficult realization that it is the inevitable destination for everyone who is on this journey called life.</span></p><p><br></p>
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