
When People Think About Herman Melville, They Often Think About Experiences Of Madness, Horror, And The Sublime. But Throughout His Life, Melville Was Deeply And Persistently Interested In Beauty. In This Fascinating Book, Cody Marrs Retraces Melville's Engagements With Beauty And Provides A Revisionary Account Of Melville's Philosophy, Aesthetics, And Literary Career. In Writings Such As Moby-dick, Timoleon, And Weeds And Wildings, Melville Reflects On The Nature, Origins, And Effects Of Beauty, And The Ways In Which Beauty Is Inexorably Bound Up With Considerations Of Religion, Science, Ecology, Art, Literature, And Metaphysics. Melville's Writing Indicates That Beauty Is, Ultimately, An Experience Of Non-sovereignty, A Felt Recognition Of The Self's Interdependence. In A Series Of Fresh Readings Of Melville's Works, Ranging From The Most To The Least Canonical, Marrs Demonstrates How And Why Melville Developed This Understanding Of Beauty, And The Ways It Resonates With Recent Scholarship On Aesthetics, Posthumanism, Ecocriticism, Materialism, And The Means And Methods Of American Literary Studies. By Recentring Melville's Treatment Of Beauty And Exploring Its Philosophical And Scholarly Implications, Marrs Provides A New, Evocative Perspective On Melville As Well As The Broader Field Of American Literary Studies.
This book investigates the central role of beauty in Herman Melville's philosophy and literary career, challenging traditional interpretations that prioritize madness and horror. Cody Marrs, a scholar of American literature, utilizes a close reading of both canonical and lesser-known works to argue that Melville viewed beauty as an experience of non-sovereignty and human interdependence. By situating these aesthetic reflections within contemporary frameworks like posthumanism and ecocriticism, the author provides a revisionary account of Melville's intellectual development.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and students of American literature frequently cite this work as a significant contribution to the re-evaluation of Melville's aesthetic philosophy. The text is noted for its ability to bridge traditional literary analysis with contemporary theoretical concerns like ecocriticism and posthumanism.
Page Count:
167
Publication Date:
2022-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192699717
ISBN-13:
9780192699718
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