In a famous review of Nathaniel Hawthorne’s Mosses from an Old Manse, Herman Melville took the critics to task for missing the darkness as the heart of Hawthorne’s writing – a blackness ‘ten times black’, as Melville put it, that fascinated him. Ironically, Melville has been subject to the same treatment by critics who have in large measure steered clear of Melville’s own darkness. The contributors to Gothic Melville reveal that, if Hawthorne’s darkness is ten times black, then Melville’s is a hundred times so, as his works repeatedly raise questions about what the truth is or if truth exists at all.
This edited collection of scholarly essays makes up for the critical neglect of Melville’s Gothicism by arguing that the Gothic is so extensively interwoven into the fabric of his writing that Melville must at last be recognised as among the genre’s most important practitioners.
Tabela de Conteúdo
Notes on Contributors
Introduction: Dead, Blind Walls: Melville’s Gothicism
Jeffrey Andrew Weinstock and Monika Elbert
ECOGOTHIC
‘“The Encantadas, ” Enchantment, and Spaces Outside History’
Lisa West
‘“All dripping in tangles green”: The Ecogothic Vision of Melville’s John Marr and Other
Sailors with Some Sea Pieces’
Steve Bellomy
‘“If there be no God”: Materialism and the Naturalist Gothic in Clarel’
Elizabeth Adams
BODIES AS MATTER
‘Attack of the “Undoffable Incubus”: The Problem of Art as Body in Herman Melville’s Pierre’
Michael Schwartz
‘Those Who Eat and Those Who Get Eaten: Cannibalism and Capitalism in Melville’s Typee and “The Paradise of Bachelors and the Tartarus of Maids”’
Jeffrey Andrew Weinstock
‘”The Body Suspended”: The Gothic Corporeality in Billy Budd’
Christopher Love
DEMOCRACY AND TYRANNY
‘The Gothic and Radical Democracy in Melville’s Benito Cereno’
Eric Wolfe
‘The Confidence-Man and the Cynical Gothic’
Craig Stensrud
‘Ahab as Gothic Villain’
Jonathan Cook
‘Sunday in the Office with Bartleby: Gothic Naturalism on Wall Street’
Wendy Ryden
GENDER AND GOTHIC RELATIONSHIPS
‘Crossing ‘the Deadly Space Between’: Melville’s Queer Gothic’
Gale Temple
‘Gothic Vacancies: The Missing Women in Melville’s Works’
Monika Elbert
‘“By their very contradictions they are made to correspond”: Symbolic Abjection and Gothic Convention in Herman Melville’s Pierre’
Abigail Boucher and Daniel Jenkin-Smith