Melville's Picture of Emerson and Thoreau in "the Confidence-Man"

1946 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 61
Author(s):  
Egbert S. Oliver
Keyword(s):  
2006 ◽  
Vol 36 (6) ◽  
pp. 12-13
Author(s):  
JOSEPH S. EASTERN
Keyword(s):  

2013 ◽  
Vol 68 (2) ◽  
pp. 145-179
Author(s):  
John Cyril Barton

This essay is the first to examine Melville’s “The Town-Ho’s Story” (Chapter 54 of Moby-Dick [1851]) in relation to W. B. Stevenson’s then-popular-but-now-forgotten British travel narrative, Twenty Years’ Residence in South America (1825). Drawing from suggestive circumstances and parallel action unfolding in each, I make a case for the English sailor’s encounter with the Spanish Inquisition in Lima as important source material for the Limanian setting that frames Melville’s tale. In bringing to light a new source for Moby-Dick, I argue that Melville refracts Stevenson’s actual encounter with the Inquisition in Lima to produce a symbolic, mock confrontation with Old-World authority represented in the inquisitorial Dons and the overall context of the story. Thus, the purpose of the essay is twofold: first, to recover an elusive source for understanding the allusive framework of “The Town-Ho’s Story,” a setting that has perplexed some of Melville’s best critics; and second, to illuminate Melville’s use of Lima and the Inquisition as tropes crucial for understanding a larger symbolic confrontation between the modern citizen (or subject) and despotic authority that plays out not only in Moby-Dick but also in other works such as Mardi (1849), White-Jacket (1850), “Benito Cereno” (1855), Clarel (1876), and The Confidence-Man (1857), wherein the last of which the author wrote on the frontispiece of a personal copy, “Dedicated to Victims of Auto da Fe.”


PMLA ◽  
1967 ◽  
Vol 82 (1) ◽  
pp. 14-27
Author(s):  
Leon F. Seltzer

In recent years, The Confidence-Man: His Masquerade, a difficult work and for long an unjustly neglected one, has begun to command increasingly greater critical attention and esteem. As more than one contemporary writer has noted, the verdict of the late Richard Chase in 1949, that the novel represents Melville's “second best achievement,” has served to prompt many to undertake a second reading (or at least a first) of the book. Before this time, the novel had traditionally been the one Melville readers have shied away from—as overly discursive, too rambling altogether, on the one hand, or as an unfortunate outgrowth of the author's morbidity on the other. Elizabeth Foster, in the admirably comprehensive introduction to her valuable edition of The Confidence-Man (1954), systematically traces the history of the book's reputation and observes that even with the Melville renaissance of the twenties, the work stands as the last piece of the author's fiction to be redeemed. Only lately, she comments, has it ceased to be regarded as “the ugly duckling” of Melville's creations. But recognition does not imply agreement, and it should not be thought that in the past fifteen years critics have reached any sort of unanimity on the novel's content. Since Mr. Chase's study, which approached the puzzling work as a satire on the American spirit—or, more specifically, as an attack on the liberalism of the day—and which speculated upon the novel's controlling folk and mythic figures, other critics, by now ready to assume that the book repaid careful analysis, have read the work in a variety of ways. It has been treated, among other things, as a religious allegory, as a philosophic satire on optimism, and as a Shandian comedy. One critic has conveniently summarized the prevailing situation by remarking that “the literary, philosophical, and cultural materials in this book are fused in so enigmatic a fashion that its interpreters have differed as to what the book is really about.”


PMLA ◽  
1952 ◽  
Vol 67 (7) ◽  
pp. 942
Author(s):  
Roy Harvey Pearce
Keyword(s):  

2007 ◽  
Vol 85 (31) ◽  
pp. 34-36
Author(s):  
MICHAEL MCCOY
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Roger Ebbatson

Alfred Tennyson’s ‘Sea Dreams’ (1860) offers a lyrical and dramatic re-inflection of an ill-fated investment made by the poet in the early 1840s. In this chapter, Tennyson’s poem, which frames a marital colloquy about financial misdealings with a resonant evocation of coastal scenery, is contextualised by reference to the nineteenth-century literary figure of the ‘confidence man’. The sociological ‘philosophy of money’ propounded by Georg Simmel and the Benjaminian concept of ‘caesura’ inflect this reading, while attention is also paid to the poem’s evocation of place as resonating with Tennyson’s response to the local coastal features of the Isle of Wight. This neglected text, the author suggests, is marked by what Angela Leighton more generally characterises as those Tennysonian ‘drowning places, of cavern and stream, of rumours, moans and melodies’ – places which offer a potent counterpoint to the poem’s overall theme of fiscal impropriety and compassionate forgiveness.


2018 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-64
Author(s):  
Beate West-Leuer

Das kollektive Identitätsgefühl in den USA basiert auf einem Heldenmythos, der seit dem 19. Jahrhundert die amerikanische Literatur durchzieht: der American Adam. Wie der biblische Adam vor dem Sündenfall nimmt er in paradiesischer Unschuld sein Schicksal in die Hand – in seinem Eden, der neuen Welt, die den Amerikanern von Gott gegeben wurde. Er ist ein naiver »Wilder«, der als Außenseiter und Einzelkämpfer ohne Rücksicht auf Regeln und Gesetze ein Leben in Ungebundenheit und Freiheit führt. Als bis heute wirkende psychische Repräsentanz ist der American Adam auch Leitbild der politischen Führungskultur in den USA. Die politischen Akteure haben den (unausgesprochenen) Auftrag, die Vorstellung eines paradiesischen Unschuldszustands aufrecht zu erhalten und die Nation vor einer Konfrontation mit den Sünden der Vergangenheit – wie der Vertreibung der Ureinwohner, Sklaverei und Vietnamkrieg – zu bewahren. Ein Verzicht auf diese Unschuldsfantasie wäre für die meisten Amerikaner unannehmbar, wie zeigt beispielhaft an der medialen Inszenierung der militärischen Biographie des Vietnamveteranen James Gordon »Bo« Gritz zeigen läßt. Insofern stellte die Wahl Donald J. Trumps zum US-Präsidenten auch eine Antwort des reaktionären Amerika auf seinen Vorgänger Barack Obama dar: Dieser brach ein Tabu, als er am 18. März 2008 von der »nie ausgeräumten Rassenfrage« sprach, die ihren Ursprung in der Sklaverei habe, »der Erbsünde der Nation«. Trump verkörpert die bitter ironische, clowneske Variante des Adam-Mythos, die der amerikanische Schriftsteller Herman Melville 1857 in seiner Satire »The Confidence-Man. His Masquerade« so brillant charakterisierte. Wie Melvilles schillernder Confidence Man, der die Schwächen seiner Mitmenschen kennt und gewissenlos ausnutzt, verführt heute Trump seine Wähler dazu, unerwünschte Aspekte der eigenen Geschichte zu verdrängen und ihm im Gegenzug blindes Vertrauen zu schenken.


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