Eurocentric Discourse and Subversive Narrativity in Herman Melville"s “Benito Cereno”

2021 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 33-64
Author(s):  
Joohee Seo
Leviathan ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 22 (3) ◽  
pp. 112-114
Author(s):  
Dawn Coleman

PMLA ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 114 (3) ◽  
pp. 359-372 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicola Nixon

At the conclusion of “Benito Cereno” Herman Melville “elucidate[s]” a curious “item or two,” including Cereno's ultragentlemanly apparel. This return to the issue of Cereno's clothes reiterates the Yankee Delano's preoccupation with Cereno as a dandy, restaging Delano's tendency to focus unswervingly on the apparently complex markers of class superiority signaled by such genteel refinement—and, within the logic of that preoccupation, to ignore the seemingly transparent truth presented by the naked black body. Melville mobilizes the figure of the dandy. I suggest, to interrogate the Yankee's veneration of social form, a veneration at odds with the North's smug self-figuration in 1855 as homogeneously democratic and classless, as morally superior to a South reviled for its social inequalities and slaveholding. By orchestrating the encounter between Yankee and dandy, Melville maps a peculiarly northern political field, pointing to an obfuscatory rhetoric of “apparent symbol[s]” that articulates the slave only polemically and ignores him otherwise.


2009 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joan De Santis

<p>Analyzes two of the short stories in Herman Melville's The Piazza Tales, "Bartleby the Scrivener: a Story of Wall Street" and "Benito Cereno" and argues that these stories are highly critical of the bourgeois class structure of American society that inform Wall Street, as well as the slave trade, in mid-Nineteenth-Century America. Posits that in these works Melville addresses the questions of hierarchical power in the workplace and the effects of racism and slavery in the colonization of America.</p>


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