Moby-Dick and Its Afterlife

Moby-Dick and Its Afterlife is a Humanities, Arts and Cultural Studies course taught by Michele Hardesty.

This course satisfies Division I requirements.

Course Description
Moby-Dick, that hard-to-classify novel about Captain Ahab's mad search for the White Whale, took its own long voyage to arrive at a position in the canon of U.S. literature. Poorly received when it was published in 1851, Herman Melville?s novel gained its current reputation only when it was revived in the 20th century. This course will follow Moby-Dick's voyage: we will read the novel itself and explore its contemporary contexts, then we will examine three moments of the novel's revival: first by writers impressed by Moby-Dick's proto-modernist style, and second by those who tied the "monomaniaca" Captain Ahab to the Cold War threat of "totalitarianism," and third to the revisionist view of C.L.R. James, whose book on Melville (composed in 1952 while awaiting deportation under the McCarran-Walter Act) focused on the abbreviated histories of the novel's "mariners, renegades, and castaways." Course will include frequent writing assignments and a class presentation.

Learning Goals

 * Presenting
 * Reading
 * Writing