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Herman Melville's use of animals: the chain of natural science, anthropomorphic symbolism, and literary naturalism in Moby-Dick and "The Encantadas"

Date

2013

Authors

Lamberson, John Gregory, author
Furrh, Douglass Madison, advisor
Taylor, Cynthia, committee member
Vanden Heuvel, Brian, committee member

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Abstract

In Moby-Dick and "The Encantadas," Herman Melville's narrators often assume the role of a naturalist, in the mode of natural history. Beginning with careful and realistic explication, Melville understands different animals in terms of their physical characteristics and behavior, in a manner influenced by Charles Darwin. After establishing an accurate picture, he proceeds to take the animals and transform them to concepts related to literary naturalism in a process of anthropomorphic symbolism. Melville's ambiguous stance on animal awareness and pain further clarifies his project of using animals to be representative of mostly human concepts. Moby-Dick and "The Encantadas" illustrate this chain with Melville's naturalistic treatment of whales and tortoises, respectively. With the precision of a scientist and the spirit of an artist, Melville uses animals as symbols of concepts that anticipate literary naturalism, most notably determinism. Melville's utilization of natural science as a means to symbolism made him a precursor to literary naturalism, which itself grew out of the influence of Darwinian ideas.

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Subject

literary naturalism
Darwin
encantadas
Melville
Moby-Dick
natural science

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