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by: Hershel Parker
List Price: $32.95Amazon.com's Price: $21.75 You Save: $11.20 (34%)Prices subject to change.
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Binding: Hardcover
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.3
EAN: 9780810124646
ISBN: 0810124645
Label: Northwestern University Press
Manufacturer: Northwestern University Press
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 248
Publication Date: December 11, 2007
Publisher: Northwestern University Press
Sales Rank: 389932
Studio: Northwestern University Press
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“Who would have looked for philosophy in whales, or for poetry in blubber?” the London John Bull remarked in October of 1851. And yet, the reviewer went on, “few books which professedly deal in metaphysics, or claim the parentage of the muses, contain as much true philosophy and as much genuine poetry as the tale of the Pequod's whaling expedition.” A decade and a half before surprising the world with a book of Civil war poetry, Melville was already confident of what was “poetic” in his prose. As Hershel Parker demonstrates in this book, Melville was steeped in poetry long before he called himself a poet. Here Parker, the dean of Melville studies, gives a compelling, in-depth account of how one of America’s greatest writers grew into the vocation of a poet. His work corrects two of the most pernicious misconceptions about Melville perpetuated by earlier critics: that he repudiated fiction writing after Pierre, and that he hadn’t begun writing poetry (let alone had a book of poems ready for publication) as early as 1860. In clearing up these misapprehensions, Parker gives a thorough and thoroughly involving account of Melville’s development as a poet. Parker demonstrates for the first time just how crucial poetry was to Melville from childhood to old age, especially its re-emergence in his life after 1849. Drawing on Melville's shrewd annotations of great British poets and on his probing, skeptical engagement with commentaries on poetry (particularly by the great Scots reviewers), Parker paints a richly textured portrait of a hitherto unseen side of Herman Melville.
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Rating: - Curious About Melville the Poet? You Might Start Here
Those wanting to know Herman Melville the poet and how much poetry meant to him all of his life would do well to start with Hershel Parker's MELVILLE: THE MAKING OF THE POET. This book will surely prove foundational in the coming years and decades as Melville enthusiasts and scholars come to enjoy easy access to Melville's poetry -- many for the first time -- as it becomes readily available in the forthcoming final two volumes of the Northwestern-Newberry series, THE WRITINGS OF HERMAN MELVILLE. ... Read More
Rating: - The Flowering of New York
Poets don't just happen, especially American poets. Like many of his contemporaries, Melville agonized over what it meant to become a poet--and Parker reveals step-by-step how Melville chose not to become the poet of "Young America," but instead came to see himself, and to fashion himself, as a contemporary of Tennyson and Arnold.
In the mode of his two-volume biography of Melville, Parker analyzes the known (Melville's books of poetry and criticism and the running commentary he kept ... Read More
Rating: - About the poet but not the poetry
Mr. Parker is a major scholar in Melville Studies. This "review" is the humble opinion of a nonscholar Melville lover.
If you have an overpowering need to see numerous small documented facts about Herman Melville's penchant for poetry, your passion will be fulfilled by Mr. Parker. He offers a page by page surfeit of names, titles, and references about what HM studied and knew about poetry. The thorough documentation is fine but the book also echoes with many a "might have," "may have," ... Read More
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