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Moby-Dick by Herman Melville

About 1,313 pages (393,880 words) in 24 products

"Moby-Dick" Search Results
Contents:
Summaries and Analysis


Products for Teachers
Moby Dick Study Guide
14,400 words, approx. 48 pages
A complete lesson plan by Saddleback Educational Publishing. For Grade 10, Grade 11, Grade 12, Grade 5, Grade 6, Grade 7, Grade 8, Grade 9. This lesson plan is sold separately and is not included with any subscription or study pack.


Quotations
summary from source:
Moby-Dick Quotes
5,896 words, approx. 20 pages
Moby-Dick, or The Whale (1851) is a novel by Herman Melville ( 1 August 1819 - 28 September 1891 ), in which the sole survivor of a lost whaling ship relates the tale of his captain's self-destructive obsession to hunt the white whale, Moby-Dick....


Project Gutenberg eBook
summary from source:
Moby Dick: or, the White Whale eBook
186,869 words, approx. 623 pages
The complete online text of Moby Dick: or, the White Whale by Herman Melville.


Author Biography

Name: Herman Melville
Birth Date: August 1, 1819
Death Date: September 28, 1891
Place of Birth: New York, New York, United States
Place of Death: New York, New York, United States
Nationality: American
Gender: Male
Occupations: author

summary from source:
Biography of Herman Melville
20365 words, approx. 67.9 pages
Herman Melville drew upon his adventurous travels on sea and land for the primary materials of his greatest fiction and poetry. Out of his experiences in the merchant service (1839), the whaling industry (1841- 1843), and the United States Navy (1843-184...
summary from source:
Biography of Herman Melville
16556 words, approx. 55.2 pages
Herman Melville, who died almost forgotten although he had once been a popular author and had left behind ten notable books of prose fiction and four of verse, has gathered increasing fame, especially for his metaphysical whaling novel, Moby-Dick (1851)....
summary from source:
Biography of Herman Melville
14744 words, approx. 49.1 pages
Herman Melville, who died almost forgotten although he had once been a popular author and had left behind ten notable books of prose fiction and four of verse, has gathered increasing fame, especially for his metaphysical whaling novel, Moby-Dick. Like m...
 


Encyclopedia and Summary Information
summary from source:
Moby Dick Summary
3,384 words, approx. 11 pages
Moby Dick by Herman Melville Herman Melville was born in New York City in 1819. Because of his family's financial instability, Melville was forced to go to work at an early age. After a variety of jobs, Melville signed onto a whaling ship at age twenty....
summary from source:
Moby-Dick Information
7,004 words, approx. 23 pages
Moby-Dick[1] was an 1851 novel by Herman Melville. The story tells the adventures of the wandering sailor Ishmael, and his voyage on the whaling ship Pequod, commanded by Captain Ahab. Ishmael soon learns that Ahab does not mean to use the Pequod and...


News and Journals
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Variety
Moby Dick.
09/16/2002: 532 words, approx. 2 pages
(MILWAUKEE REPERTORY THEATER; 700 SEATS; $45 TOP) MILWAUKEE A Milwaukee Repertory Theater presentation of a play in two acts adapted and directed by Eric Simonson from the novel by Herman Melville. Set, Kent Dorsey; costumes, Karin Kopischke; lighting, Nancy Schertler; sound, Barry G....
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Contenido
MOBY DICK.(TT: Moby Dick.)(Extracto)
05/01/2000: 9,682 words, approx. 32 pages
Es uno de los más extraordinarios libros que sobre el mar se han escrito. La historia del capitán Ahab persiguiendo a la ballena que le cortó la pierna representa una pasión funesta pero a la vez es un canto a la vida, al trabajo...
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The New York Observer
Toni Schlesinger: Back In Print
4/11/2006: 385 words, approx. 1 pages
Just as we were really missing Toni Schlesinger's "Shelter" column that was published in the Village Voice since 1997, this 300-plus page anthology of her writings crosses our desk. It should be noted that the original cover, from the spring Princeton Architectural Press catalog, is...
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The New York Observer
Our Best Writer, Revived Again\'d1 Melville Made Whole at Last
9/25/2005: 1,753 words, approx. 6 pages
High above the intersection of Park Avenue and 26th Street, exactly where no one will notice it, a small metal sign silently proclaims the crossroads to be “Herman Melville Square.” So the city pays heed—barely—to the greatest writer ever to live and write here. Of...
 


Criticism and Essays
Literary Criticism
summary from source:
Critical Essay by Pamela A. Boker
16,598 words, approx. 55 pages
In the following excerpt, Boker presents a psychoanalytic reading of Melville's motivation in Moby-Dick, suggesting that Melville felt abandoned by his mother and that his art was nourished by “repression, disavowal, and displacement of grief.”
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Critical Essay by Paul McCarthy
11,351 words, approx. 38 pages
In the following essay, McCarthy studies Herman Melville's depiction of madness in Moby-Dick, arguing that "madness is all but ubiquitous" in this novel. McCarthy contends that madness is found in animals and humans, that the universe itself appears to be mad. Furthermore, McCarthy analyzes the distinct manifestations of insanity in the characters on board the ship and demonstrates the progression of madness in Ahab.
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Critical Essay by Edwin Shneidman
7,965 words, approx. 27 pages
In the following excerpt, Shneidman offers a psychological portrait of Ahab and characterizes his relationship to Moby-Dick as “a classical illustration of the traditional psychoanalytical position of suicide.”
 
Featured Essays
summary from source:


Essay Grade: 86%
Surface: the Key to Understanding Moby-dick
3,139 words, approx. 11 pages
There are many key themes and words in Herman Melville's Moby-Dick. One of the more interesting words found repeatedly is the word surface. There are several ways to interpret this word; it is the veil under which the unknown resides, it is the dividing line between the limits of human knowledge and that which is unknowable, it is the barrier that protects the soul from falling below, and it is a finite form .
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Essay Grade: 92%
The Goodness of Moby Dick
2,616 words, approx. 9 pages
The whale in "Moby Dick" by Herman Melville is seen as a character of goodness. His goodness is expressed by his physical characteristics, how he destroys the ship, and his past.
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Essay Grade: 92%
Moby Dick: How It Came to Be Written
1,650 words, approx. 6 pages
Essay gives light on the diamond in the rough novel that would emerge in the 1920's as a classic.
 


Moby-Dick Study Pack

Get the complete Moby-Dick Study Pack, which includes everything but the lesson plans listed on this page. Approximately 1,313 pages (at 300 words per page) in 24 products. (Download a sample literature guide)

 Please Note: Study Pack does not include teacher lesson plans, puzzle packs, or any HighBeam content.

This Study Pack Contains:
Complete Literature Study Guide
Complete Book Notes
6 Biographies
2 Encyclopedia Articles
1 eBook
4 Literature Criticism Essays
8 Student Essays
Multiple Formats Available:

· online web format
· "print-friendly" format
· downloadable PDF format
· downloadable Word/RTF format
Available Immediately Online

Moby-Dick by Herman Melville

About 1,313 pages (393,880 words) in 24 products


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