Winter, ThomasCarroll, Bret E.2019-05-172019-05-1720049780761925408http://hdl.handle.net/11693/51356Herman Melville's Moby Dick; or, The Whale (1851) describes Captain Ahab of the whaling ship Pequod and his quest to kill the white whale that took his leg on an earlier whale hunt. This self-destructive mission ends with the death of Ahab and his crew, with the single exception of Ishmael, the book's narrator. The novel dramatizes the concerns of American middle-class men in the emerging capitalist marketplace of the mid–nineteenth century. The novel negotiates meanings of bourgeois manhood and same-sex relations, as well as man's precarious relationship to nature.EnglishMen's StudiesMoby DickBook Chapter10.4135/9781412956369.n16310.4135/97814129563699781412956369