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Graduation

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"Thar she blows...."

By JAMES D. WATTS JR. Scene Writer on Oct 18, 2012, at 4:33 PM  Updated on 10/18 at 4:33 PM



ARTS

'Lion King' to donate to OK disaster relief

Celebrity Attractions announced that Disney Theatricals will donate a portion of this week's ticket sales to the Tulsa run ...

Letts, 'Pippin' win at Drama Desk Awards

Tulsa native Tracy Letts won the Outstanding Actor in a Play at the 58th annual Drama Desk Awards, presented Sunday night ...

REVIEW: "Boeing-Boeing" by Theatre Tulsa

A great many things must work together properly for an airplane is ever going to leave the ground.

The same thing is ...

CONTACT THE BLOGGER

James D. Watts Jr.

918-581-8478
Email

Those of you who check out the Google logo will have noticed that today's is done in the shape of a whale, to mark the 161st anniversary of the publication of "Moby-Dick, or The Whale," by Herman Melville.

"Moby-Dick" is today considered one of the great American novels, with elements of this challenging tale about a fateful voyage of a New England whaling ship becoming deeply embedded into the American culture (Starbucks, anyone?).

It's not an easy read -- I sometimes wonder if I would have ever made it through the book had it not been the only thing I had to read on a long automobile trip from Tulsa to northern Illinois, which I spent folded up in the back seat of the family's Honda. But make to the end I did, and some passages (the sermon before the voyage, for example) still have a way of haunting the mind.

But not everyone's reaction to "Moby-Dick" has been positive, as this review form 1852 makes clear:

“Mr. Melville is evidently trying to ascertain how far the public will consent to be imposed upon. He is gauging, at once, our gullibility and our patience. Having written one or two passable extravaganzas, he has considered himself privileged to produce as many more as he pleases, increasingly exaggerated and increasingly dull…. In bombast, in caricature, in rhetorical artifice — generally as clumsy as it is ineffectual — and in low attempts at humor, each one of his volumes has been an advance among its predecessors…. Mr. Melville never writes naturally. His sentiment is forced, his wit is forced, and his enthusiasm is forced. And in his attempts to display to the utmost extent his powers of “fine writing,” he has succeeded, we think, beyond his most sanguine expectations… We have no intention of quoting any passages just now from Moby-Dick. The London journals, we understand, “have bestowed upon the work many flattering notices,” and we should be loth to combat such high authority. But if there are any of our readers who wish to find examples of bad rhetoric, involved syntax, stilted sentiment and incoherent English, we will take the liberty of recommending to them this precious volume of Mr. Melville’s.” — New York United States Magazine and Democratic Review, 1852

It was reviews such as this that sent Melville into a personal tailspin. And it would be some 30 years after his death before critics and the public would begin to realize what an achievement "Moby-Dick" is, and that it was truly the masterwork Melville thought it to be.
ARTS

'Lion King' to donate to OK disaster relief

Celebrity Attractions announced that Disney Theatricals will donate a portion of this week's ticket sales to the Tulsa run ...

Letts, 'Pippin' win at Drama Desk Awards

Tulsa native Tracy Letts won the Outstanding Actor in a Play at the 58th annual Drama Desk Awards, presented Sunday night ...

REVIEW: "Boeing-Boeing" by Theatre Tulsa

A great many things must work together properly for an airplane is ever going to leave the ground.

The same thing is ...

CONTACT THE BLOGGER

James D. Watts Jr.

918-581-8478
Email

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Graduation

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