Criticism > Nineteenth-Century Literary Criticism > Pierre, or, The Ambiguities, Herman Melville - Nicola Nixon (essay date 1997)


Pierre, or, The Ambiguities, Herman Melville - Nicola Nixon (essay date 1997)

Nicola Nixon (essay date 1997)

SOURCE: “Compromising Politics and Herman Melville's Pierre,” in American Literature, Vol. 69, No. 4, December, 1997, pp. 719-41.

[In the following essay, Nixon examines Pierre in its historical context, maintaining that Melville preferred ambiguity to political allusion.]

In a now rather famous chapter at the midpoint of Pierre; or, the Ambiguities, “Young America in Literature,” Herman Melville announces a thoroughly uncompromising narrative agenda:

Among the various conflicting modes of writing history, there would seem to be two grand practical distinctions, under which all the rest must subordinately range. By the one mode, all contemporaneous circumstances, facts, and events must be set down contemporaneously; by the other, they are only to be set down as the general stream of the narrative shall dictate; for matters which are kindred in time, may be very...

[The entire page is 9257 words long]

Join eNotes

The above is a free excerpt. Get total access to this content with the: