Criticism > Short Story Criticism > Billy Budd, Herman Melville - Joseph M. Garrison, Jr. (essay date 1986)

Billy Budd, Herman Melville - Joseph M. Garrison, Jr. (essay date 1986)

Joseph M. Garrison, Jr. (essay date 1986)

SOURCE: “Billy Budd: A Reconsideration,” in Ball State University Forum, Vol. 27, No. 1, Winter, 1986, pp. 30–41.

[In the following essay, Garrison debates the reliability of the narrator in Billy Budd, maintaining that the story is about “the art of perception.”]

“Peace, peace, thou ass of a commentator,” Melville wrote (133). His commentators, however, have not been quiet. Billy Budd continues to exert its magnetic power; and criticism, of course, continues to appear. Recently, Professor Robert Merrill has said that new interpretations “must justify themselves by helping to resolve the critical problem which has so divided the critics: how should we interpret the actions of Billy Budd and Captain Vere?” (283). His resolution rejects the question about the reliability of the narrative voice and finds the narrator “clearly sympathetic” with Vere. He...

[The entire page is 6079 words long]

Join eNotes

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