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Typee

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This Classroom Edition of Melville's classic first novel contains questions for discussion to help students with reading comprehension, critical thinking, and a close reading of the text."Melville has the strange, uncanny magic of sea-creatures, and some of their repulsiveness. He isn't quite a land animal. There is something slithery about him. Something always half-seas-over. In his life they said he was mad - or crazy. He was neither mad nor crazy. But he was over the border. ...There he is then, in Typee, among the dreaded cannibal savages. And they are gentle and generous with him, and he is truly in a sort of Eden. Here at last is Rousseau's Child of Nature and Chateaubriand's Noble Savage called upon and found at home. Yes, Melville loves his savage hosts. He finds them gentle, laughing lambs compared to the ravening wolves of his white brothers, left behind in America and on an American whaleship. The ugliest beast on earth is the white man, says Melville. In short, Herman found in Typee the paradise he was looking for. It is true, the Marquesans were 'immoral', but he rather liked that. Morality was too white a trick to take him in. ...There they are, these South Sea Islanders, beautiful big men with their golden limbs and their laughing, graceful laziness. And they will call you brother, choose you as a brother." - D.H. LawrenceTypee, a semi-autobiographical work, is Melville's first novel. Like all his work, it is infused with a latent homoeroticism and is important not only as literature but as philosophical, psychological, and anthropological commentary. Most of all, however, it is a fine story that captured the public's imagination and remained one of Melville's most popular works throughout his lifetime.Watersgreen House is an independent international book publisher with editorial staff in the UK and USA. One of our aims at Watersgreen House is to showcase same-sex affection in works by important gay and bisexual authors in ways which were not possible at the time the books were originally published. We also publish nonfiction, including textbooks, as well as contemporary fiction that is literary, unusual, and provocative.

Editions (45)

ISBN9798233478314
Publisherwatersgreen
Publication Date01/23/26
Pages376

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  • bucher_michele
    bucher_michele

    48 Followers

    5.0

    Absolut lesenswert: 👍👍👍👍👍

    Die auf Erlebnissen von Moby-Dick-Autor Herman Melville basierende Geschichte folgt dem jungen Seemann Tommo, der von einem Walfangschiff flieht und zusammen mit seinem Freund Toby auf einer Südseeinsel strandet. Sie geraten ins Tal der sogenannten «Typee», eines indigenen Stammes auf den Marquesas-Inseln. Den Typee wird Kannibalismus zugeschrieben, weshalb Tommo sich zu Beginn des Aufeinandertreffens fürchtet. Mit der Zeit stellt der Seemann - trotz des unerklärlichen Verschwindens von Toby - fest, dass die Typee gastfreundlich und friedlich sind. Oder doch nicht? Nebst eindrücklichen Landschafts- und spannenden Gesellschaftsbildern zeichnet Herman Melville bereits 1846 (!) mit dem Blick aus der Ferne ein kritisches Bild auf unsere vermeintlich zivilisierte westliche Gesellschaft: «Da gab es keine der tausend Quellen des Unbehagens, die der Einfallsreichtum des zivilisierten Menschen geschaffen hat, um sein eigenes Glück zu verderben. Es gab keine Zwangsversteigerungen, keine Protestnoten, keine fälligen Rechnungen, […] keine Bettler; keine Schuldnergefängnisse; […] oder, um es mit einem Wort zusammenzufassen - kein Geld! Jene Wurzel allen Übels war im Tal nicht zu finden.» Wer also kein Geld und keine Zeit hat für eine ausgedehnte Reise auf die Marquesas-Inseln in Ostpolynesien: lesen!

    Absolut lesenswert: 👍👍👍👍👍

    Mar 21, 2026

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