List Price

$23.95

Textbook Details

  • EDITION:
    1st Edition
  • ISBN:
    0618300074
  • ISBN-13:
    9780618300075
  • PUB. DATE:
    January 2003
  • PUBLISHER:
    Cengage Learning
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Typee / Edition 1 by Herman Melville, Geoffrey Sanborn (Editor)

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Overview -

Typee

Product Details

  • Pub. Date: January 2003
  • Publisher: Cengage Learning

Synopsis

From its publication in 1846, Typee, Herman Melville's first book, was recognized as a classic of travel and adventure literature. Based on the author's own experiences, as well as oral and written sources, in the South Seas, Melville's story of two runaway sailors held captive by the Typees is a vivid portrait of Polynesian life. Many readers delighted in its racy scenes, but religious fundamentalists saw to it that criticism of missionaries was expurgated from the American text. Five years later, the religious press took revenge on Moby-Dick when Melville again displayed his persistent skepticism and irreverence and celebrated cultural relativity as he had done in Typee. As Melville's fame declined after the 1850s, readers forgot the old religious denunciations and remembered Typee as the best of his books. Throughout his lifetime, Melville's most famous and popular character was Fayaway. This text of Typee is an Approved Text of the Center for Editions of American Authors (Modern Language Association of America).

Library Journal

Melville's 1846 South Seas travelog catapulted him from sailor to wordsmith. Typee is considered one of his better books. Its criticism of missionaries, however, caused a furor, and some publishers deleted those sections. This Newberry Edition offers the authoritative text. At this price, grab one. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

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Biography

Herman Melville's legend is as mammoth and elusive as the whale that established it. The author's Moby-Dick; Or, The Whale stands as one of literature's greatest epics, a story of mythological proportions that was grounded in real life and a new way of storytelling. Melville's work, underappreciated in its time, remains as much subject to debate and interpretation as it was when he first caught the public eye with his South Seas adventure, Typee, in 1846.

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