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Why should you read “Moby Dick”? - Sascha Morrell

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    A mountain separating two lakes.
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    A room papered
    floor to ceiling with bridal satins.
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    The lid of an immense snuffbox.
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    These seemingly unrelated images
    take us on a tour of a sperm whale’s head
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    in Herman Melville’s "Moby Dick."
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    On the surface,
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    the book is the story of Captain Ahab’s
    hunt for revenge against Moby Dick,
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    the white whale who bit off his leg.
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    But though the book features pirates,
    typhoons, high-speed chases,
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    and giant squid,
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    you shouldn’t expect a conventional
    seafaring adventure.
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    Instead, it’s a multilayered exploration
    of not only the intimate details
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    of life aboard a whaling ship,
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    but also subjects from across
    human and natural history,
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    by turns playful and tragic,
    humorous, and urgent.
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    The narrator guiding us through
    these explorations
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    is a common sailor called Ishmael.
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    Ishmael starts out telling his own story
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    as he prepares to escape the “damp
    and drizzly November in [his] soul”
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    by going to sea.
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    But after he befriends
    the Pacific Islander Queequeg
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    and joins Ahab’s crew aboard the Pequod,
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    Ishmael becomes more
    of an omniscient guide for the reader
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    than a traditional character.
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    While Ahab obsesses over revenge
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    and first mate Starbuck
    tries to reason with him,
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    Ishmael takes us
    on his own quest for meaning
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    throughout “the whole universe,
    not excluding its suburbs.”
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    In his telling, life’s biggest questions
    loom large, even in the smallest details.
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    Like his narrator, Melville
    was a restless and curious spirit,
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    who gained an unorthodox education
    working as a sailor
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    on a series of grueling voyages
    around the world in his youth.
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    He published "Moby Dick" in 1851,
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    when the United States’
    whaling industry was at its height.
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    Nantucket, where the Pequod sets sail,
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    was the epicenter of this lucrative
    and bloody global industry
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    which decimated the world’s
    whale populations.
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    Unusually for his time,
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    Melville doesn’t shy away
    from the ugly side of this industry,
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    even taking the whale’s perspective
    at one point,
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    when he speculates on how terrifying
    the huge shadows of the ships must be
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    to the creature swimming below.
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    The author’s first-hand familiarity
    with whaling is evident
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    over and over again
    in Ishmael’s vivid descriptions.
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    In one chapter,
    the skin of a whale’s penis
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    becomes protective clothing
    for a crewman.
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    Chapters with titles as unpromising
    as “Cistern and Buckets”
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    become some of the novel’s
    most rewarding
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    as Ishmael compares bailing out
    a sperm-whale’s head to midwifery,
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    which leads to reflections on Plato.
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    Tangling whale-lines provoke
    witty reflections
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    on the “ever-present perils”
    entangling all mortals.
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    He draws on diverse branches of knowledge,
    like zoology, gastronomy, law, economics,
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    mythology, and teachings from a range
    of religious and cultural traditions.
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    The book experiments with writing style
    as much as subject matter.
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    In one monologue, Ahab challenges
    Moby Dick in Shakespearean style:
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    “Towards thee I roll, thou all-destroying
    but unconquering whale;
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    to the last I grapple with thee;
    from hell’s heart I stab at thee;
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    for hate’s sake I spit
    my last breath at thee.”
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    One chapter is written as a playscript,
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    where members of the Pequod’s multi-ethnic
    crew chime in individually and in chorus.
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    African and Spanish sailors trade insults
    while a Tahitian seaman longs for home,
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    Chinese and Portuguese crewmembers
    call for a dance,
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    and one young boy prophesies disaster.
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    In another chapter,
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    Ishmael sings the process
    of decanting whale oil in epic style,
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    as the ship pitches and rolls
    in the midnight sea
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    and the casks rumble like landslides.
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    A book so wide-ranging
    has something for everyone.
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    Readers have found
    religious and political allegory,
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    existential enquiry,
    social satire, economic analysis,
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    and representations
    of American imperialism,
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    industrial relations and racial conflict.
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    As Ishmael chases meaning
    and Ahab chases the white whale,
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    the book explores the opposing forces
    of optimism and uncertainty,
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    curiosity and fear that characterize
    human existence
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    no matter what it is we’re chasing.
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    Through "Moby Dick’s" many pages,
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    Melville invites his readers
    to leap into the unknown,
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    to join him on the hunt
    for the “ungraspable phantom of life.”
Title:
Why should you read “Moby Dick”? - Sascha Morrell
Speaker:
Sascha Morrell
Description:

View full lesson: https://ed.ted.com/lessons/why-should-you-read-moby-dick-sascha-morrell

A mountain separating two lakes. A room papered floor to ceiling with bridal satins. The lid of an immense snuffbox. These seemingly unrelated images take us on a tour of a sperm whale’s head in Herman Melville’s "Moby Dick." Though the book features pirates, typhoons, high-speed chases, and giant squid, it’s anything but a conventional seafaring adventure. Sascha Morrell digs into the classic novel.

Lesson by Sascha Morrell, directed by Martina Meštrović.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
05:36
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Tara Ahmadinejad edited English subtitles for Why should you read "Moby Dick"?
Tara Ahmadinejad edited English subtitles for Why should you read "Moby Dick"?

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