Moby-Dick et la question du livre

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1991

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Copyright PERSEE 2003-2023. Works reproduced on the PERSEE website are protected by the general rules of the Code of Intellectual Property. For strictly private, scientific or teaching purposes excluding all commercial use, reproduction and communication to the public of this document is permitted on condition that its origin and copyright are clearly mentionned.



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André Bleikasten, « Moby-Dick et la question du livre », Revue Française d'Études Américaines, ID : 10.3406/rfea.1991.1441


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Moby-Dick and the Question of the Book In Moby-Dick, Melville pursued the old Western dream, revived in the 19th century by German Romanticism, of the liber mundi, the unique and absolute Book that would encompass the totality of knowledge. The world's text, however, can no longer be authenticated by God's signature, as it was in the Middle Ages. Its totality has broken into fragments ; the new Bible is nothing more than « the draught of a draught. » Moby-Dick invites both a sym-bolic reading, according to the totalizing spirit of analogy, and a more modern dia-bolic reading, acknowledging the disorder and uncompletedness of a fragmented world.

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