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I explain Moby-Dick in under an hour with memes throughout so you don't get bored. :) It's a deep dive into Herman Melville’s masterpiece, what a lot of people consider to be "the Great American Novel" (well that and like twelve other books). I explore existential sailors, homoerotic subtext, gnostic philosophy, colonial guilt, and whales that may or may not be God himself? We're gonna hit “Call me Ishmael," we're gonna hit Ahab’s fiery soliloquies and a whole bunch of other stuff, peeling back them layers of Melville’s prose to uncover the madness, meaning, and metaphysics beneath. If you've ever felt confused, bored, or just straight-up afraid of this book, you’re in the right place. Sources: Robert T. Talley, “Anti-Ishmael: Novel Beginnings in Moby-Dick,” Literature Interpretive Theory 18 (2007): 1-19. Natsuki Ikezawa, “Literature of the Quest: Melville and Pynchon,” Leviathan 18, (March, 2016): 94-105. Mary Blish, “The Whiteness of the Whale Revisited,” CLA Journal 41 (Sep., 1997): 55-69. Toni Morrison, “Unspeakable Things Unspoken: The Afro-American Presence in American Literature,” The Tanner Lectures on Human Values, delivered at the University of Michigan, 1988. Edward Stone, “The Whiteness of ‘The Whale,’” CLA Journal 18 (March, 1975), 348-363. 00:00 intro 00:55 Part One: Ishmael 21:16 Part Two: Ahab 35:50 Part Three: The Whale 49:50: Parte Four: The End #hermanmelville #mobydick #bookreview #booktube #literaryanalysis #classiclit