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Bartleby
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Herman Melville's short story "Bartleby, the Scrivener" is a foundational text in American literature courses and is widely studied in undergraduate English and humanities classes. Published in 1853, the story follows a passive, enigmatic law copyist whose repeated refusal to comply — expressed through the phrase "I would prefer not to" — raises profound questions about labor, free will, alienation, and the limits of human connection. Its brevity makes it an accessible entry point for literary analysis, while its ambiguity rewards close reading and sustains serious critical debate.

Student papers on this topic most commonly take an analytical approach focused on character, theme, and narrative structure. Many examine the relationship between Bartleby and the unnamed narrator, exploring how power, sympathy, and helplessness interact in a Wall Street office setting. Others connect the story to Melville's biography and artistic development, reading Bartleby as a figure for the frustrated writer or the alienated worker. The recurring focus on characters like Turkey, the narrator's other scriveners, and the Wall Street environment suggests that papers frequently situate the story within its social and economic context.

A strong essay on "Bartleby, the Scrivener" builds a focused thesis around a specific interpretive claim — for example, what the narrator's failure to act reveals about complicity or moral responsibility — rather than simply summarizing plot. Textual evidence drawn from the story's dialogue, imagery, and setting typically carries the most weight. A common pitfall is treating Bartleby as purely symbolic without grounding that interpretation in the story's specific language and events.

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Literature and argumentative discourse
¶ … Sonny's Blues," by James Baldwin, "The Sorrow Songs," by W.E.B. Du Bois, and "Am I Blue," by Alice Walker. Specifically, it will discuss the use of the blues in all three works, and how music influences each story.
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Willa Cather Willa Sibert Cather Was Born
Willa Sibert Cather was born in Winchester, Virginia, in the year 1873. She lived in Virginia until she turned nine years old at which point she moved to the Nebraska prairie, to the borough of Catherton, which bore her…
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Chaucer's Pardoner: Hypocrisy and Irony in Canterbury Tales
Chaucer's Canterbury Tales On The Pardoner Character Palucas
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Homer's The Odyssey: themes and analysis
While today we primarily read the works of Homer for the eloquence and literary skill of this great Greek poet, we may also examine his texts for the clues that they provide to a deeper understanding of Greek society.
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Passion versus reasoning in human decision-making
Reason is defined as the (human) capacity for logical, rational or analytic thought, inference of discrimination. It makes the information available in the intellect for the will to act on.
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Walt Whitman and Herman Melville \"Crossing Brooklyn
Walt Whitman's poem "Crossing Brooklyn Ferry" and Herman Melville's short story "Bartleby the Scrivener" are set in New York City during the early years of the industrial revolution, but are markedly different in tone, theme and the perceptions and feelings of the main characters. Melville's characters exist without joy, love or hope, and merely drag themselves through a life of drudgery and alienation, without making any human connections to each other or to nature. Mankind in Bartleby's world is simply trapped in a pointless existence that ends with death, and unlike Whitman's narrator they are unable to rise above this grim, mundane world or imagine a common link with others or with the past and the future. Rather than simply being tools and machines carrying out routine, white-collar tasks, Whitman's narrator finds the resources within himself to transform an ordinary scene of returning home from work into a sublime spiritual experience, in which he perceives a bond with all of mankind, past, present and future, as well as with nature and the entire universe in a way that Bartleby and his coworkers never could have imagined.
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Byron's "Darkness" vs. "She Walks in Beauty": A Contrast
¶ … pleasant and romantic world depicted in "She Walks in Beauty," Byron illustrates a dark, cold, and hopeless world in "Darkness." "Darkness" is an elaborately detailed poem that remains a testament to Byron's…
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Women and Eccentricity in Shaw Eliza Doolittle
Eliza Doolittle and the Dog-woman project almost opposite images of British womanhood. Eliza has been turned out by her father into the slums of London and she longs to live in comfort and security.
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Western Studies Emphasizes on the Following Two
¶ … Western Studies emphasizes on the following two topics namely, Inspirational artists during the Renaissance and England before becoming a Constitutional Monarchy. The first topic takes into account the Renaissance…
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Literature: overview and analysis
Although Melville's story of the scrivener would ostensibly seem to be about the mysterious stranger named Bartleby, it can more accurately be described as a story about the effect that Bartleby had on those around him,…