Bartleby the Scrivener
Since the publication of Herman Melville's "Bartleby the Scrivener" literary critics have written countless papers examining various themes and motifs that they determine are present in the text. There is obviously the theme of the monetary and the lower or working classes vs. The middle and upper. Also there is the question of who is in charge, employer or employee. What is most interesting is the question of responsibility. What do employees owe their employers and what do those employers owe them in return? Moreover, what do human beings owe one another when they are no longer useful to society? In this particular case, what does Bartleby the Scrivener owe to his boss and what does he then owe to Bartleby whence the young man begins to lose touch with reality?
When the reader is first introduced to Bartleby, he seems an incomparably hard worker and a real asset to his employer, whose other two employees are drunk half of the day. The only problem that the employer seems to have with Bartleby is his demeanor. "I should have been quite delighted with is application, had he been cheerfully industrious. But he wrote on silently, palely, mechanically" (Melville 2335). He works fastidiously and almost single-mindedly. It seems that he is the nearly perfect employee. This is how the system is supposed to work. A man is paid a wage and in exchange for those funds, he is required to perform duties assigned him by the man who is paying him.
However, a scrivener is expected to have certain duties besides the copying of documents. On one such...
According to McDermott, this direct lineage and relationship that both novels owe to Faulkner is tremendous. The murder of Homer is a flashback and a continuation of Emily's dysfunctional relationship with her father. Just as she later holds onto Homer's corpse, she also refuses to let her father's corpse go for three days. Although both male figures dominate her, she can not let them go. Her aberrant grieving for her
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