Take a Picture: A Novel

Show full item record


Title: Take a Picture: A Novel
Author: Bell, David James
Description: The creative component of my dissertation is a novel called Take A Picture which tells the story of sixty-seven year old Jack Hoskins, a childless widower and the owner of the last independent funeral home in the fictional town of Dove Point, Indiana. As a large corporation encroaches on Mr. Hoskins’ business, he finds himself questioning the efficacy of his profession and searching for a different way to serve his community. His decision to begin photographing the dead has enormous repercussions for both his business and his personal life. Take A Picture , like all of my fiction, operates in the realistic tradition and has been inspired by the works of authors from Herman Melville to Richard Ford. The critical component of my dissertation is an essay titled “Unfathomable Me: The Privileged View of Nature in Melville’s Moby-Dick.” My essay argues that Ishmael seeks an unimpeded, unmediated experience of the natural world, and this occurs most notably in the chapter, “The Grand Armada.” In this chapter, Ishmael looks down into the ocean depths and witnesses a pod of whales mating and nursing their young. At this moment, human beings become decentralized in the natural world, and Ishmael is able to see the whales as “subject” and not “object.” Much of nineteenth-century American literature—most notably the works of Henry David Thoreau and Walt Whitman—deals with this desire for first-hand knowledge of the natural world as well as an intense concern with recognizing oneself as a member of the larger human community.
Permanent Link: http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ucin1116246020
http://hdl.handle.net/2374.OX/13026
Date: 2005

Files in this item

Files Size Format View

There are no files associated with this item.

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show full item record