Herman Melville's "Bartby, Scripner" excellent Samaritan is introduced to the capital world. That goal is to make a profit in the market economy. The story is conveyed by a man named "lawyer", an "old man" seeking acceptance of God by showing so-called "goodwill" to employees (Melville 1483). He regarded them simply as property and clearly stated their property with the words "myself, my employee, my career, my room, and the general environment" (Melville 1484).
Herman Melville scribe Barbie is a novel about an anonymous attorney who hired a clerk named Bartby. Throughout the novel, Bartby has various working periods. Initially, he did not condemn or accomplish writing without hesitation, but with the development of the novel his attitude towards work has made tremendous changes. As critical articles about Mordechai Marcus' novel have several advantages, Bartby is a psychological double for lawyers, and he is motivated by his inner potential death, and absoluteism And free will. Collision between.
Scrivener's Bartleby of Herman Melville is a temptation. It can be a short story or a short story. 64 pages of my lovely novel art. This is the last work by Melville and is considered to be the first work of a new style called naturalism. It is possible, but it must be calm and initially easy. It is this relaxing mood that makes it attractive. We were introduced to the office of Dickens' clerk. Here, the staff will spend a lot of time in one business day, completely copying legal documents, discussions and testimonies. Each page must be word-by-word verbatim and the tolerance for footprints must be minimal. The owner and the narrator operate his team with a simple hand. Consider a less trivial version of Mr. Fezziwig of A Christmas Carrol, or Samuel Pickwick of Pickwick's thesis.
In the short novel "Bartby, Scrivina", Herman Melville created a somewhat confusing character. Melville used commentators and lawyers to explain Batubi as a strange character. The interaction between the narrator and Batubi reveals several points of human nature. Despite this title, the story is not about Bartree but about how the narrator interacts with other people. From the beginning of the story, Melville draws the story as a passive attack. The passive attack of the narrator is evident from his interaction with other writers, Turkey. Rather than speaking to him about his "morning worship" (545) and all the content that the narrator requested with confidence, the "narrator" for him "will not enter the meeting room after 12 o'clock" ( 545) should be. Narrator later said that Bartby's unusual behavior brought about his (narrator) passive aggression in the story.