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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
3 pages in length. The writer briefly discusses the thematic importance of the narrator's ability to accept Bartleby's behavior without judgment. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
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3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCbartby.rtf
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how human conflict plays an integral role between them, much of which is brought about by Bartlebys unusual behavior. The method by which Melville addresses this ongoing discord is
significant to the relationship between Bartleby and the narrator inasmuch as it demonstrates how Bartlebys odd conduct is the catalyst to the narrators ability to bypass his instinctual reaction and
reconsider how he should extend a bit of compassion toward the unusual fellow. "Again I sat ruminating what I should do. Mortified as I was at his behavior,
and resolved as I had been to dismiss him when I entered my office, nevertheless I strangely felt something superstitious knocking at my heart..." (Melville 33).
Yet another way to illustrate how the narrators awareness changes in his dealings with Bartleby is by the way the narrator both acknowledges and ultimately accepts that
Bartleby is a unique individual who sidesteps conventional approaches to follow his own inner calling. It takes a brave soul to go against social constructs when it comes to
public behavior, yet Bartleby has no compunction whatsoever with regard to behaving differently than everyone else. The narrator, initially like all others who scorned Bartlebys oddness, comes to allow
for the differences that set each person apart from another. Ritter supports this notion by contending how Bartleby "stupefies his fastidious boss [the narrator] precisely because his spectral physical
presence cannot be contained within the same reductive understanding of the working class" (Office Politics). Perhaps it even reaches a point where the
narrator becomes somewhat envious of Bartlebys courage to follow the beat of his own drum, being that the quest for individualism is typically met with the disdain he so readily
...