What if the most radical rebellion was simply to say "no"?
Herman Melville's Bartleby, the Scrivener is a razor-sharp parable of modern alienation, as relevant in today's open-plan offices as in the ledger-lined corridors of nineteenth-century Wall Street. This definitive presentation restores Melville's wit, irony, and moral complexity while offering gentle notes for contemporary readers.
When an amiable lawyer hires the enigmatic Bartleby, productivity soars-until the scrivener's sudden refusals grind the office's gears to a halt. Neither threats nor compassion can move him. As piles of unexamined documents grow, so does an unsettling question: What does society owe to the souls it consumes?
What You'll Discover in This Edition:
- A Portrait of Passive Dissent - See how Bartleby's polite non-compliance destabilizes capitalism's clockwork.
- The Birth of Modern Bureaucracy - Walk Wall Street's corridors where faceless labor first met mass paperwork.
- Timeless Themes of Empathy & Duty - Confront the moral dilemma of helping those who refuse to help themselves.
- Melville's Dark Humor & Style - Experience prose that balances dry comedy with existential weight.
- Contextual Enhancements - Light annotations clarify period law-office culture without interrupting narrative flow.
Perfect for readers of Kafka, Camus, or contemporary workplace satires, Bartleby invites you to question obedience, purpose, and the silent costs of "business as usual."
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