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Cover image of The Exceptionalist State and the State of Exception
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The Exceptionalist State and the State of Exception

Herman Melville's Billy Budd, Sailor

William V. Spanos

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Critics predominantly view Herman Melville’s Billy Budd, Sailor as a "testament of acceptance," the work of a man who had become politically conservative in his last years. William V. Spanos disagrees, arguing that the novella was not only a politically radical critique of American exceptionalism but also an eerie preview of the state of exception employed, most recently, by the George W. Bush administration in the post–9/11 War on Terror.

While Billy Budd, Sailor is ostensibly about the Napoleonic Wars, Spanos contends that it is at heart a cautionary tale addressed to the American public as...

Critics predominantly view Herman Melville’s Billy Budd, Sailor as a "testament of acceptance," the work of a man who had become politically conservative in his last years. William V. Spanos disagrees, arguing that the novella was not only a politically radical critique of American exceptionalism but also an eerie preview of the state of exception employed, most recently, by the George W. Bush administration in the post–9/11 War on Terror.

While Billy Budd, Sailor is ostensibly about the Napoleonic Wars, Spanos contends that it is at heart a cautionary tale addressed to the American public as the country prepared to extend its westward expansion into the Pacific Ocean by way of establishing a global imperial navy. Through a close, symptomatic reading of Melville’s text, Spanos rescues from critical oblivion the pervasive, dense, and decisive details that disclose the consequences of normalizing the state of exception—namely, the transformation of the criminal into the policeman (Claggart) and of the political human being into the disposable reserve that can be killed with impunity (Billy Budd).

What this shows, Spanos demonstrates, is that Melville's uncanny attunement to the dark side of the American exceptionalism myth enabled him to foresee its threat to the very core of democracy in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. This view, Spanos believes, anticipates the state of exception theory that has emerged in the recent work of Giorgio Agamben, Alain Badiou, Judith Butler, and Jacques Ranciere, among other critical theorists.

The Exceptionalist State and the State of Exception illustrates that Melville, in his own time, was aware of the negative consequences of the deeply inscribed exceptionalist American identity and recognized the essential domestic and foreign policy issues that inform the country’s national security program today.

Reviews

Reviews

A must for Melvillians from all the isles of the sea and all the ends of the earth. Essential.

Spanos offers an incisive case that with Billy Budd, in line with his earlier fiction from the 1850s, the elderly Melville left a powerful critique of American exceptionalism, an ideology that relies on spatial divisions of Old World and New World as well as temporal divisions of past, present, and future.

Spanos offers a bracing account of Melville’s last novel that conveys its unsettling power.

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Book Details

Publication Date
Status
Available
Trim Size
6
x
9
Pages
232
ISBN
9780801899348
Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
1. Late Melville and His Historical Occasion: Prolegomenon to a Rereading of Billy Budd, Sailor
2. Criticism of Billy Budd, Sailor: A Counterhistory
3. Billy Budd: A

Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
1. Late Melville and His Historical Occasion: Prolegomenon to a Rereading of Billy Budd, Sailor
2. Criticism of Billy Budd, Sailor: A Counterhistory
3. Billy Budd: A Symptomatic Reading
4. American Exceptionalism and the State of Exception after 9/11: Melville's Proleptic Witness
Notes
Index

Author Bio
Featured Contributor

William V. Spanos, Ph.D.

William V. Spanos is Distinguished Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the State University of New York, Binghamton, and author of The Errant Art of Moby-Dick: The Canon, the Cold War, and the Struggle for American Studies and Herman Melville and the American Calling: The Fiction after Moby-Dick, 1851–1857.