What we’re about
"Wisdom and Woe" is a philosophy and literature discussion group dedicated to exploring the world, work, life, and times of Herman Melville and the 19th century Romantic movement. We will read and discuss topics related to:
- Works of Herman Melville: Moby-Dick, Clarel, Bartleby the Scrivener, Billy Budd, the Confidence Man, Mardi, reviews, correspondence, etc.
- Themes and affinities: whales, cannibals, shipwrecks, theodicy, narcissism, exile, freedom, slavery, redemption, democracy, law, orientalism, Zoroastrianism, Gnosticism, psychology, mythology, etc.
- Influences and sources: the Bible, Shakespeare, Hawthorne, Milton, Cervantes, Dante, Emerson, Kant, Plato, Romanticism, Stoicism, etc.
- Legacy and impact: adaptations, derivations, artworks, analysis, criticism, etc.
- And more
The group is free and open to anybody with an interest in learning and growing by "diving deeper" (as Hawthorne once said of his conversations with Melville) into "time and eternity, things of this world and of the next, and books, and publishers, and all possible and impossible matters."
"There is a wisdom that is woe; but there is a woe that is madness. And there is a Catskill eagle in some souls that can alike dive down into the blackest gorges, and soar out of them again and become invisible in the sunny spaces."
(Moby-Dick, chapter 96)
"Though wisdom be wedded to woe, though the way thereto is by tears, yet all ends in a shout." (Mardi, chapter 2.79)
"The heart of the wise is in the house of mourning; but the heart of fools is in the house of mirth." (Ecclesiastes 7:4)
NOTE: This page is intended as a thematic overview of the meetups in the series, but is not itself a meetup. To RSVP, please see the individual events as they are announced on the Wisdom and Woe calendar. This page will be updated as necessary to reflect changes to the schedule.
For a descriptive overview of this series, see here:
Series schedule:
- A Discourse Upon the Origin of Inequality - Rousseau - 5/19
- The Theory of the Leisure Class - Veblen - 5/26
- Of Dandyism and of George Brummell - Jules Barbey d'Aurevilly - 6/2
- Typee: A Peep At Polynesian Life - 6/9, 6/16, 6/23
- Omoo: A Narrative of Adventures in the South Seas - 6/30, 7/7, 7/14
- Totem and Taboo - Freud - 7/21
- Letters to His Son - Lord Chesterfield - 7/28
- Don Juan - Lord Byron - 8/4
- D'Orsay; or, The Complete Dandy - W. Teignmouth Shore - 8/11
- Henrietta Temple - Benjamin Disraeli - 8/18
- Pierre; or, The Ambiguities - 8/25, 9/1, 9/8, 9/15
- Movie night: "Pola X" - 9/22
- The Teachings of Don Juan: A Yaqui Way of Knowledge - Carlos Castaneda - 9/29
- A Tale of a Tub - Jonathan Swift - 10/6
- Sartor Resartus - Thomas Carlyle - 10/13, 10/20
- The Rape of the Lock - Alexander Pope - 10/24 [Thu]
- Dandy Doodles - 10/27
- The Sea Lady - H.G. Wells - 11/3
- The Book of Job - 11/10
- Cinderella [Thu] - 11/14
- The Women of Trachis - Sophocles - 11/17
- John Rutherford, The White Chief - George Lillie Craik - 11/24
- A Fringe of Leaves - Patrick White - 12/1, 12/8, 12/15
- White Shadows in the South Seas - Frederick O'Brien - 12/22, 12/29
- White Jacket; or, The World in a Man-of-War - 1/5, 1/12, 1/19, 1/26
- The Woman in White - Wilkie Collins - 2/2, 2/9, 2/23
- Movie night: "White Shadows in the South Seas" & "Fig Leaves" - 2/16
- The Monastery - Walter Scott - 3/2, 3/16
- Movie night: "Last of the Pagans" & "Omoo-Omoo, The Shark God" - 3/9
- The Overcoat; Master and Man; An Honest Thief - 3/23
- The Rebel - Camus - 3/30
- One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest - Ken Kesey - 4/6, 4/13
- The Trembling of a Leaf - W. Somerset Maugham - 4/20, 4/27
- The Cruise of the Kawa - George S. Chappell - 5/4
- Murat - Alexandre Dumas [Thu] - 5/8
- Billy Budd, Sailor (An Inside Narrative) - 5/11
- Movie night: "Beau Travail" - 5/18
- On Revolution - Hannah Arendt - 5/25
- Pacifism and Rebellion in the Writings of Herman Melville - John Bernstein - 6/1
- Red Jacket - John N. Hubbard - 6/8, 6/15
Upcoming events (4+)
See all- New Bedford Moby-Dick Marathon 2025Needs location
[This event is hosted by the New Bedford Whaling Museum, in-person and live-streamed.]
Embark on an Unforgettable Literary Voyage!
The New Bedford Whaling Museum invites you to join one of the world’s most renowned readings of Herman Melville’s iconic American novel, Moby-Dick. The Moby-Dick Marathon features a 25-hour live-streamed read-a-thon, starting from the Extracts, on Saturday January 4, 11:25am EDT, to Sunday January 5, noon EDT interspersed with exciting Melville-inspired activities. (Time is approximate and dependent on the reading pace of the Marathon.) Enjoy engaging conversations with scholars from the Melville Society Cultural Project, live performances and more.
For further information, please visit:
https://www.whalingmuseum.org/program/moby-dick-marathon-2025/ - White-Jacket; or, The World in a Man-of-War (week 2)Link visible for attendees
In 1794, with U.S. ships no longer under the protection of the British government and in response to attacks by Barbary pirates, the United States Congress passed a major piece of legislation, establishing a permanent standing Navy along with a commission for six frigates.
Many of the guidelines for the fledgling U.S. Navy were not formalized until years later, and in its earliest days, sailors were responsible for providing their own uniforms. This circumstance provides the central conceit of White-Jacket (1850), Melville's fictionalized account of his first-hand experience as an ordinary naval seaman aboard the U.S. frigate United States (designated the Neversink in the novel).
The narrator, joining the ship and anticipating the need to endure the storms around Cape Horn, fashions a coat for himself from the spare materials at hand. But the result--the titular white jacket--proves to be more of a curse than a blessing. His comic ordeal is arguably the funniest among all of Melville's long works.
Around mid-point, however, the novel shifts focus to the tyrannical abuses of officers' powers, with graphic descriptions of the horrors of corporal punishment and the appalling conditions to which seamen were subjected. The escalating conflict again takes its cue from the Navy's nominal dress code: specifically, its regulations concerning facial hair, culminating in what the narrator dubs "the rebellion of the beards."
White-Jacket is both critically acclaimed and historically significant. During a Congressional debate on the military's use of flogging, the original publisher (Harper & Bros.) provided members of Congress with copies of the work, helping to win political support for abolition of the practice. Moreover, "by making life aboard a man-of-war stand for life in the world at large, and by turning flogging into a symbol of man's inhumanity to man, [Melville] contributed to the escalating debate about slavery."
Note: This meetup will be recorded for private use.
Schedule:
- Week 1: Chapters 1-24
- Week 2: Chapters 25-47
- Week 3: Chapters 48-71
- Week 4: Chapters 72- The End
White Jacket; or, The World in a Man-of-War:
- Kindle
- Gutenberg
- Archive
- Google Books
- Librivox 17h 31m
This meetup is part of a series on Fig Leaves and Fancy Pants.
- Moby-Dick Read-a-Thon [Peabody Essex Museum]Needs location
[This event is hosted by the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, MA. Registration is required.]
Join the Peabody Essex Museum on select Wednesday evenings over Zoom for an amazing, year-long journey through Herman Melville’s Moby-Dick! Each session of our voyage will feature a brief special presentation on the day’s reading and its connections to the PEM exhibition Draw Me Ishmael: The Book Arts of Moby Dick, followed by a lively discussion.
Read-a-Thon schedule:
Wednesday evenings, 6:30–8:00 pm EDT- Session 1 | July 24, 2024: Introduction to the book and exhibition
- Session 2 | October 9, 2024: Chapters 1–28
- Session 3 | January 15, 2025: Chapters 29–54
- Session 4 | March 12, 2025: Chapters 55–96
- Session 5 | June 18, 2025: Chapters 97–Epilogue
For more information and to register for the zoom link, go to:
https://www.pem.org/events/pem-reads-a-months-long-moby-dick-marathon - White-Jacket; or, The World in a Man-of-War (week 3)Link visible for attendees
In 1794, with U.S. ships no longer under the protection of the British government and in response to attacks by Barbary pirates, the United States Congress passed a major piece of legislation, establishing a permanent standing Navy along with a commission for six frigates.
Many of the guidelines for the fledgling U.S. Navy were not formalized until years later, and in its earliest days, sailors were responsible for providing their own uniforms. This circumstance provides the central conceit of White-Jacket (1850), Melville's fictionalized account of his first-hand experience as an ordinary naval seaman aboard the U.S. frigate United States (designated the Neversink in the novel).
The narrator, joining the ship and anticipating the need to endure the storms around Cape Horn, fashions a coat for himself from the spare materials at hand. But the result--the titular white jacket--proves to be more of a curse than a blessing. His comic ordeal is arguably the funniest among all of Melville's long works.
Around mid-point, however, the novel shifts focus to the tyrannical abuses of officers' powers, with graphic descriptions of the horrors of corporal punishment and the appalling conditions to which seamen were subjected. The escalating conflict again takes its cue from the Navy's nominal dress code: specifically, its regulations concerning facial hair, culminating in what the narrator dubs "the rebellion of the beards."
White-Jacket is both critically acclaimed and historically significant. During a Congressional debate on the military's use of flogging, the original publisher (Harper & Bros.) provided members of Congress with copies of the work, helping to win political support for abolition of the practice. Moreover, "by making life aboard a man-of-war stand for life in the world at large, and by turning flogging into a symbol of man's inhumanity to man, [Melville] contributed to the escalating debate about slavery."
Note: This meetup will be recorded for private use.
Schedule:
- Week 1: Chapters 1-24
- Week 2: Chapters 25-47
- Week 3: Chapters 48-71
- Week 4: Chapters 72- The End
White Jacket; or, The World in a Man-of-War:
- Kindle
- Gutenberg
- Archive
- Google Books
- Librivox 17h 31m
This meetup is part of a series on Fig Leaves and Fancy Pants.