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Thousands               of               stories               and               accounts               passed               from               generation               to               generation               since               ancient               history               share               common               elements               of               the               human               experience.

In               the               same               way,               American               literature               of               the               19th               and               20th               centuries               bears               numerous               overlapping               themes               that               define               and               analyze               people               and               societies.

American               literature               fraught               with               examples               of               this               notion               came               from               authors               like               Arthur               Miller,               Herman               Melville,               and               F.

Scott               Fitzgerald.

Melville's               Captain               Ahab               of               Moby               Dick               and               Miller's               Abigail               Williams               of               The               Crucible               work               to               gain               their               revengeful               ends               through               murderous               ploys,               while               Fitzgerald's               Meyer               Wolfsheim               of               The               Great               Gatsby               and               Miller's               Joe               Keller               of               All               My               Sons               fall               under               a               corrupting               hypnosis               of               materialism.

Thus,               several               pieces               in               American               literature,               including               All               my               Sons,               The               Crucible,               Moby               Dick,               and               The               Great               Gatsby,               embody,               evaluate,               and               explore               common               motifs               such               as               human               corruption,               the               contrast               between               appearance               and               truth,               and               vengeance.

The               corruption               of               man               surfaces               as               a               ubiquitous               theme               throughout               several               literary               works.

Fitzgerald's               Meyer               Wolfsheim               and               Miller's               Joe               Keller               represent               the               debasing               effects               of               avarice,               money,               power,               and               selfishness               on               human               morality.

To               begin,               Fitzgerald's               Meyer               Wolfsheim,               the               human               molar-cuffed               gangster,               fixes               the               World's               Series               in               1919               and               reveals               his               insightfulness               of               misdemeanors               and               murder,               serving               as               the               ultimate               model               of               the               corrupt               and               lethal               inter-criminal               realm               diseased               with               evil               and               dishonesty.

In               order               to               fix               the               1919               World's               Series,               Meyer               must               stand               high               in               the               echelons               of               criminal               power.

Meyer's               ploy               to               deceive               thousands               of               people               clearly               offers               a               glimpse               into               Wolfsheim's               mind,               a               concoction               of               greed               and               power.

In               addition,               the               human               molar               cuffs               on               Wolfsheim's               sleeves               suggest               that               this               criminal               mastermind               most               likely               committed               a               gruesome               murder,               since               a               gangster               of               his               status               would               only               wear               the               molars               of               a               victim.

Meyer               lives               his               life               by               a               self-centered               code               of               business               and               crime               deprived               of               ethics               with               a               mission               to               gather               "business               gonnegtion[s]"               under               his               belt               to               increase               his               illegal               wealth               and               advance               his               persona               in               the               world               of               organized               crime               in               the               1920s.

Wolfsheim               even               exploits               fellow               criminals,               often               refusing               "to               pay               [them]               a               penny               until               [they]               shut               [their]               mouth[s]"               about               his               criminal               stratagems               (Fitzgerald               74).

Wolfsheim               the               crook               thrives               in               the               world               of               illegitimate               business,               as               he               does               not               hesitate               to               chase               his               wants               when               "he               just               [sees]               the               opportunity"               (Fitzgerald               78).

His               success               finds               its               roots               in               "the               Jazz               Age,"               a               time               of               prohibition               and               crime.

"marked               by               Prohibition               and               gangsterism,"               where               "American               morality"               and               social               development               "were               marked               by               questionable               business               ethics               .

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with               materialistic               and               economic               factors"               determining               the               course               of               progress               in               all               aspects               of               society               (Inge/Solomon               3).

Extending               beyond               the               novel,               a               real-life               gambler               and               racketeer               by               the               name               of               Arnold               Rothstein               served               as               the               basis               for               Wolfsheim's               character;               this               notorious               felon               allegedly               arranged               countless               cases               of               stolen               bonds               and               fixed               events.

Wolfsheim               represents               a               single               pawn               in               the               era               of               Prohibition,               a               chess               game               of               crookedness,               immorality,               extortion,               and               murder               for               individual               gain.
               In               addition               to               Meyer               Wolfsheim's               experiences               in               the               criminal               realm,               another               man               of               business,               Miller's               Joe               Keller,               follows               suit               with               schemes               to               advance               his               personal               interests               and               well-being.

By               knowingly               shipping               faulty               airplane               parts,               framing               his               partner,               and               avoiding               a               deserved               prison               sentence,               Joe               Keller               embodies               the               corruption               of               man               and               the               self-centered               motivation               of               criminals.

Keller's               gambit               to               overlook               the               defective               airplane               parts               sent               to               the               war               front               in               spite               of               the               potential               disasters               they               may               cause               indubitably               equates               him               with               a               man               like               Meyer               Wolfsheim.

Despite               his               knowledge               of               Steve's               innocence               and               suffering,               Joe               Keller               casually               lives               on               without               any               significant,               visible               regard               for               the               life               of               the               incarcerated,               hapless               Steve               or               the               grieving               families               of               the               deceased               plane               pilots               who               suffer               because               of               Keller's               callous               indifference.

Keller               believes               that               he               lives               in               the               "land               of               the               great               big               dogs"               and               that               if               any               man               dares               to               try               and               stop               Joe               from               making               money               for               his               family,               Keller               would               "eat               him"               (Miller               59).

Joe               claims               to               "under[stand]               the               way               the               world               is               made"               and               "understand               money,"               seeing               corporate               America               as               a               dog-eat-dog               realm               where               the               strongest               businesses               and               families               thrive               at               the               expense               of               the               weakest               (Miller               63).

With               this               in               mind,               Keller               brags               of               how               he               "pulled               a               fast               one               getting               [himself]               exonerated"               and               could               still               reconstruct               "one               of               the               best               shops               in               the               state               again,"               reemerging               as               "respected               man               .

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bigger               than               ever"               because               of               his               furtive               maneuvers               (Miller               26).

With               his               mind               set               on               acquiring               wealth               and               ensuring               only               his               family's               well-being,               Keller               fails               to               consider               the               well-being               of               the               society               and               the               nation               as               a               whole               and               the               rights               of               others               to               freedom               and               the               pursuit               of               happiness.

Joe               "watch[es]               his               star               go               out"               as               his               own               dishonorable               past               and               hidden               truths               lead               to               the               disappearance               of               his               inner               "star               .

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[of]               honesty,"               which               regularly               guides               individuals               in               life               but               "never               lights               again"               once               corrupted               (Miller               61).

Joe's               heartless,               detrimental,               and               corrupt               decisions               also               correspond               to               the               root               for               Larry               Keller's               suicide,               since               the               boy               could               not               carry               his               father's               guilty               and               selfish               name.

Keller's               immorality               directly               escalates               to               murder,               suicide,               and               emotional               unrest               which               eventually               tears               the               foundations               of               the               family               which               Keller               worked               all               of               his               life               to               support.
               The               contrast               between               a               person's               outer,               public               appearance               and               his               true               character               also               emerges               as               a               theme               throughout               American               literature.

People's               physical               characteristics               and               social               strata               often               create               an               inaccurate               image.

This               notion               manifests               itself               aboard               Melville's               Pequod,               where               the               mysterious               harpooner               Queequeg               appears               as               a               savage,               cannibal               heathen.

Queequeg's               bodily               tattoos,               sharpened               teeth,               and               barbaric               manner               inadvertently               conceal               his               true               identity               as               a               South               Seas               prince               with               qualities               of               kindness,               devotion,               selflessness,               and               mercifulness.

Queequeg's               anomalous               appearance               detaches               him               from               the               Pequod               crew               members,               some               of               whom               believe               that               "it               was               the               devil               himself"               who               had               walked               onto               their               ship               (Melville               21).

As               a               result,               the               harpooner               becomes               a               stereotyped               and               debased               individual               open               to               jibes               and               insults.

The               sharpened               teeth               of               this               "abominable               savage"               combined               with               Queequeg's               celerity               with               the               harpoon               suggest               unnatural               power,               satanic               presence,               and               notoriety.

Queequeg's               "unearthly               tattooings"               convey               darkness               and               nefariousness               which               accompany               his               lack               of               proper               demeanor               and               restraint               at               times.

On               the               other               hand,               Queequeg's               friendship               with               Ishmael               and               Ishmael's               acceptance               of               Queequeg's               unique               background               allow               for               the               harpooner's               true               soul               to               surface.

Queequeg               quickly               proves               to               be               a               pious,               God-respecting               individual               who               retains               to               his               faith               at               all               costs.

Despite               Queequeg's               bestial               facade               and               lack               of               propriety,               the               "man's               a               human               being"               equal               to               any               other,               with               "reason               to               fear"               whomever               he               encounters               in               the               same               fashion               the               crew               fears               the               harpooner               (Melville               24).

In               addition,               the               harpooner's               devotion               to               Ishmael               becomes               irrefutable               as               he               treats               "[Ishmael]               with               so               much               civility               and               consideration,"               even               at               times               when               Ishmael               "was               guilty               of               great               rudeness"               (Melville               27).

Also,               Queequeg's               kindness               toward               Ishmael               radiates               as               he               shares               numerous               personal               effects               of               sentimental               value,               including               his               Tomahawk.

The               magnanimous               Kokovoan               prince               even               daringly               risks               his               life               to               rescue               the               "bumpkin"               who               ridiculed               him               aboard               the               packet               to               Nantucket.

Behind               his               dark               eyes               lies               "a               simple,               honest               heart"               that               supports               "a               spirit               that               would               dare               a               thousand               devils"               (Melville               48).

Queequeg's               amenities               of               character               overcome               the               physical               mask               which               harbors               a               noble               character.
               In               addition               to               the               struggle               between               Queequeg's               threatening               appearance               and               his               noble               character,               Fitzgerald's               Jay               Gatsby               faces               a               different               contrast               of               personas.

In               this               case,               Jay               Gatsby's               suave               appearance               of               a               civilized               man,               countless               riches,               smooth,               appealing               personality,               and               influential               friends               mask               the               impoverished               yet               highly               motivated               young               man               hidden               beneath               the               skin               of               an               affluent               gangster.

With               glamour,               style,               money,               and               excessive               lavishness,               Jay               Gatsby               creates               the               image               of               a               successful               "rajah"               of               fine               education,               background,               and               future               who               "lived.

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in               all               the               capitals               of               Europe,"               and               figuratively               bathes               in               gold               and               silver               each               day               (Fitzgerald               69).

As               people               visit               his               mansion               and               note               his               beautiful               "many-colored               .

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shirts               of               sheer               linen               and               thick               silk               and               fine               flannel,"               they               become               mesmerized               with               materialistic               elements               which               distract               them               from               Gatsby's               true               self               (Fitzgerald               97).

Gatsby               becomes               known               for               his               extravagant               parties,               with               culinary               wonders               and               charming               musical               performances               for               both               invited               guests               and               "People               [who]               were               not               invited,"               who               simply               "went               there"               to               witness               Gatsby's               extravagance               and               falsely               evaluate               his               money               as               a               direct               correlation               to               his               heart               and               identity               (Fitzgerald               41).

The               uninvited               guests,               blind               with               their               own               acquisitive               sensations               in               Gatsby's               mansion,               assume               that               Gatsby               must               descend               from               a               long               line               of               noble               men               of               status.

By               associating               with               influential               men               of               politics,               business,               and               crime,               Gatsby               blends               in               as               a               young               tycoon               able               to               buy               anyone,               offering               "business               opportunit[ies]"               to               close               acquaintances.

Also,               with               decorations               of               bravery               "from               every               Allied               government,"               Gatsby               successfully               creates               an               ideal               personality               and               a               second               character               for               himself.

Even               Jay's               smile               "of               eternal               reassurance               .

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that               may               appear               four               or               five               times               in               life"               blinds               the               public               from               Jay's               hidden               truths               as               he               quickly               becomes               a               local               celebrity               and               the               subject               of               many               conversations               of               admiration               (Fitzgerald               48).

Thus,               a               deceitful,               prosperous               guise               solidifies               for               this               "second               cousin               to               the               devil,"               who               fooled               humanity               just               as               efficiently               as               Gatsby               fooled               New               York               (Fitzgerald               61).

On               the               other               hand,               a               thorough               examination               of               Gatsby               and               his               genuine               character               reveals               a               different               reality.

Behind               the               mask,               Gatsby               represents               a               rags-to-riches,               quick-cash               visionary               "rais[ed]               out               of               nothing,               straight               out               of               the               gutter"               who               rises               out               of               his               own               social               ghetto               to               the               top               echelon               of               social               class               (Fitzgerald               179).

The               brains               behind               the               riches               represent               Gatsby's               powerful               charisma,               rare               business               drive,               and               understanding               in               pecuniary               matters               and               business.

The               true               Gatsby,               a               son               of               destitute               workers,               beams               with               motivation               in               his               agenda               for               "resolves               .

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about               improving               his               mind"               in               his               rise               to               success               (Fitzgerald               182).

Gatsby's               abilities               to               pass               himself               off               as               a               noble,               debonair               "Oxford               man"               suggest               a               man               of               dedication               and               diligence               toward               the               realization               of               the               American               Dream.

Jay               Gatsby               becomes               an               authentic               representation               of               an               impoverished               man's               soul               finding               the               riches               that               stopped               him               from               achieving               his               dreams               long               ago.
               The               passion               for               revenge               has               existed               in               the               human               psyche               since               the               dawn               of               humankind               and               functions               as               a               central               emotion               in               human               relations.

The               theme               of               vengeance               spans               across               several               pieces               of               literature,               including               Herman               Melville's               Moby               Dick               and               Arthur               Miller's               The               Crucible.

First,               this               powerful               urge               for               evil               and               destruction               emerges               through               Melville's               Captain               Ahab,               the               merciless               peg-legged               commander               of               the               Pequod               who               lost               his               appendage               and               soul               to               a               legendary               white               whale.

By               risking               the               lives               of               his               crew               to               hunt               Moby               Dick,               proclaiming               his               goal               of               annihilating               the               whale,               and               refusing               to               turn               back               or               assists               captains               of               other               vessels,               Captain               Ahab               emerges               as               a               nefarious,               merciless               mad-man               driven               living               an               empty               life               that               ends               in               self-destruction.

Ahab's               reality               and               life               shatter               during               his               first,               nearly               lethal               encounter               with               Moby               Dick,               as               he               becomes               a               man               "cut               away               from               the               stake               when               the               fire               has               overrunningly               wasted               all               [of               his]               limbs               without               consuming               them,"               scorched               with               vengeance               and               fury               (Melville               117).

The               "crazy               Ahab"               grows               so               furious               over               his               loss               to               the               white               whale               that               he               piles               the               "rage               and               hate               felt               by               his               whole               race               from               Adam               down"               on               Moby               Dick's               head               (Melville               177).

With               such               tramendous,               infuriating               rage               packed               in               "his               bloodshot               eyes               of               a               prairie               wolf,"               Ahab               breathes               vengeance               every               second               of               every               day               (Melville               158).

After               a               short               period               of               time               the               Captain               explodes               with               hatred,               transforming               him               into               a               juggernaut               of               "madness               maddened."               Since               Moby               Dick               remains               as               the               root               cause               of               Ahab's               crumbling               mentality               and               life,               the               destruction               of               that               "dumb               brute"               represents               the               only               cure               for               the               captain's               divided               soul.

"Dismember[ing]               [the]               dismemberer"               will               satiate               Ahab's               hunger               for               blood,               truth,               and               redress.

"For               Ahab,               existence               in               this               world               is               but               a               prison               because               he               cannot               know,               and               sometimes               doubts,               that               any               deeper               meaning               exists"               in               his               life               and               fate               after               the               loss               of               his               being               to               Moby               Dick;               thus,               Ahab               can               only               pathetically               "attack               and               destroy               the               inscrutable               surfaces               which               he               has               personified               in               the               white               whale"               (Elliott               3).

The               notion               that               decimating               a               magnificent               creature               will               assure               his               spiritual               and               mental               restoration               drags               Ahab               onto               a               suicidal               voyage.

Even               as               the               voyage               progresses               and               the               crew               spots               the               white               whale               numerous               times,               the               Captain               becomes               intoxicated               with               added               anger               as               he               prepares               to               "strike               the               sun"               if               needed               to               accomplish               his               bloody               goal.

Because               his               life               revolves               around               Moby               Dick's               destruction,               Ahab               ceases               caring               for               the               wellness               of               his               crew               or               the               troubles               of               other               ships               on               the               high               seas.

As               a               result,               the               Captain's               intransigent               agenda               of               vengeance               against               his               nautical               enemy               aimed               at               resolving               his               own               mental               troubles               drives               the               Pequod               and               its               crew               to               the               bottom               of               the               ocean,               while               the               captain               himself               suffers               a               gruesome               failure               and               death               on               Moby               Dick's               fin.
               In               addition,               Miller's               Abigail               Williams,               the               distraught,               revengeful               young               girl               banished               from               the               Proctor               household               also               represents               the               personification               of               vengeance.

Through               her               effort               to               invent               the               witchcraft               episode               in               Salem               in               order               to               spread               lies               about               Elizabeth               and               bring               her               to               trial               under               witchcraft               charges,               Abigail               Williams               emerges               as               a               notorious               girl               bent               on               the               destruction               of               John               Proctor's               beatific               wife.

Unable               to               seduce               Proctor               after               their               affair,               Abigail               becomes               fraught               with               such               inhumane               revenge               that               she               decides               to               do               all               she               can               to               assure               Elizabeth's               death.

Abigail's               successful               machination               to               kill               Elizabeth               would               allow               Abigail               to               replace               Elizabeth,               serving               as               payback               for               her               banishment.

Elizabeth               represents               all               which               Abigail               cannot               have,               physically               and               emotionally;               as               a               result,               Abigail               grimly               dreams               of               the               day               she               would               "dance.

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.on               [Elizabeth's]               grave."               Also,               by               threatening               a               number               of               the               possessed               girls               from               the               forest               in               the               beginning               of               the               witchcraft               crisis,               Abigail               Williams               reveals               her               capacity               to               murder               in               cold               blood               anyone               who               jeopardizes               her               mission               to               avenge               her               hatred               for               Elizabeth.

Although               Mary               Warren               and               Betty               appear               as               Abigail's               friendly               companions,               Abigail               does               not               hesitate               to               turn               on               them               at               the               instant               she               sense               their               fear               or               will               to               confess               the               truth.

Although               only               a               girl               of               seventeen,               "Abigail               smashes               [Betty]               across               the               face"               ruthlessly               to               ensure               that               she               "shut[s]               it"               regarding               Abigail's               "drink[ing]               [of]               a               charm               to               kill               John               Proctor's               wife               .

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to               kill               Goody               Proctor"               (Miller               16).

As               the               girls               continue               to               fear               the               consequences               of               silence               regarding               Abigail's               lies               and               murderous               plans,               Abigail's               determination               and               insanity               surface               with               her               threat               to               "come               to               [Mary               Warren]               in               the               black               of               some               terrible               night               and               .

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bring               a               pointy               reckoning               that               will               shudder               [her]"               (Miller               17).

Those               who               dare               to               undermine               Abigail's               devious               scheme               to               destroy               Elizabeth               will               "wish               [they]               had               never               seen               the               sun               go               down,"               as               the               young               Abigail's               evil               heart               eclipses               her               morality               and               conscience               (Miller               17).

Abigail,               a               "terrorist               of               desire,"               plots               to               "exact               revenge               for               [her]               socially               determined               impotence"               and               inability               to               obtain               her               wants               (Bloom               134).

Abigail's               vengeance               exhumes               a               small               piece               of               the               "elements               of               social               corruption,               moral               disease,               and               unresolved               and               repressed               feelings               of               anger               and               hostility"               that               lay               dormant,               "embedded               in               [Salem's]               fabric"               (Woolway               2).

One               stab               to               equate               the               pains               and               injustices               between               individuals               results               in               a               bloody               disaster               for               an               entire               community.
               In               conclusion,               mankind's               susceptibility               to               corruption,               inadequate               physical               evaluation               of               individuals               as               a               judgment               of               character,               and               the               urge               for               vengeance               represent               the               driving               forces               behind               the               majority               of               societal               ailments               today.

In               this               instance,               Miller's               Abigail               Williams               single-handedly               destroys               a               community,               while               Melville's               Ahab               draws               an               entire               crew               to               a               bottomless               oceanic               grave               in               pursuit               of               vengeance.

Had               individuals               accepted               their               social               and               materialistic               losses,               prevention               of               these               disasters               would               have               worked.

Similarly,               Fitzgerald's               Wolfsheim               and               Miller's               Joe               Keller               face               the               threat               of               total               materialistic               and               physical               destruction               because               of               their               acquisitive               ploys               to               obtain               more               than               they               could               have.

Any               theme               directly               relates               to               elements               of               the               human               experience               which               give               rise               to               many               societal               problems;               the               exercise               of               corruption               jeopardizes               the               well-being               of               a               populace,               just               as               the               false               judgment               of               individuals               or               a               quest               for               vengeance               may               destroy               lives               and               lead               to               global               conflicts.
               Harold               Bloom,               "Modern               Critical               Interpretations:               The               Crucible."               Chelsea               House               Publishers.
               Mark               Elliott,               "An               overview               of               'Bartleby               the               Scrivener.'"               Literature               Resource               Center.
               Scott               Fitzgerald,               "The               Great               Gatsby."               Scribner               Paperback               Fiction.
               Thomas               Inge               and               Eric               Solomon,               "F.

Scott               Fitzgerald:               Overview."               Reference               Guide               to               American               Literature.
               Herman               Melville,               "Moby-Dick."               Signet               Classic.
               Arthur               Miller,               "All               My               Sons."               Dramatists               Play               Service,               Inc.
               Arthur               Miller,               "The               Crucible."               Penguin               Classic.
               Joanne               Woolway,               "A               discussion               of               'The               Crucible.'"               Drama               for               Students.






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