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Bartleby the Scrivener Essay

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Bartleby’s Isolation and the Wall
Introduction:
“Bartleby the Scrivener, A Story of Wall Street” is a short story by Herman Melville in which the narrator, a lawyer who runs a firm on Wall Street, tells the story of a rebellious scrivener who worked for him named Bartleby. One day, Bartleby simply states “I would prefer not to” when asked to do his normal copying duties as a scrivener (Melville). Soon Bartleby starts sleeping and eating at the office, refusing to leave. Eventually the narrator decides his only option is to move out and leave Bartleby there. Unfortunately the next tenant is not nearly as passive as the prior and has the lonely scrivener arrested. In jail he continues his preference against society and it eventually leads …show more content…

By stripping himself of all physical human contact he has transformed himself from a person to a thing. He is merely a purposeless object that has rooted itself to the office. By this point we can see Bartleby has successfully isolated himself physically from the world.
Bartleby’s Emotional Isolation: Bartleby’s method of rejection is broken down in the online article “Time of Our Lives: A Critical History of Temporality”, by David Couzens Hoy. When Bartleby uses the statement, “I would prefer not to” [it] is “neither an affirmation nor a negation.” Bartleby is not refusing to do what he is asked, but he is not accepting the order either. There is a double negation involved, and because the only two possibilities are to say yes or no. Bartleby’s impossible position of saying neither collapses into nothingness” (Hoy, 174). As it is stated in the quote Bartleby is neither refusing nor is he accepting any duty the lawyer asks of him. This double negative statement makes it very difficult for the lawyer to understand what Bartleby means by it. By being so ambiguous in his meaning Bartleby can keep his emotions or feelings towards society, work, humanity etc. hidden from sight. By isolating himself emotionally and keeping his feelings out of plain sight he leaves things up for interpretation. Keeping his emotions inside is just another step towards complete isolation. Egbert S. Oliver states it best in the book A Critical Guide to Herman Melville, “To

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