Moby Dick finale: Ahab Derangement Syndrome episode artwork

EPISODE · Feb 25, 2026 · 1H 6M

Moby Dick finale: Ahab Derangement Syndrome

from Do You Even Lit? · host cam and benny feat. rich

Tell me if you've heard this one: A mentally unstable old man abuses his position of power to pursue his own personal agenda. He alternates between smooth talking—tremendous moxie, the best speeches—and threatening the LOSERS and HATERS who stand in his way. He runs roughshod over checks and balances, ignores the norms of civil society, and whips his followers into a fervour against an imagined enemy. In his egotistical mania, he takes down everyone else with him. We are talking of course about Herman Melville's MOBY DICK (chapters 81-135). Rich gets political: On Melville's egalitarian dream, the milk and sperm of human kindness, Ahab as demagogue, why the crew don't mutiny, parallels to the current political moment, and Latin America as a cautionary tale. Does Rich have a point here, or has he fallen victim to Ahab Derangement Syndrome? Benny is all symbolism-ed out: Bad omen after bad omen, we get it. We can see the ending coming a mile away. Has Melville created too rich of a feast for us? Does the explicit fatalism make Ahab a more or less interesting character? Did any of us feel any narrative tension in this last third of the book? What is with the pacing? What's it all about: Cam proposes the 'interpretation interpretation'. We talk about the limitations of Ahab's approach to meaning-making, vs Ishmael's more pluralistic approach. And our final thoughts on tackling this behemoth of a book.  CHAPTERS: (00:00:00) don’t cry for me argentina (00:07:30) what did we think of the final section? (00:16:02) What does it all mean? (00:20:30) Ahab vs Ishmael meaning-making project (00:28:23) overdosing on omens and symbolism (00:37:40) Pip the cabin boy (00:44:07) The milk and sperm of human kindness (00:47:48) Ahab the demagogue (00:59:18) Next book announcement   WRITE US: We love listener feedback. Send us a note at [email protected] to correct our hot takes, add your own, or ask a question.   NEXT ON THE READING LIST: The Royal Game — Stefan Zweig Atomised — Michel Houellebecq

Tell me if you've heard this one: A mentally unstable old man abuses his position of power to pursue his own personal agenda. He alternates between smooth talking—tremendous moxie, the best speeches—and threatening the LOSERS and HATERS who stand in his way. He runs roughshod over checks and balances, ignores the norms of civil society, and whips his followers into a fervour against an imagined enemy. In his egotistical mania, he takes down everyone else with him. We are talking of course about Herman Melville's MOBY DICK (chapters 81-135). Rich gets political: On Melville's egalitarian dream, the milk and sperm of human kindness, Ahab as demagogue, why the crew don't mutiny, parallels to the current political moment, and Latin America as a cautionary tale. Does Rich have a point here, or has he fallen victim to Ahab Derangement Syndrome? Benny is all symbolism-ed out: Bad omen after bad omen, we get it. We can see the ending coming a mile away. Has Melville created too rich of a feast for us? Does the explicit fatalism make Ahab a more or less interesting character? Did any of us feel any narrative tension in this last third of the book? What is with the pacing? What's it all about: Cam proposes the 'interpretation interpretation'. We talk about the limitations of Ahab's approach to meaning-making, vs Ishmael's more pluralistic approach. And our final thoughts on tackling this behemoth of a book.  CHAPTERS: (00:00:00) don’t cry for me argentina(00:07:30) what did we think of the final section?(00:16:02) What does it all mean?(00:20:30) Ahab vs Ishmael meaning-making project(00:28:23) overdosing on omens and symbolism(00:37:40) Pip the cabin boy(00:44:07) The milk and sperm of human kindness(00:47:48) Ahab the demagogue(00:59:18) Next book announcement   WRITE US: We love listener feedback. Send us a note at [email protected] to correct our hot takes, add your own, or ask a question.   NEXT ON THE READING LIST: The Royal Game — Stefan Zweig Atomised — Michel Houellebecq

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Tell me if you've heard this one: A mentally unstable old man abuses his position of power to pursue his own personal agenda. He alternates between smooth talking—tremendous moxie, the best speeches—and threatening the LOSERS and HATERS who stand in...

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