Well, Ahab is almost an anti-hero, in this way, similar to the romantic vision of Lucifer. Both are have a natural power of rethoric, in many technical aspects they are similar characters. I am not sure if Pequod is the nice circles (one can always play with the crew and see their sins, but Ishmael is not Dante guided by Virgil, he is a sinner that admires a pagan) but there is a descend to hell in this story. Maybe the Pequod is a map or europe, Melville reaction to the Thourean/Emerson romatic view.
In other works, like Benito Cereno, Melville seems to reflect the Civil War concerns. The africans are evil (while freedom is a good cause) , and to me it seems like Melville was pointing the war would be decisive for the matter but it was not a solution. (Ultimatelly Melville was right). His characters have this tragic quality in a way, failure of objective, which may seems Melville didnt feel we could achive anything with heroic acts at all.
Anyways, I think Melville is a master of atmosphere. Read the begining of Benito Cereno, it is all about bad omens, but the wether and sea conditions seems to be telling the whole drama of the book. Much like Poe (or Emily Bronte) when the "supernatural" is natural and psychological.


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) Or they are other nations/societies that do not move toward greatness/madness? Because they may represent humanity but not all humanity. 