Bartleby the Scrivener
By: Jack • Essay • 333 Words • November 17, 2009 • 1,146 Views
Essay title: Bartleby the Scrivener
Angelica Rodriguez
P75-69-5011
ENC1102 TH 12:40pm
03-04-08
An Existential Death
The short story “Bartleby the Scrivener” by Herman Melville is a complex piece of literature about a lawyer on Wall Street and his unusual copyists. The oddest employee is one by the name of Bartleby who bewilders his coworkers by his refusal to work. The lawyer who is consistently empathetic towards him tries to fire him, but Bartleby refuses to leave the office although he is not producing any labor. It is through his refusal to work and to give no rational reason for doing so other than he would “prefer not to”, that the entire story takes form into Bartleby’s absurdity better defined by an existentialist as the end stage to the pursuit of happiness. After going through the process of consciousness, experiencing a crisis and asking the question that ultimately ends in absurdity and happiness Bartleby can accept the universe as unexplainable and choose his place in it.
Bartleby becomes conscious of the world and its brutality when he is fired from the Dead Letter