Touching This Leviathan

Author:   Peter Wayne Moe
Publisher:   Oregon State University
ISBN:  

9780870713071


Pages:   152
Publication Date:   30 April 2021
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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Touching This Leviathan


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Overview

Touching This Leviathan asks how we might come to know the unknowable--in this case, whales, these animals so large yet so elusive, revealing just a sliver of back, a glimpse of a fluke, or, if you're lucky, a split-second breach before diving away. It's a pressing question, given how frequently whales are in the news: Japan just withdrew from the International Whaling Commission's ban on whaling; the Makah Tribe seeks to resume hunts; in 2019 there was a rash of dead gray whales along the west coast (some 200 of them); in 2018, an orca attracted international attention when she pushed her dead calf through the water 17 days before finally letting go. But other whale books sit in disciplinary silos: the history books, the science books, the literary books. There's no conversation between them, which is where Touching This Leviathan intervenes. Drawing upon biology, theology, local history, literary studies, environmental studies, and composition theory, Touching This Leviathan is necessarily interdisciplinary: literary nonfiction that gestures toward science and literary criticism as it invites readers into the belly of the whale.

Full Product Details

Author:   Peter Wayne Moe
Publisher:   Oregon State University
Imprint:   Oregon State University
Weight:   0.230kg
ISBN:  

9780870713071


ISBN 10:   0870713078
Pages:   152
Publication Date:   30 April 2021
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

Touching This Leviathan is at once a memoir, an essay on the art of composition, a commonplace book, and a love letter to whales. It is an artful collage in which the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. -James K.A. Smith, Image Journal Touching This Leviathan is both memoir and meditation, exploring what it means to watch and wait for whales, to live inside a whale, to flense a dead whale, to use the word 'whale'. Peter Moe's rich, thoughtful prose veers from personal experiences to history and science while reading like epic poetry. -- Erich Hoyt, Research Fellow, Whale and Dolphin Conservation, and Author, Orca: The Whale Called Killer, Insect Lives, Creatures of the Deep Touching This Leviathan is many books at once--a book of fatherhood, a book of faith, a book of teaching, a praxis of rhetoric, a ceto-bibliophile's catalog of whaling arcana, a guide to the allure and disgust of flensing, and the list could easily go on. But this undefinable something is itself part of the book's deep charm, evidence of what it is to live in search of the mysteries one is also next to. --Dan Beachy-Quick, author of A Whaler's Dictionary Touching This Leviathan is one of my favorite pieces of writing that I've read all season. This lyric work yields a map of a singular consciousness--a mind at work that stands in for the minds of many. --Elena Passarello, author of Animals Strike Curious Poses From citizen science to theology, from ecocriticism to writing theory, from biological regionalism to literary criticism, Professor Moe's accomplished interdisciplinary reach matches his firm grasp in this diverse and fascinating book. --Paul Lindholdt, author of Making Landfall and In Earshot of Water: Notes from the Columbia Plateau In Touching This Leviathan, Peter Moe explores what it means to truly know whales, deftly weaving together literary, biblical, and intimately personal threads into a tapestry that invited me to see the majestic and mysterious creatures I study with new eyes. --Ryan M. Bebej, biologist and paleontologist, Calvin University Moe's book is an obsessive act of poetry and reclamation out of memory and fact, a referential reverie. It is highly imagined and imaginative, as digressive as Melville's great opus, yet condensed into these few intense pages. It speaks of faith and spirituality and blasphemy and dissent. It is as brilliant on writing as it is on whales: the saying of them, their naming, their presence and absence. Skeletal, pathologised, sensual, mythologised, it lies very close indeed to the whale, to the whaleness of the whale. And like Moby-Dick, I would read it all over again. --Philip Hoare, author of The Whale


Moe's book is an obsessive act of poetry and reclamation out of memory and fact, a referential reverie. It is highly imagined and imaginative, as digressive as Melville's great opus, yet condensed into these few intense pages. It speaks of faith and spirituality and blasphemy and dissent. It is as brilliant on writing as it is on whales: the saying of them, their naming, their presence and absence. Skeletal, pathologised, sensual, mythologised, it lies very close indeed to the whale, to the whaleness of the whale. And like Moby-Dick, I would read it all over again. --Philip Hoare, author of The Whale In Touching This Leviathan, Peter Moe explores what it means to truly know whales, deftly weaving together literary, biblical, and intimately personal threads into a tapestry that invited me to see the majestic and mysterious creatures I study with new eyes. --Ryan M. Bebej, biologist and paleontologist, Calvin University From citizen science to theology, from ecocriticism to writing theory, from biological regionalism to literary criticism, Professor Moe's accomplished interdisciplinary reach matches his firm grasp in this diverse and fascinating book. --Paul Lindholdt, author of Making Landfall and In Earshot of Water: Notes from the Columbia Plateau Touching This Leviathan is one of my favorite pieces of writing that I've read all season. This lyric work yields a map of a singular consciousness--a mind at work that stands in for the minds of many. --Elena Passarello, author of Animals Strike Curious Poses Touching This Leviathan is many books at once--a book of fatherhood, a book of faith, a book of teaching, a praxis of rhetoric, a ceto-bibliophile's catalog of whaling arcana, a guide to the allure and disgust of flensing, and the list could easily go on. But this undefinable something is itself part of the book's deep charm, evidence of what it is to live in search of the mysteries one is also next to. --Dan Beachy-Quick, author of A Whaler's Dictionary Touching This Leviathan is both memoir and meditation, exploring what it means to watch and wait for whales, to live inside a whale, to flense a dead whale, to use the word 'whale'. Peter Moe's rich, thoughtful prose veers from personal experiences to history and science while reading like epic poetry. -- Erich Hoyt, Research Fellow, Whale and Dolphin Conservation, and Author, Orca: The Whale Called Killer, Insect Lives, Creatures of the Deep


"""Touching This Leviathan is at once a memoir, an essay on the art of composition, a commonplace book, and a love letter to whales. It is an artful collage in which the whole is greater than the sum of its parts."" -James K.A. Smith, Image Journal ""Touching This Leviathan is both memoir and meditation, exploring what it means to watch and wait for whales, to live inside a whale, to flense a dead whale, to use the word 'whale'. Peter Moe's rich, thoughtful prose veers from personal experiences to history and science while reading like epic poetry."" -- Erich Hoyt, Research Fellow, Whale and Dolphin Conservation, and Author, Orca: The Whale Called Killer, Insect Lives, Creatures of the Deep ""Touching This Leviathan is many books at once--a book of fatherhood, a book of faith, a book of teaching, a praxis of rhetoric, a ceto-bibliophile's catalog of whaling arcana, a guide to the allure and disgust of flensing, and the list could easily go on. But this undefinable something is itself part of the book's deep charm, evidence of what it is to live in search of the mysteries one is also next to."" --Dan Beachy-Quick, author of A Whaler's Dictionary ""Touching This Leviathan is one of my favorite pieces of writing that I've read all season. This lyric work yields a map of a singular consciousness--a mind at work that stands in for the minds of many."" --Elena Passarello, author of Animals Strike Curious Poses ""From citizen science to theology, from ecocriticism to writing theory, from biological regionalism to literary criticism, Professor Moe's accomplished interdisciplinary reach matches his firm grasp in this diverse and fascinating book."" --Paul Lindholdt, author of Making Landfall and In Earshot of Water: Notes from the Columbia Plateau ""In Touching This Leviathan, Peter Moe explores what it means to truly know whales, deftly weaving together literary, biblical, and intimately personal threads into a tapestry that invited me to see the majestic and mysterious creatures I study with new eyes."" --Ryan M. Bebej, biologist and paleontologist, Calvin University ""Moe's book is an obsessive act of poetry and reclamation out of memory and fact, a referential reverie. It is highly imagined and imaginative, as digressive as Melville's great opus, yet condensed into these few intense pages. It speaks of faith and spirituality and blasphemy and dissent. It is as brilliant on writing as it is on whales: the saying of them, their naming, their presence and absence. Skeletal, pathologised, sensual, mythologised, it lies very close indeed to the whale, to the whaleness of the whale. And like Moby-Dick, I would read it all over again."" --Philip Hoare, author of The Whale"


Touching This Leviathan is both memoir and meditation, exploring what it means to watch and wait for whales, to live inside a whale, to flense a dead whale, to use the word 'whale'. Peter Moe's rich, thoughtful prose veers from personal experiences to history and science while reading like epic poetry. -- Erich Hoyt, Research Fellow, Whale and Dolphin Conservation, and Author, Orca: The Whale Called Killer, Insect Lives, Creatures of the Deep Touching This Leviathan is many books at once--a book of fatherhood, a book of faith, a book of teaching, a praxis of rhetoric, a ceto-bibliophile's catalog of whaling arcana, a guide to the allure and disgust of flensing, and the list could easily go on. But this undefinable something is itself part of the book's deep charm, evidence of what it is to live in search of the mysteries one is also next to. --Dan Beachy-Quick, author of A Whaler's Dictionary Touching This Leviathan is one of my favorite pieces of writing that I've read all season. This lyric work yields a map of a singular consciousness--a mind at work that stands in for the minds of many. --Elena Passarello, author of Animals Strike Curious Poses From citizen science to theology, from ecocriticism to writing theory, from biological regionalism to literary criticism, Professor Moe's accomplished interdisciplinary reach matches his firm grasp in this diverse and fascinating book. --Paul Lindholdt, author of Making Landfall and In Earshot of Water: Notes from the Columbia Plateau In Touching This Leviathan, Peter Moe explores what it means to truly know whales, deftly weaving together literary, biblical, and intimately personal threads into a tapestry that invited me to see the majestic and mysterious creatures I study with new eyes. --Ryan M. Bebej, biologist and paleontologist, Calvin University Moe's book is an obsessive act of poetry and reclamation out of memory and fact, a referential reverie. It is highly imagined and imaginative, as digressive as Melville's great opus, yet condensed into these few intense pages. It speaks of faith and spirituality and blasphemy and dissent. It is as brilliant on writing as it is on whales: the saying of them, their naming, their presence and absence. Skeletal, pathologised, sensual, mythologised, it lies very close indeed to the whale, to the whaleness of the whale. And like Moby-Dick, I would read it all over again. --Philip Hoare, author of The Whale


Author Information

Peter Wayne Moe's Touching This Leviathan asks how someone might come to know the unknowable-in this case, whales. This is his first book, though he has also published over twenty essays on the teaching of writing. Moe is an assistant professor of English and oversees the writing program at Seattle Pacific University, where, in the summer of 2020, he led a project working alongside 130 volunteers to hang a whale skeleton in the school's science building.

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