Don\u27t Believe Everything You Read: Hoaxes and Satire in the Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym

Abstract

The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym stands out among Edgar Allan Poe\u27s body of work as his only novel. It also stands out in the fact that it has received comparatively little attention from scholars, owing at least in part to the idea that it is a literary failure on Poe\u27s part. Analysis reveals quite the contrary, however, as the novel is not a disjointed narrative masquerading as travel literature, but rather it is a satire of the genre of travel literature. Poe was driven to write the novel at the behest of his publisher, who also encouraged Poe to plagiarize authentic travel literature for his own narrative in order to create a more saleable product. Poe borrowed heavily from Benjamin Morrell\u27s A Narrative of Four Voyages and fashioned his own novel as a satire of Morrell\u27s reportedly true account. I argue that Poe\u27s novel contains elements of hoax, satire, and parody and was written to satirize a genre of literature that Poe originally had no interest in pursuin

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