Queequeg

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English

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Etymology

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Proper noun

Queequeg

  1. A fictional sidekick character in American author Herman Melville's 1851 novel Moby-Dick, the multiracial tattooed Polynesian cannibal prince and skilled harpooner who became a whaler on European vessels out of wanderlust. Queequeg practices an alien fictional religion and constantly engages in feats of bravado intimidating to the white and ethnically-European protagonist but befriends him and shows no resentment at treatment by white societies. Melville's text describes him as “George Washington cannibalistically developed”.
    • 1999, Ray B. Browne, “Bonaparte, Napoleon”, in edited by Rosemary Herbert, The Oxford Companion to Crime and Mystery Writing, Oxford University Press, →DOI, →ISBN:
      Half British and half Aboriginal, Bony is in his early to middle forties. Like Herman Melville's Queequeg before him, Bony benefits from his mixture of races.
    • 2004, Joyce A. Rowe, “Herman Melville's Moby-Dick”, in edited by Jay Parini, The Oxford Encyclopedia of American Literature, Oxford University Press, →DOI, →ISBN; republished as Philip W. Leininger, editor, (Please provide a date or year):
      As they stroll out together they evoke stares, not because of Queequeg's outlandish tattooing (since New Bedford's whaling port draws a worldwide sailor population), but because of the easy companionship of a dark-skinned man with a white. Melville seems to raise the question, What might America have become if the European encounter with the wilderness had been directed by truly humane, universal values?

Noun

Queequeg (plural Queequegs)

  1. A person, fictional character, or other foil who literally or symbolically fulfills one or more of the roles Queequeg played in Moby-Dick such as the noble savage, Entwicklungsroman guru or exemplar, or racially-inflected spear carrier role.

Derived terms

Spanish

Proper noun

Queequeg m

  1. a fictional character in American author Herman Melville's 1851 novel Moby-Dick
    • 2015 November 21, Jacinto Antón, “En el corazón de la ballena [In the heart of the whale]”, in El País, archived from the original on 2015-11-23, Reportaje:
      Pero la palabra, me puntualizó la taxista, no hace referencia a un descanso muy profundo, ni a la arriesgada vida del ballenero, ni al ataúd de Queequeg, sino que es el apellido de una de las grandes familias pioneras del viejo Nantucket, ese Gotha de los mares—los Starbuck, Marcy, Coleman, Folgers—que maridó el coraje y el negocio, el arpón y el cuaquerismo, y se construyó un provechoso reino sobre el ámbar gris y el espermaceti.
      (please add an English translation of this quotation)