Moby Dick gained recognition as an important American novel in the 1920s, more than half a century after its publication. Its fame subsequently grew, not least because it was widely included in university syllabi in the United States, where it was elevated to the status of a great American novel. Moby Dick has endured for two reasons: its virtuosic, bravura writing is a pleasure to read, and its near-mythical characters and plot have proved accommodating to interpretations by successive generations, which have found in the novel representations of imperialism, same-sex marriage, and climate change.