Essays 1 - 30
In five pages this novel is analyzed in terms of the character's loneliness and how they mirror the author's own. Five sources ar...
him and a real gun is fired and he is killed. 6) The narrator is...
"association of love with life, and the consequent indissolubility and self-sufficiency of the relationship" (Tyler). However, lov...
can have genuine depth. Both while their relationship is still comparatively superficial, and later when it becomes truly meaningf...
In Indian Camp, he witnesses a particularly brutal example of his own fathers contempt for and disassociation with women in genera...
and resume business as usual. This was the America that greeted an injured young soldier named Ernest Hemingway. The place he lo...
who suffered a serious ax wound and is lying on the top bunk, above his laboring wife. When he heard this comment he "rolled over ...
Uncle Sam finally entered the First World War in 1917, Hemingway tried to enlist, but was constantly rejected because of his poor ...
errors, and so kind to people that I always thought of him as a sort of saint" (Hemingway 88). This is clearly a very high claim t...
Hemingway makes clear his own feelings even without stating them by delving more into the older waiters character than the younger...
End of Something," "Cat in the Rain," and "The Big Two-Hearted River (Parts I and II)." First well describe the stories, than anal...
writer recalls reading once that Hemingway said it really was nothing more than a book about an old man and the sea, nothing more....
his mother. Prior to the war, Hemingway lets the reader know that Krebs was in tune with small town life. He attended a Methodist ...
of fruit trees and beyond the plain the mountains were brown and bare. There was fighting in the mountains" (Hemingway 3). The t...
really did what he wanted to do. As one critic notes, he is "a disillusioned writer" (Arthur). But, in reality he is far more than...
pictured offering ironic commentaries on sculpture and art, with his conversation peppered with "allusions to Samuel Johnson, Sain...
Frederic and Hemingway both drove ambulances, and were both wounded, and both fell in love with their nurses. But, to take a trivi...
Hemingways protagonists often suffer war wounds similar to his; "excoriate the mother" as he did; or "reflect contemptuously on th...
to convince her that having the abortion is no big deal. PATTERN OF SYMBOLS ASSOCIATED WITH MODERN WORLD It is an interesti...
"girl" in reference to this female, a choice which would appear to indicate that she is somewhat younger than her companion yet He...
the position of the wound. He has been wounded in a way that precludes his ability to have sex and this seems to serve as the trag...
they write: attempting to arrive at some truth about a topic. In Hemingways case, a good argument can be made for his attempt to u...
is a man of honor and integrity. He represents all that is good in the world of man as he stands to be a man who follows the old r...
War while still serving with the Italians, and became well-decorated by the Italian government4. After returning from the war, he...
their lives and their emotions. However, she did have control over Jake, Robert, and Mike because they were lost, part of that los...
several symbolic connotations in this name, primarily the contrast to the happy little dance called the Jig and the fact that she ...
their lives and their emotions. These men did not need a woman to encourage them or to make them feel like they were men. Inter...
those standards of conduct which generations before World War I appeared to accept as adequate and perfectly satisfactory" (Meyers...
is often overlooked as a Hemingway story because it addresses a very different sort of theme. But, it is a timeless theme and it i...
and WWI, was a man affected by warfare and a man who is known for writing about the Lost Generation, the men and women who were lo...