YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Hemingways Loneliness in For Whom the Bell Tolls
Essays 91 - 120
In nine pages 3 essays are presented regarding Ernest Hemingway's To Have and Have Not that offer personal opinions, literary anal...
In five pages this report discusses how Hemingway's short story presentations are typically merely 'the tip of the iceberg' with t...
In five pages Hemingway's impotent protagonist particularly in terms of his complicated and sexually torturous relationship with L...
In a paper of five pages the youth and age of protagonists in Ernest Hemingway's The Old Man and the Sea and A Clean, Well Lighted...
Hemingway's works are discussed as they highlight the aspect of beauty as it appears in war. This unlikely subject is contemplated...
In five pages Hemingway's 'reminiscent narrative' and tone are examined within the context of this short story. Two sources are c...
In five pages this research essay explores the abortion debate within the context of Hemingway's short story and how important saf...
In ten pages this paper considers the authors' perspectives on reason and emotion as reflected in Ellison's 'Invisible Man,' Hemin...
In seven pages the ways in which Hemingway's real life mirrored his characters and fiction are examined within the context of vari...
developed what became known as the definitive Hemingway narrative style -- dispassionate, objective and oftentimes ironic. Life i...
quotes Gertrude Stein as calling Hemingways set "the lost generation" (Roth, 450). Although only a few of his stories and novels a...
In 4 pages free will and fate as it summons moral courage are considered in this comparative paper that includes a discussion of H...
In eight pages this paper analyzes how Hemingway's life experiences are artistically represented in his stories 'A Clean, Well Lig...
In five pages a critical analysis of the novel by Claude Clayton Smith in which The Sun Also Rises is linked with The Crystal Tren...
In eight pages a search for meaning and the literary transition from modernism into postmodernism is presented in a discussion of ...
even Hemingway himself consciously does not, that "blowing things heads off" is not the way to prove a mans masculinity. "What imp...
In five pages Hemingway's characterization of Robert Cohn is examined within the context of a critical article by Robert Meyerson ...
Kansas City Star, Hemingway himself "left Kansas City in the spring of 1918 and did not return for 10 years, [becoming] the first ...
In nine pages this paper examines the necessary logical sequence that evolves in the tragedies of Hemingway's A Farewell to Arms a...
In five pages this paper discusses Johnson's notion that literature cannot withstand the test of time in a comparative analysis of...
This 5 page paper analyzes the way in which the motif of the journey was used in three classic American novels: The Grapes of Wrat...
In five pages Hemingway's Harold Krebs is compared with Melville's story narrator in an argument that asserts that confrontation f...
In six pages this paper discusses how escaping into nature is thematically developed in Henry Roth's Call It Sleep, William Faulkn...
was eventually decided upon as a fix-it solution soon turned into a mistake of good intention when, in 1965, Charles Scribner Jr. ...
This paper examines how Joseph Heller's Catch 22 reflects the concepts featured in Kate Chopin's The Awakening, Ralph Ellison's In...
In seven pages phallic symbolism is considered in a comparative analysis of Melville's 'Bartleby the Scrivener' and Hemingway's 'H...
In five pages this paper discusses how spirituality and money are represented in O'Neill's Long Day's Journey into Night, Hemingwa...
driver, and at last he made it to the front in Europe during the height of World War I (Roth, 450). He was seriously wounded in It...
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...