YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Women and the Stories of Ernest Hemingway
Essays 1 - 30
for her money, but resents her for the power it has given her and the lack of ambition he himself embraces. He feels he has paid ...
Hills Like White Elephants, Up in Michigan and A Canary for One represents the inherent dichotomy that exists between conventional...
woman who is significant, but rather how she makes the male character feel. This is particularly true of young women, who almost f...
or three line synopsis of the story. Then, there would be at two or three points which illustrate how women in this piece are trea...
to salvage their relationship. When a scratch on his leg goes untreated with iodine, it becomes gangrenous, and as he lay dying, ...
quotes Gertrude Stein as calling Hemingways set "the lost generation" (Roth, 450). Although only a few of his stories and novels a...
In eight pages a search for meaning and the literary transition from modernism into postmodernism is presented in a discussion of ...
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...
This paper analyzes Ernest Hemingway's short story, The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber. The author addresses narrative voic...
his physician father to perform a Caesarean on a pregnant squaw. Dr. Adams describes the serious medical situation in clinical, m...
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...
In ten pages men and women as depicted in the characterizations of Jake Barnes and Lady Brett Ashley in Ernest Hemingway's novel T...
In six pages this paper examines how Hemingway's rather condescending attitudes and low opinion of women are reflected in his shor...
Like White Elephants" we have a man and a woman, although the characters are an American Man and a Girl, wherein the man is seemi...
In four pages this essay analyzes the short story by Ernest Hemingway with an emphasis upon symbolism includiing that represented ...
and Barnes are the same person. What is clear is that Hemingways experiences make Barnes seem very real. So does Hemingways famou...
women: "During the early 20th century the term new woman came to be used in the popular press. More young women than ever were goi...
writer recalls reading once that Hemingway said it really was nothing more than a book about an old man and the sea, nothing more....
In six pages this paper examines the socioeconomic and physical environments depicted in For Whom The Bell Tolls by Ernest Hemingw...
Kansas City Star, Hemingway himself "left Kansas City in the spring of 1918 and did not return for 10 years, [becoming] the first ...
She has been given the opportunity, or so she thinks, to finally live a life that is solely hers. There is a powerful sense of fre...
conversation between the bartenders as they speak of how he had tried to commit suicide. The older bartender indicates that it mus...
three oclock. What kind of hour is that to go to bed?" (Hemingway). His colleague says "He stays up because he likes it" (Hemingwa...
strolled down town, read and went to bed. He was still a hero to his two young sisters" (Hemingway 112). He was a hero because he ...
desperation or dismay of the narrator whereas Hemingways story leaves us to infer the desperation, but the ending is very similar....
injured while enjoying an African hunting adventure with his wife, Helen. The primary theme is death, and how man often puts off ...
In five pages this essay considers the theme of leaving home as experienced by the protagonists in Ernest Hemingway's 'A Soldier's...
In six pages this research paper examines how Ernest Hemingway uses women as objects in his stories 'Soldier's Home' and 'Indian C...
he presents. There is pain and violence and death in Hemingways world, and he struggles to show his readers this aspect of life....
conventions of gender as she, or Jake, thinks she is" (The Sun Also Rises (1926) Lecture Notes (Last Day of Discussion)). This fal...