For Whom the Bell Tolls is Ernest Hemingway's story of the Spanish Civil War. This war has often been seen as a conflict between good and evil, and the novel is frequently viewed as a way of illustrating the brotherhood of man in its portrayal of how Robert Jordan fights as a volunteer for the republicans against the fascists. This essay shows that Jordan actually loses his faith in the war. I instead propose that his determination to perform his mission is regained through Maria, and that he integrates with her as he finishes his mission. Initially, Jordan becomes alienated because he discovers the hopelessness and immorality of the republican struggle. The fascists are really not true enemies, and the republicans seem to have become the...
Ernest Hemingway occupies a towering place among the twentieth century post-war writers. The alienat...
Examines the moral dimensions of Hemingway’s code found in For Whom the Bell Tolls considering the a...
Argues that the novel’s complex representation of war as abhorrent yet sometimes justified reflects ...
For Whom the Bell Tolls is Ernest Hemingway's story of the Spanish Civil War. This war has often b...
Ernest Hemingway’s For Whom the Bell Tolls have been praised by critics, such as Edmund Wilson and R...
?é?á This research is undergone in order to look for surface manifestation and to find out deep stru...
As an ambulance driver in World War I and a war correspondent in World War II and the Spanish Civil ...
The theme of bravery and cowardice, in addition to the idea of death and survival are marvelously de...
Abstract ?é?á This research is undergone in order to look for surface manifestation and to find out ...
Focuses on Jordan’s attempts, as an outsider in a foreign land, to assimilate fully and achieve a ne...
This essay examines commitment and abandonment structured as two binary opposites informing For Whom...
This article tries to analyze the internal mechanisms by which Ernest Hemingway transforms the prota...
Examines a controversy arising from the characterization in For Whom the Bell Tolls of a real-life C...
The term ‘alienation’ continues to be a central concept summarizing salient facets of life in contem...
Overview of the global tensions leading up to the Spanish Civil War and the scope of Hemingway’s con...
Ernest Hemingway occupies a towering place among the twentieth century post-war writers. The alienat...
Examines the moral dimensions of Hemingway’s code found in For Whom the Bell Tolls considering the a...
Argues that the novel’s complex representation of war as abhorrent yet sometimes justified reflects ...
For Whom the Bell Tolls is Ernest Hemingway's story of the Spanish Civil War. This war has often b...
Ernest Hemingway’s For Whom the Bell Tolls have been praised by critics, such as Edmund Wilson and R...
?é?á This research is undergone in order to look for surface manifestation and to find out deep stru...
As an ambulance driver in World War I and a war correspondent in World War II and the Spanish Civil ...
The theme of bravery and cowardice, in addition to the idea of death and survival are marvelously de...
Abstract ?é?á This research is undergone in order to look for surface manifestation and to find out ...
Focuses on Jordan’s attempts, as an outsider in a foreign land, to assimilate fully and achieve a ne...
This essay examines commitment and abandonment structured as two binary opposites informing For Whom...
This article tries to analyze the internal mechanisms by which Ernest Hemingway transforms the prota...
Examines a controversy arising from the characterization in For Whom the Bell Tolls of a real-life C...
The term ‘alienation’ continues to be a central concept summarizing salient facets of life in contem...
Overview of the global tensions leading up to the Spanish Civil War and the scope of Hemingway’s con...
Ernest Hemingway occupies a towering place among the twentieth century post-war writers. The alienat...
Examines the moral dimensions of Hemingway’s code found in For Whom the Bell Tolls considering the a...
Argues that the novel’s complex representation of war as abhorrent yet sometimes justified reflects ...