Hemingway, through his characters, illustrates the many different genres and functions of disease. More than just inflictors of sadness and pain, disease and injury are part of the human condition. They are undeniable truths that give life to humanity, Hemingway’s characters, and Hemingway himself. As Hemingway writes in Death in the Afternoon, “…all stories, if continued far enough, end in death, and he is no true storyteller who would keep that from you.” Part of Hemingway’s art is acknowledging that there is no true cure. Vitality and death, contentedness and pain, disease and survival all coexist in Hemingway’s writing as one: life
Outlines the progression of Hemingway’s fictional portrayal of old age and its relationship to death...
Relying on Richard Rorty’s theories of art and politics, Curtis argues that Hemingway’s work exhibit...
Draws on Freud’s theory of psychobiography to examine the devastating effect of the suicide of Hemin...
Hemingway, through his characters, illustrates the many different genres and functions of disease. M...
Examination of Hemingway’s declining health in relation to his writing. Details the various psycholo...
Hemingway\u27s very short story A Day\u27s Wait has received only passing critical interest that g...
Biopsychosocial approach to Hemingway’s life and suicide, drawing on biographies, letters, writing f...
Examines how Hemingway, Fitzgerald, and Styron wrote about their depression as a way of understandin...
There are many writers who use factual and fictional framework for their creative writing. Usually, ...
Focusing on themes of death and renewal, Haldar discusses the ways Hemingway’s writing encapsulates ...
Presents Death in the Afternoon as Hemingway’s therapeutic counsel to violent, inexplicable trauma, ...
The life and works of Ernest Miller Hemingway resemble the views of the people of Castile, Spain in ...
Applies Elisabeth Kübler-Ross’s work on death and dying to the subject of death throughout Hemingway...
Looks at Hemingway’s recasting of familiar things such as a soft breeze on the family dog to represe...
Hemingway is different from his contemporaries in that he, in a sense, is a pessimistic and melancho...
Outlines the progression of Hemingway’s fictional portrayal of old age and its relationship to death...
Relying on Richard Rorty’s theories of art and politics, Curtis argues that Hemingway’s work exhibit...
Draws on Freud’s theory of psychobiography to examine the devastating effect of the suicide of Hemin...
Hemingway, through his characters, illustrates the many different genres and functions of disease. M...
Examination of Hemingway’s declining health in relation to his writing. Details the various psycholo...
Hemingway\u27s very short story A Day\u27s Wait has received only passing critical interest that g...
Biopsychosocial approach to Hemingway’s life and suicide, drawing on biographies, letters, writing f...
Examines how Hemingway, Fitzgerald, and Styron wrote about their depression as a way of understandin...
There are many writers who use factual and fictional framework for their creative writing. Usually, ...
Focusing on themes of death and renewal, Haldar discusses the ways Hemingway’s writing encapsulates ...
Presents Death in the Afternoon as Hemingway’s therapeutic counsel to violent, inexplicable trauma, ...
The life and works of Ernest Miller Hemingway resemble the views of the people of Castile, Spain in ...
Applies Elisabeth Kübler-Ross’s work on death and dying to the subject of death throughout Hemingway...
Looks at Hemingway’s recasting of familiar things such as a soft breeze on the family dog to represe...
Hemingway is different from his contemporaries in that he, in a sense, is a pessimistic and melancho...
Outlines the progression of Hemingway’s fictional portrayal of old age and its relationship to death...
Relying on Richard Rorty’s theories of art and politics, Curtis argues that Hemingway’s work exhibit...
Draws on Freud’s theory of psychobiography to examine the devastating effect of the suicide of Hemin...