Close textual reading focusing on allusion, myth-adaptation, humor, and irony. Contends that Hemingway employs literary allusion to create his psychological symbols. Rudat dives deeply beneath the Hemingway iceberg to examine such topics as the nature of Jake’s wound, Jake and Brett’s relationship, and Brett’s promiscuity
Takes issue with previous irony studies focusing on exclusion and rejection of idealism. Dow contend...
Investigates Jake’s humorous and ironic use of equivocation (references to Senlis and Grand Cerf) ai...
Relying on the theories of Lacan, Derrida, and Freud, Stoltzfus focuses on language and phallic abse...
Examines Jake’s reaction to Brett’s entourage of homosexuals, concluding that Jake’s misdirected ang...
“Oh, Jake, ” Brett said, “we could have had a damned good time together.” Ahead was a mounted police...
Interprets Othello’s presence in Green Hills of Africa, The Sun Also Rises, and A Farewell to Arms, ...
Posits that Jake seeks out Pedro Romero to serve as his sexual stand-in (prosthetic supplementation)...
Argues that Hemingway’s anxieties regarding castration and emasculation, due to his own war injuries...
When discussing Ernest Hemingway’s The Sun Also Rises (1926), scholars often criticize Lady Brett As...
Psycho-critical investigation of Hemingway\u27s life and works, drawing on contemporary wound theory...
Marxist examination, opening with a critique of Hemingway’s method (including the use of omission an...
Close reading of the Botin’s restaurant scene within the context of the novel, arguing that Jake’s s...
Reads the novel as a response to the collapse of traditional, romantic values following World War I....
On the allegorical and anti-Semitic nature of The Sun Also Rises. Concludes that Hemingway intention...
Close textual reading to reveal biblical and other allusions, sexual jokes, and puns buried within t...
Takes issue with previous irony studies focusing on exclusion and rejection of idealism. Dow contend...
Investigates Jake’s humorous and ironic use of equivocation (references to Senlis and Grand Cerf) ai...
Relying on the theories of Lacan, Derrida, and Freud, Stoltzfus focuses on language and phallic abse...
Examines Jake’s reaction to Brett’s entourage of homosexuals, concluding that Jake’s misdirected ang...
“Oh, Jake, ” Brett said, “we could have had a damned good time together.” Ahead was a mounted police...
Interprets Othello’s presence in Green Hills of Africa, The Sun Also Rises, and A Farewell to Arms, ...
Posits that Jake seeks out Pedro Romero to serve as his sexual stand-in (prosthetic supplementation)...
Argues that Hemingway’s anxieties regarding castration and emasculation, due to his own war injuries...
When discussing Ernest Hemingway’s The Sun Also Rises (1926), scholars often criticize Lady Brett As...
Psycho-critical investigation of Hemingway\u27s life and works, drawing on contemporary wound theory...
Marxist examination, opening with a critique of Hemingway’s method (including the use of omission an...
Close reading of the Botin’s restaurant scene within the context of the novel, arguing that Jake’s s...
Reads the novel as a response to the collapse of traditional, romantic values following World War I....
On the allegorical and anti-Semitic nature of The Sun Also Rises. Concludes that Hemingway intention...
Close textual reading to reveal biblical and other allusions, sexual jokes, and puns buried within t...
Takes issue with previous irony studies focusing on exclusion and rejection of idealism. Dow contend...
Investigates Jake’s humorous and ironic use of equivocation (references to Senlis and Grand Cerf) ai...
Relying on the theories of Lacan, Derrida, and Freud, Stoltzfus focuses on language and phallic abse...