Examines Jake’s reaction to Brett’s entourage of homosexuals, concluding that Jake’s misdirected anger towards these “dandies” stems from his own sexually debilitating wound. Rudat goes on to argue that it is possible to read Jake as a closeted homosexual who comes to terms with his wound and achieves sexual dominance in the final scene with Brett
Argues that attempts to impose gender norms on Brett and Jake result in misreading the text. Discuss...
Far from reading Jake Barnes’s impotence as a detriment, Bradley argues that his steer-like qualitie...
Hemingway: A Study in Gender and Sexuality explores a subject that few scholars have studied: how t...
Close textual reading focusing on allusion, myth-adaptation, humor, and irony. Contends that Hemingw...
“Oh, Jake, ” Brett said, “we could have had a damned good time together.” Ahead was a mounted police...
Posits that Jake seeks out Pedro Romero to serve as his sexual stand-in (prosthetic supplementation)...
Theorizing that the novel is an exploration of the nature of homosexuality, Nissen examines veiled s...
Isn\u27t it pretty to think so? The ambiguity of this question, posed by Jake Barnes in the last li...
Draws on theories of evolutionary psychology and cognitive science in his examination of masculine p...
Close textual reading to reveal biblical and other allusions, sexual jokes, and puns buried within t...
Traces Jake Barnes’s efforts to define homosexual and heterosexual desire as two separate entities w...
Argues that Hemingway’s anxieties regarding castration and emasculation, due to his own war injuries...
Relying on the theories of Lacan, Derrida, and Freud, Stoltzfus focuses on language and phallic abse...
This paper investigates how gender and sexuality are socially constructed, and therefore how these t...
Close reading of the Botin’s restaurant scene within the context of the novel, arguing that Jake’s s...
Argues that attempts to impose gender norms on Brett and Jake result in misreading the text. Discuss...
Far from reading Jake Barnes’s impotence as a detriment, Bradley argues that his steer-like qualitie...
Hemingway: A Study in Gender and Sexuality explores a subject that few scholars have studied: how t...
Close textual reading focusing on allusion, myth-adaptation, humor, and irony. Contends that Hemingw...
“Oh, Jake, ” Brett said, “we could have had a damned good time together.” Ahead was a mounted police...
Posits that Jake seeks out Pedro Romero to serve as his sexual stand-in (prosthetic supplementation)...
Theorizing that the novel is an exploration of the nature of homosexuality, Nissen examines veiled s...
Isn\u27t it pretty to think so? The ambiguity of this question, posed by Jake Barnes in the last li...
Draws on theories of evolutionary psychology and cognitive science in his examination of masculine p...
Close textual reading to reveal biblical and other allusions, sexual jokes, and puns buried within t...
Traces Jake Barnes’s efforts to define homosexual and heterosexual desire as two separate entities w...
Argues that Hemingway’s anxieties regarding castration and emasculation, due to his own war injuries...
Relying on the theories of Lacan, Derrida, and Freud, Stoltzfus focuses on language and phallic abse...
This paper investigates how gender and sexuality are socially constructed, and therefore how these t...
Close reading of the Botin’s restaurant scene within the context of the novel, arguing that Jake’s s...
Argues that attempts to impose gender norms on Brett and Jake result in misreading the text. Discuss...
Far from reading Jake Barnes’s impotence as a detriment, Bradley argues that his steer-like qualitie...
Hemingway: A Study in Gender and Sexuality explores a subject that few scholars have studied: how t...