Traces the historical development of American hunting culture and the resulting social attitudes toward the ideal American hunter. Focusing on the tension between the hunter as elite individualist and democratic everyman, Maier concludes that Hemingway was “moving toward a more sophisticated understanding of the implications of the transformation of hunting into a leisure sport.” Calls for further investigation into the cultural influence of hunting on Hemingway and his writing
Chronicles Hemingway’s lifelong passion for hunting through this collection of the author’s writings...
Contemporary American hunting and fishing literature draws upon a tradition which, like the acts of ...
From a historical perspective, the hunting of wild animals by man has never been depicted as a subje...
This project explores the place of sport hunting in human history, especially as it came to be expre...
Public attitudes toward hunting have passed through several distinct phases in American history. For...
American sport hunters of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries “aimed” to reclaim the f...
Hunting has always had multiple strands of meaning, and we cannot hope to comb them out in a short e...
Hunting and fishing made up a large part of the life of Ernest Hemingway, and these sports, in turn,...
Hunting is a social world in which members socially differentiate themselves into smaller social wor...
This article examines how hunting came to define the American identity in the nineteenth century and...
This research project aims to explore the micro-culture surrounding big game and trophy hunting as a...
Uses Hemingway’s three “Letters” on hunting appearing in Esquire (1934) as a lens for viewing Macomb...
This study examines the role of fox-hunting in the establishment of Anglo-American elite transatlant...
Bakhtinian reading of the hunter/prey binary, focusing briefly on domestic hunters such as Harry of ...
This project explores the changing meaning of hunting in American political and cultural life from 1...
Chronicles Hemingway’s lifelong passion for hunting through this collection of the author’s writings...
Contemporary American hunting and fishing literature draws upon a tradition which, like the acts of ...
From a historical perspective, the hunting of wild animals by man has never been depicted as a subje...
This project explores the place of sport hunting in human history, especially as it came to be expre...
Public attitudes toward hunting have passed through several distinct phases in American history. For...
American sport hunters of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries “aimed” to reclaim the f...
Hunting has always had multiple strands of meaning, and we cannot hope to comb them out in a short e...
Hunting and fishing made up a large part of the life of Ernest Hemingway, and these sports, in turn,...
Hunting is a social world in which members socially differentiate themselves into smaller social wor...
This article examines how hunting came to define the American identity in the nineteenth century and...
This research project aims to explore the micro-culture surrounding big game and trophy hunting as a...
Uses Hemingway’s three “Letters” on hunting appearing in Esquire (1934) as a lens for viewing Macomb...
This study examines the role of fox-hunting in the establishment of Anglo-American elite transatlant...
Bakhtinian reading of the hunter/prey binary, focusing briefly on domestic hunters such as Harry of ...
This project explores the changing meaning of hunting in American political and cultural life from 1...
Chronicles Hemingway’s lifelong passion for hunting through this collection of the author’s writings...
Contemporary American hunting and fishing literature draws upon a tradition which, like the acts of ...
From a historical perspective, the hunting of wild animals by man has never been depicted as a subje...