Analysis of the novel’s symbolic landscape, providing a close reading of Cantwell’s imaginary road trip from Kansas City to reveal a religious subtext of absolution and rebirth. Nickel connects Cantwell’s need for atonement with the personal horrors Hemingway experienced during World War II, contending that “Kansas City may serve in Hemingway’s memory and imagination as a point of return and renewal.
Examines Hemingway’s lifelong fascination with primitive modernism, tracing his interest in African ...
Manuscript study. Detailed investigation of Hemingway’s extensive drafting and revision process, dra...
Across the River and into the Trees was Ernest Hemingway's least popular and most unrecognized novel...
Uses Leo Marx’s The Machine in the Garden to discuss the breakdown between wilderness and civilizati...
Investigates Hemingway’s descriptive writing, drawing connections between his stylistic simplicity a...
Drawing on trauma theory, Messent examines the effects of trauma on the scarred Nick Adams in severa...
The purpose of this thesis is, first, to examine the critical controversy surrounding the publicatio...
Examines how the topography of Venice and vicinity become central character and major theme of Acr...
Draws on Girard’s theories of scapegoating to examine Cantwell’s position as the unjustly persecuted...
Specifically, the study of the progression focuses on examining Hemingway\u27s Across the River and ...
Discusses Hemingway’s brief references to Kansas City in some of his unpublished manuscripts and lam...
Explores Hemingway’s treatment of gender and psychic trauma, relating Cantwell’s disabilities to his...
Explores the theme of universal alienation, particularly considering its comparison of Kansas City t...
Like generations of American students, my first exposure to the outsized life and highly stylized wr...
Draws on the theories of “becoming” found in the work of Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari to discus...
Examines Hemingway’s lifelong fascination with primitive modernism, tracing his interest in African ...
Manuscript study. Detailed investigation of Hemingway’s extensive drafting and revision process, dra...
Across the River and into the Trees was Ernest Hemingway's least popular and most unrecognized novel...
Uses Leo Marx’s The Machine in the Garden to discuss the breakdown between wilderness and civilizati...
Investigates Hemingway’s descriptive writing, drawing connections between his stylistic simplicity a...
Drawing on trauma theory, Messent examines the effects of trauma on the scarred Nick Adams in severa...
The purpose of this thesis is, first, to examine the critical controversy surrounding the publicatio...
Examines how the topography of Venice and vicinity become central character and major theme of Acr...
Draws on Girard’s theories of scapegoating to examine Cantwell’s position as the unjustly persecuted...
Specifically, the study of the progression focuses on examining Hemingway\u27s Across the River and ...
Discusses Hemingway’s brief references to Kansas City in some of his unpublished manuscripts and lam...
Explores Hemingway’s treatment of gender and psychic trauma, relating Cantwell’s disabilities to his...
Explores the theme of universal alienation, particularly considering its comparison of Kansas City t...
Like generations of American students, my first exposure to the outsized life and highly stylized wr...
Draws on the theories of “becoming” found in the work of Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari to discus...
Examines Hemingway’s lifelong fascination with primitive modernism, tracing his interest in African ...
Manuscript study. Detailed investigation of Hemingway’s extensive drafting and revision process, dra...
Across the River and into the Trees was Ernest Hemingway's least popular and most unrecognized novel...