Source study. Recounts the needless 1910 death of French primitive painter Henri Rousseau due to blood poisoning after neglecting a cut on his leg. Posits that Hemingway may have heard the story from Gertrude Stein who had honored Rousseau with a 1908 banquet
Opens with a brief survey of the story’s publication history and critical reception, focusing on the...
Thematic study comparing Hemingway’s treatment of the nature of death and mortality to Qaddafi’s, no...
Explores the relationship between sport and art found in Green Hills of Africa to counter Borges’s c...
Scholarship shows that Hemingway translated some of what he read in the Journal of American Medical ...
Discusses Hemingway’s suicide in the context of Camus’s existentialist thought in The Myth of Sisyph...
Examination of Hemingway’s declining health in relation to his writing. Details the various psycholo...
Gives evidence that Wharton may have sent Hemingway a copy of de Watteville’s book about photographi...
Psycho-critical investigation of Hemingway\u27s life and works, drawing on contemporary wound theory...
Draws on Hemingway’s 1919 medical readings and war experiences to explore the severity of the story’...
Applies Elisabeth Kübler-Ross’s work on death and dying to the subject of death throughout Hemingway...
Details the circumstances surrounding Hemingway’s suicide and describes his funeral and will. Includ...
Discusses both Picasso’s and Hemingway’s fascination with pain, brutality, and sexuality, culminatin...
Identifies a specific issue of the Journal of the AMA as a probable source for providing Hemingway w...
Traces the impact of wounding and death in Hemingway’s life, specifically the significance of his fa...
Looks at Hemingway’s recasting of familiar things such as a soft breeze on the family dog to represe...
Opens with a brief survey of the story’s publication history and critical reception, focusing on the...
Thematic study comparing Hemingway’s treatment of the nature of death and mortality to Qaddafi’s, no...
Explores the relationship between sport and art found in Green Hills of Africa to counter Borges’s c...
Scholarship shows that Hemingway translated some of what he read in the Journal of American Medical ...
Discusses Hemingway’s suicide in the context of Camus’s existentialist thought in The Myth of Sisyph...
Examination of Hemingway’s declining health in relation to his writing. Details the various psycholo...
Gives evidence that Wharton may have sent Hemingway a copy of de Watteville’s book about photographi...
Psycho-critical investigation of Hemingway\u27s life and works, drawing on contemporary wound theory...
Draws on Hemingway’s 1919 medical readings and war experiences to explore the severity of the story’...
Applies Elisabeth Kübler-Ross’s work on death and dying to the subject of death throughout Hemingway...
Details the circumstances surrounding Hemingway’s suicide and describes his funeral and will. Includ...
Discusses both Picasso’s and Hemingway’s fascination with pain, brutality, and sexuality, culminatin...
Identifies a specific issue of the Journal of the AMA as a probable source for providing Hemingway w...
Traces the impact of wounding and death in Hemingway’s life, specifically the significance of his fa...
Looks at Hemingway’s recasting of familiar things such as a soft breeze on the family dog to represe...
Opens with a brief survey of the story’s publication history and critical reception, focusing on the...
Thematic study comparing Hemingway’s treatment of the nature of death and mortality to Qaddafi’s, no...
Explores the relationship between sport and art found in Green Hills of Africa to counter Borges’s c...