Freudian analysis focusing on the novel’s death motif, suggesting Jake’s insomnia is caused by his preoccupation with impotence and fear of death. Traces Jake’s dysfunctional relationship with Brett to his obsessive reliving of the war, as evidenced through specific scenes, characters, and imagery
Argues that Hemingway’s anxieties regarding castration and emasculation, due to his own war injuries...
Draws on manuscripts in his analysis of the hopeless nature of Jake and Brett’s relationship. Cain c...
In my thesis project, I am especially interested in the reason for the decadent lifestyle of Heming...
Argues that Jake’s impotence is not only physical but psychological and moral as well, resulting in ...
Close reading of the Botin’s restaurant scene within the context of the novel, arguing that Jake’s s...
“Oh, Jake, ” Brett said, “we could have had a damned good time together.” Ahead was a mounted police...
Explores the seemingly contradictory nature of sleep in “Big Two-Hearted River” and “Now I Lay Me,” ...
Examines the neurological and psychological aftereffects of Jake’s wound, concentrating on the pheno...
Examines Jake’s reaction to Brett’s entourage of homosexuals, concluding that Jake’s misdirected ang...
Close textual reading focusing on allusion, myth-adaptation, humor, and irony. Contends that Hemingw...
Far from reading Jake Barnes’s impotence as a detriment, Bradley argues that his steer-like qualitie...
Gender study investigating Jake Barnes’s struggle to psychically integrate his masculine consciousne...
Connects the novel’s numerous imperialism references to Brett’s colonization of men, including Cohn,...
Suggests that the novel reflects Jake’s suppressed war memories by examining reoccurring allusions a...
Focuses on the expatriates’ sense of belonging based on their shared debilitating war experience. Co...
Argues that Hemingway’s anxieties regarding castration and emasculation, due to his own war injuries...
Draws on manuscripts in his analysis of the hopeless nature of Jake and Brett’s relationship. Cain c...
In my thesis project, I am especially interested in the reason for the decadent lifestyle of Heming...
Argues that Jake’s impotence is not only physical but psychological and moral as well, resulting in ...
Close reading of the Botin’s restaurant scene within the context of the novel, arguing that Jake’s s...
“Oh, Jake, ” Brett said, “we could have had a damned good time together.” Ahead was a mounted police...
Explores the seemingly contradictory nature of sleep in “Big Two-Hearted River” and “Now I Lay Me,” ...
Examines the neurological and psychological aftereffects of Jake’s wound, concentrating on the pheno...
Examines Jake’s reaction to Brett’s entourage of homosexuals, concluding that Jake’s misdirected ang...
Close textual reading focusing on allusion, myth-adaptation, humor, and irony. Contends that Hemingw...
Far from reading Jake Barnes’s impotence as a detriment, Bradley argues that his steer-like qualitie...
Gender study investigating Jake Barnes’s struggle to psychically integrate his masculine consciousne...
Connects the novel’s numerous imperialism references to Brett’s colonization of men, including Cohn,...
Suggests that the novel reflects Jake’s suppressed war memories by examining reoccurring allusions a...
Focuses on the expatriates’ sense of belonging based on their shared debilitating war experience. Co...
Argues that Hemingway’s anxieties regarding castration and emasculation, due to his own war injuries...
Draws on manuscripts in his analysis of the hopeless nature of Jake and Brett’s relationship. Cain c...
In my thesis project, I am especially interested in the reason for the decadent lifestyle of Heming...