Influence study comparing the existential philosophy found in Hemingway’s novel with Che Guevara’s Guerilla Warfare (1961) and Episodes of the Cuban Revolutionary War (1963). Morgan argues that both Jordan and Guevara serve as existential models because of their shared idealism, work ethic, adaptability, and “live in the moment” mentality
Reader’s companion providing an overview of the novel’s literary and historical contexts and critica...
Comparison study situating each author within their biographical, historical, and political contexts...
Argues that the novel’s complex representation of war as abhorrent yet sometimes justified reflects ...
Compares the legacies of Hemingway and Ernesto “Che” Guevara and their continuing impact on contempo...
Details Williams’s introduction to Fidel Castro through Hemingway. Also describes the authors’ share...
abstract: During the mid-1930s in Cuba, Ernest Hemingway befriended Cuban artist Antonio Gattorno (1...
Biographical account of Hemingway’s political activism during the mid-1930s, contending that Hemingw...
Traces the evolution of Hemingway’s political stance from isolationist to activist and proponent for...
Comments briefly on Twain’s influence, suggesting that the impassioned anti-imperialism found in “Th...
Recounts Hemingway’s involvement in the Spanish Civil War, uncovering the historical analogues for s...
Provides historical and political contexts for teaching Hemingway’s works, including the short stori...
Examines the moral dimensions of Hemingway’s code found in For Whom the Bell Tolls considering the a...
Examines the view of Spain that emerges through Hemingway’s autobiographical writings (Death in the ...
On Hemingway’s life in Cuba. Brasch provides a context for his Hemingway’s Library: A Composite Reco...
This article tries to analyze the internal mechanisms by which Ernest Hemingway transforms the prota...
Reader’s companion providing an overview of the novel’s literary and historical contexts and critica...
Comparison study situating each author within their biographical, historical, and political contexts...
Argues that the novel’s complex representation of war as abhorrent yet sometimes justified reflects ...
Compares the legacies of Hemingway and Ernesto “Che” Guevara and their continuing impact on contempo...
Details Williams’s introduction to Fidel Castro through Hemingway. Also describes the authors’ share...
abstract: During the mid-1930s in Cuba, Ernest Hemingway befriended Cuban artist Antonio Gattorno (1...
Biographical account of Hemingway’s political activism during the mid-1930s, contending that Hemingw...
Traces the evolution of Hemingway’s political stance from isolationist to activist and proponent for...
Comments briefly on Twain’s influence, suggesting that the impassioned anti-imperialism found in “Th...
Recounts Hemingway’s involvement in the Spanish Civil War, uncovering the historical analogues for s...
Provides historical and political contexts for teaching Hemingway’s works, including the short stori...
Examines the moral dimensions of Hemingway’s code found in For Whom the Bell Tolls considering the a...
Examines the view of Spain that emerges through Hemingway’s autobiographical writings (Death in the ...
On Hemingway’s life in Cuba. Brasch provides a context for his Hemingway’s Library: A Composite Reco...
This article tries to analyze the internal mechanisms by which Ernest Hemingway transforms the prota...
Reader’s companion providing an overview of the novel’s literary and historical contexts and critica...
Comparison study situating each author within their biographical, historical, and political contexts...
Argues that the novel’s complex representation of war as abhorrent yet sometimes justified reflects ...