Close reading of the system of oppositions that thematically structures the novel and reveals Frederic’s apprehensions, especially addressing the configuration of war and haven. Explores the subtext of doublings in several identity confusions, concluding that Catherine’s death saves Frederic from his continual search for meaningful identity
Reads Hemingway’s organization of the novel into character groups as a postwar commentary on the con...
This paper explores the possibility that Hemingway scholars are overlooking the development of Hemin...
Claims A Farewell to Arms is Hemingway’s finest novel, admiring the simplicity of his writing as an ...
Proposes the calamity of the novel to be the love between the protagonists, arguing that A Farewell ...
Concentrates on the novel’s dialogical qualities, analyzing Hemingway’s controlled style in relation...
Focuses on how love is defined and manifested in the novel, asserting that love illuminates the char...
Relies on the theories of French feminist Helene Cixous in his examination of Hemingway’s opposition...
Draws on William James’s philosophical theories, arguing that Jamesion pragmatism helps the reader t...
Explores the stages of Hemingway’s deepening disillusionment with World War I, attributing it to his...
Comparison study of each novel’s representation of their generation’s struggle with war. Contrasts F...
Reads A Farewell to Arms as an ‘anti-Aeneid’ subverting the Roman conceptions of honor and patriarch...
Connects Hemingway’s prose style with the artistic conventions of a still-life painting to expose Fr...
Argues that a close examination of the novel’s focus on war and fascism reveals both an underlying p...
Interprets Othello’s presence in Green Hills of Africa, The Sun Also Rises, and A Farewell to Arms, ...
Extended study of death’s changing cultural meaning in the aftermath of World War I, arguing that A ...
Reads Hemingway’s organization of the novel into character groups as a postwar commentary on the con...
This paper explores the possibility that Hemingway scholars are overlooking the development of Hemin...
Claims A Farewell to Arms is Hemingway’s finest novel, admiring the simplicity of his writing as an ...
Proposes the calamity of the novel to be the love between the protagonists, arguing that A Farewell ...
Concentrates on the novel’s dialogical qualities, analyzing Hemingway’s controlled style in relation...
Focuses on how love is defined and manifested in the novel, asserting that love illuminates the char...
Relies on the theories of French feminist Helene Cixous in his examination of Hemingway’s opposition...
Draws on William James’s philosophical theories, arguing that Jamesion pragmatism helps the reader t...
Explores the stages of Hemingway’s deepening disillusionment with World War I, attributing it to his...
Comparison study of each novel’s representation of their generation’s struggle with war. Contrasts F...
Reads A Farewell to Arms as an ‘anti-Aeneid’ subverting the Roman conceptions of honor and patriarch...
Connects Hemingway’s prose style with the artistic conventions of a still-life painting to expose Fr...
Argues that a close examination of the novel’s focus on war and fascism reveals both an underlying p...
Interprets Othello’s presence in Green Hills of Africa, The Sun Also Rises, and A Farewell to Arms, ...
Extended study of death’s changing cultural meaning in the aftermath of World War I, arguing that A ...
Reads Hemingway’s organization of the novel into character groups as a postwar commentary on the con...
This paper explores the possibility that Hemingway scholars are overlooking the development of Hemin...
Claims A Farewell to Arms is Hemingway’s finest novel, admiring the simplicity of his writing as an ...