Comparison study. Draws on John Limon’s theories of war literature to show the complex relationship between war and peace in Crane’s “A Mystery of Heroism,” and to a lesser extent in A Farewell to Arms and chapter three of In Our Time. Concludes that Hemingway’s realistic style precludes an easy categorization of his rhetorical technique
Relates Hemingway’s personal experience in war to his fiction, examining the change in writing from ...
Celebratory survey of major texts, including A Farewell to Arms and For Whom the Bell Tolls, to illu...
Discusses the effects of war trauma, particularly posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), on the writi...
This myth that war is glorious, heroic, full of adventure and excitement has been for centuries and ...
Psychoanalytic approach reflecting on Hemingway’s views on war and peace found in his preface to A F...
Clarifies Hemingway’s complicated and conflicted views on war, correcting the popular perception tha...
Close examination of Hemingway’s view of war through his treatment of medals in “War Medals for Sale...
Discusses the psychological effects of World War I and the interim war period on Hemingway and his w...
Collection of reprinted essays by such well-known Hemingway scholars as Robert W. Lewis, Robert E. G...
This study seeks to excavate a certain line of irony running through the war fiction of Ernest Hemin...
Comparison study of each novel’s representation of their generation’s struggle with war. Contrasts F...
Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms has autobiographical elements that reveal the author’s life...
Reads Cather’s One of Ours (1922) and A Farewell to Arms as complementary expositions on the meaning...
In his writing, Ernest Hemingway made frequent use of the word ‘honesty’. ‘Honesty’ is, however, an ...
As an ambulance driver in World War I and a war correspondent in World War II and the Spanish Civil ...
Relates Hemingway’s personal experience in war to his fiction, examining the change in writing from ...
Celebratory survey of major texts, including A Farewell to Arms and For Whom the Bell Tolls, to illu...
Discusses the effects of war trauma, particularly posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), on the writi...
This myth that war is glorious, heroic, full of adventure and excitement has been for centuries and ...
Psychoanalytic approach reflecting on Hemingway’s views on war and peace found in his preface to A F...
Clarifies Hemingway’s complicated and conflicted views on war, correcting the popular perception tha...
Close examination of Hemingway’s view of war through his treatment of medals in “War Medals for Sale...
Discusses the psychological effects of World War I and the interim war period on Hemingway and his w...
Collection of reprinted essays by such well-known Hemingway scholars as Robert W. Lewis, Robert E. G...
This study seeks to excavate a certain line of irony running through the war fiction of Ernest Hemin...
Comparison study of each novel’s representation of their generation’s struggle with war. Contrasts F...
Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms has autobiographical elements that reveal the author’s life...
Reads Cather’s One of Ours (1922) and A Farewell to Arms as complementary expositions on the meaning...
In his writing, Ernest Hemingway made frequent use of the word ‘honesty’. ‘Honesty’ is, however, an ...
As an ambulance driver in World War I and a war correspondent in World War II and the Spanish Civil ...
Relates Hemingway’s personal experience in war to his fiction, examining the change in writing from ...
Celebratory survey of major texts, including A Farewell to Arms and For Whom the Bell Tolls, to illu...
Discusses the effects of war trauma, particularly posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), on the writi...