Connects the novel’s numerous imperialism references to Brett’s colonization of men, including Cohn, Mippipopolous, Romero, and Jake. Concludes that by novel’s end, Jake realizes his domination and seeks to free himself of Brett’s control
The Significance of a Religious Pilgrimage in Ernest Hemingway’s The Sun Also Rises The Sun Also Ri...
Interprets Othello’s presence in Green Hills of Africa, The Sun Also Rises, and A Farewell to Arms, ...
Reads the novel as a response to the collapse of traditional, romantic values following World War I....
Marxist examination, opening with a critique of Hemingway’s method (including the use of omission an...
Arguing against critical opinion that Brett selflessly sends Romero away while the two are in Madrid...
“Oh, Jake, ” Brett said, “we could have had a damned good time together.” Ahead was a mounted police...
Investigates Jake’s humorous and ironic use of equivocation (references to Senlis and Grand Cerf) ai...
Theorizing that the novel is an exploration of the nature of homosexuality, Nissen examines veiled s...
Focuses on the expatriates’ sense of belonging based on their shared debilitating war experience. Co...
Reference source. Opens with a brief biography of Hemingway’s early years, including his conservativ...
Surveys the novel’s biographical origins, composition, and reception before moving into an analysis ...
Close textual reading to reveal biblical and other allusions, sexual jokes, and puns buried within t...
The Sun Also Rises is a novel rich with elements of Catholicism, which are woven into Jake Barnes’ p...
Relying on the theories of Lacan, Derrida, and Freud, Stoltzfus focuses on language and phallic abse...
Argues for Brett’s performative role as mother-figure and analyzes the oedipal tendencies of the “bo...
The Significance of a Religious Pilgrimage in Ernest Hemingway’s The Sun Also Rises The Sun Also Ri...
Interprets Othello’s presence in Green Hills of Africa, The Sun Also Rises, and A Farewell to Arms, ...
Reads the novel as a response to the collapse of traditional, romantic values following World War I....
Marxist examination, opening with a critique of Hemingway’s method (including the use of omission an...
Arguing against critical opinion that Brett selflessly sends Romero away while the two are in Madrid...
“Oh, Jake, ” Brett said, “we could have had a damned good time together.” Ahead was a mounted police...
Investigates Jake’s humorous and ironic use of equivocation (references to Senlis and Grand Cerf) ai...
Theorizing that the novel is an exploration of the nature of homosexuality, Nissen examines veiled s...
Focuses on the expatriates’ sense of belonging based on their shared debilitating war experience. Co...
Reference source. Opens with a brief biography of Hemingway’s early years, including his conservativ...
Surveys the novel’s biographical origins, composition, and reception before moving into an analysis ...
Close textual reading to reveal biblical and other allusions, sexual jokes, and puns buried within t...
The Sun Also Rises is a novel rich with elements of Catholicism, which are woven into Jake Barnes’ p...
Relying on the theories of Lacan, Derrida, and Freud, Stoltzfus focuses on language and phallic abse...
Argues for Brett’s performative role as mother-figure and analyzes the oedipal tendencies of the “bo...
The Significance of a Religious Pilgrimage in Ernest Hemingway’s The Sun Also Rises The Sun Also Ri...
Interprets Othello’s presence in Green Hills of Africa, The Sun Also Rises, and A Farewell to Arms, ...
Reads the novel as a response to the collapse of traditional, romantic values following World War I....