Argues that both Hemingway’s For Whom the Bell Tolls and Orwell’s Homage to Catalonia (1938) use the backdrop of war to retrospectively raise ethical and epistemic questions regarding the choices, commitments, and sacrifices one makes within the limitations of personal knowledge. Contends that Hemingway and Orwell concluded one’s only duty was to do one’s best. Specifically explores Robert Jordan’s choice to accept his fatal mission in the face of love and a seemingly unwinnable war
The Spanish Civil War was fought between the Republicans, who were loyal to the Spanish Republic, an...
Arthur Koestler and George Orwell were amongst the many intellectuals who rushed to Spain when the c...
Comparison study situating each author within their biographical, historical, and political contexts...
Contextualizes the Spanish Civil War historically and politically, comparing Hemingway’s war in For ...
Compares the authors’ differing perspectives on the Spanish Civil War, contending that Hemingway, th...
Compares the utopian impulses of Hemingway’s novel with Orwell’s 1938 memoir, contending that despit...
The Spanish Civil War was an extraordinary event that draught unprecedent attention of intellectuals...
The Spanish Civil War was a war of ideologies, and it involved more voluntary individual participati...
For many Englishmen in the 1930s the Spanish Civil War was a water shed, a turning point not only in...
Compares the experiences and writings of Hemingway and Andre Malraux during the Spanish Civil War, n...
Surveys the ideological and political contexts of the Spanish civil war, including the political ram...
Argues against famed critic Harold Bloom’s judgment of the novel’s failure to transcend time and pla...
Argues that the novel’s complex representation of war as abhorrent yet sometimes justified reflects ...
Comments on both men’s leftist sympathies during the Spanish Civil War and related works, Orwell’s H...
Recounts Hemingway’s involvement in the Spanish Civil War, uncovering the historical analogues for s...
The Spanish Civil War was fought between the Republicans, who were loyal to the Spanish Republic, an...
Arthur Koestler and George Orwell were amongst the many intellectuals who rushed to Spain when the c...
Comparison study situating each author within their biographical, historical, and political contexts...
Contextualizes the Spanish Civil War historically and politically, comparing Hemingway’s war in For ...
Compares the authors’ differing perspectives on the Spanish Civil War, contending that Hemingway, th...
Compares the utopian impulses of Hemingway’s novel with Orwell’s 1938 memoir, contending that despit...
The Spanish Civil War was an extraordinary event that draught unprecedent attention of intellectuals...
The Spanish Civil War was a war of ideologies, and it involved more voluntary individual participati...
For many Englishmen in the 1930s the Spanish Civil War was a water shed, a turning point not only in...
Compares the experiences and writings of Hemingway and Andre Malraux during the Spanish Civil War, n...
Surveys the ideological and political contexts of the Spanish civil war, including the political ram...
Argues against famed critic Harold Bloom’s judgment of the novel’s failure to transcend time and pla...
Argues that the novel’s complex representation of war as abhorrent yet sometimes justified reflects ...
Comments on both men’s leftist sympathies during the Spanish Civil War and related works, Orwell’s H...
Recounts Hemingway’s involvement in the Spanish Civil War, uncovering the historical analogues for s...
The Spanish Civil War was fought between the Republicans, who were loyal to the Spanish Republic, an...
Arthur Koestler and George Orwell were amongst the many intellectuals who rushed to Spain when the c...
Comparison study situating each author within their biographical, historical, and political contexts...