Analyzes Hemingway’s concern with market forces on artists’ aesthetic ideals and insulated artistic sanctuaries (1920s Paris and Bimini) to demonstrate the posthumous novel’s thematic coherence. Maintains that in his attempt to recreate Paris on the island, Hudson comes to recognize his own complicity in corrupting his artistic integrity by pandering to market demands, and eventually acknowledges his tangential relationship to the high modernists of Hemingway’s Paris. Ulin connects Hudson to Hemingway’s other artist-protagonist mired in economic structure, David Bourne of The Garden of Eden
Sees the subject of the novel to be the creative process itself, with Roger the writer and Hudson th...
Inspired by A Moveable Feast, this collection of ninety-five stunning black-and-white photographs ca...
The major theme of Hemingway's last novel, Islands in the Stream, is the moral and spiritual develop...
On the artist’s development and maturation within the ideal environment of Paris. Focuses on Hemingw...
Reads the Paris portions as a microcosm for the novel, focusing on the destructive impact of Paris o...
On the importance of Paris for the young Hemingway’s literary apprenticeship and as the site of his ...
On the importance of impressionism, imagism, and polyphonic prose to Hemingway’s aesthetic throughou...
Argues that Hemingway’s writing about trout fishing while in Paris in the 1920s was instrumental in ...
The author’s fourth slice of Paris history focuses on economic and cultural turbulence in the years ...
Critical biography arguing that Hemingway’s four posthumous works, A Moveable Feast, Islands in the ...
Argues that Thomas Hudson and Santiago are the climactic versions of Hemingway’s artist-hero, with I...
Examines the function of islands, representing a means for reinventing one’s identity, in several He...
Characterizes the strained relationship between the two writers as a clash of literary traditions. L...
This interpretive study of "The Garden of Eden" manuscript examines the general critical conception ...
This work is a textual analysis of the editing of the posthumous fiction of Ernest Hemingway, includ...
Sees the subject of the novel to be the creative process itself, with Roger the writer and Hudson th...
Inspired by A Moveable Feast, this collection of ninety-five stunning black-and-white photographs ca...
The major theme of Hemingway's last novel, Islands in the Stream, is the moral and spiritual develop...
On the artist’s development and maturation within the ideal environment of Paris. Focuses on Hemingw...
Reads the Paris portions as a microcosm for the novel, focusing on the destructive impact of Paris o...
On the importance of Paris for the young Hemingway’s literary apprenticeship and as the site of his ...
On the importance of impressionism, imagism, and polyphonic prose to Hemingway’s aesthetic throughou...
Argues that Hemingway’s writing about trout fishing while in Paris in the 1920s was instrumental in ...
The author’s fourth slice of Paris history focuses on economic and cultural turbulence in the years ...
Critical biography arguing that Hemingway’s four posthumous works, A Moveable Feast, Islands in the ...
Argues that Thomas Hudson and Santiago are the climactic versions of Hemingway’s artist-hero, with I...
Examines the function of islands, representing a means for reinventing one’s identity, in several He...
Characterizes the strained relationship between the two writers as a clash of literary traditions. L...
This interpretive study of "The Garden of Eden" manuscript examines the general critical conception ...
This work is a textual analysis of the editing of the posthumous fiction of Ernest Hemingway, includ...
Sees the subject of the novel to be the creative process itself, with Roger the writer and Hudson th...
Inspired by A Moveable Feast, this collection of ninety-five stunning black-and-white photographs ca...
The major theme of Hemingway's last novel, Islands in the Stream, is the moral and spiritual develop...