Brief study outlining the novels’ shared narrative structure of tension, emotional or physical wounding, and departure. Citing this structure in many of the stories of In Our Time and Men Without Women as well, Adair concludes that such dependence on a single narrative pattern suggests Hemingway’s lack of imagination
Explores the appropriation of caesarean childbirth as an analogy for male creativity, arguing for th...
Exploration of the interwoven depiction of war and domesticity in The Sun Also Rises, A Farewell to ...
Ernest Miller Hemingway (1899-1961) a famous American Nobel laureate (1954), is considered the maste...
The two novels are The Sun Also Rises (1926) and A Farewell to Arms (1929). Not only are they among...
Relying on wound and code hero theories, Bhattacharya argues that while The Sun Also Rises represent...
Claims A Farewell to Arms is Hemingway’s finest novel, admiring the simplicity of his writing as an ...
Briefly compares the endings of several Hemingway’s works, noting their similar structure and excess...
Analyzes the unexpected mass appeal of A Farewell to Arms to post-World War I audiences, and its suc...
Compares narrative strategies employed by Dos Passos, Fitzgerald, and Hemingway to attract a noncomb...
Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms has autobiographical elements that reveal the author’s life...
Examines how the setting and images of the opening chapter of A Farewell to Arms anticipates the nov...
Explores the stages of Hemingway’s deepening disillusionment with World War I, attributing it to his...
Surveys the novel’s biographical origins, composition, and reception before moving into an analysis ...
The purpose of this thesis is to study the structure of the five major novels of Hemingway, excludin...
Structural pattern is a very important aspect of any novel and an understanding of it often leads to...
Explores the appropriation of caesarean childbirth as an analogy for male creativity, arguing for th...
Exploration of the interwoven depiction of war and domesticity in The Sun Also Rises, A Farewell to ...
Ernest Miller Hemingway (1899-1961) a famous American Nobel laureate (1954), is considered the maste...
The two novels are The Sun Also Rises (1926) and A Farewell to Arms (1929). Not only are they among...
Relying on wound and code hero theories, Bhattacharya argues that while The Sun Also Rises represent...
Claims A Farewell to Arms is Hemingway’s finest novel, admiring the simplicity of his writing as an ...
Briefly compares the endings of several Hemingway’s works, noting their similar structure and excess...
Analyzes the unexpected mass appeal of A Farewell to Arms to post-World War I audiences, and its suc...
Compares narrative strategies employed by Dos Passos, Fitzgerald, and Hemingway to attract a noncomb...
Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms has autobiographical elements that reveal the author’s life...
Examines how the setting and images of the opening chapter of A Farewell to Arms anticipates the nov...
Explores the stages of Hemingway’s deepening disillusionment with World War I, attributing it to his...
Surveys the novel’s biographical origins, composition, and reception before moving into an analysis ...
The purpose of this thesis is to study the structure of the five major novels of Hemingway, excludin...
Structural pattern is a very important aspect of any novel and an understanding of it often leads to...
Explores the appropriation of caesarean childbirth as an analogy for male creativity, arguing for th...
Exploration of the interwoven depiction of war and domesticity in The Sun Also Rises, A Farewell to ...
Ernest Miller Hemingway (1899-1961) a famous American Nobel laureate (1954), is considered the maste...