Argues that the opening passage of the short story represents a vivid metaphor comparing the loggers’ destruction of trees and the economy of Horton’s Bay to Nick’s destruction of his relationship with Marjorie. Contends that Hemingway considered men’s sexual exploitation of women analogous to the logging industry’s desecration of northern Michigan
Ecofeminism is the convergence of feminism and ecology into one field of study focused on the relati...
Treats fishing in The Old Man and the Sea, Islands in the Stream, and “Big Two-Hearted River,” argui...
Ecofeminism is the convergence of feminism and ecology into one field of study focused on the relati...
Examines Hemingway’s short story through the lens of ecocriticism, focusing on the author’s affinity...
Ecocritical approach to the role of nature as a source of spiritual relief in a chaotic world, traci...
Environmental Writing and Great Lakes LiteratureHe shifted focus from that single virgin pine to the...
Investigates Hemingway’s descriptive writing, drawing connections between his stylistic simplicity a...
Arguing against traditional interpretations of The Old Man and the Sea as man against nature, Van No...
Close analysis focusing on the ecological implications of loss and destruction. Connecting Hemingway...
Analyzes Hemingway’s depiction of continuous shifts of setting, arguing for place over character, as...
In this paper, I analyze two contemporary post-apocalyptic novels, Jean Hegland’s novel Into the For...
Explains strategies (pre-reading, class discussion, and post-discussion) for helping to expand under...
Overview of rapidly changing environmental conditions during Hemingway’s lifetime, including the ris...
“Fathers and Sons” is the final tale in Ernest Hemingway’s Winner Take Nothing and last published Ni...
Assesses Hemingway\u27s status among environmentalists since the term ecocriticism, coined in 1978...
Ecofeminism is the convergence of feminism and ecology into one field of study focused on the relati...
Treats fishing in The Old Man and the Sea, Islands in the Stream, and “Big Two-Hearted River,” argui...
Ecofeminism is the convergence of feminism and ecology into one field of study focused on the relati...
Examines Hemingway’s short story through the lens of ecocriticism, focusing on the author’s affinity...
Ecocritical approach to the role of nature as a source of spiritual relief in a chaotic world, traci...
Environmental Writing and Great Lakes LiteratureHe shifted focus from that single virgin pine to the...
Investigates Hemingway’s descriptive writing, drawing connections between his stylistic simplicity a...
Arguing against traditional interpretations of The Old Man and the Sea as man against nature, Van No...
Close analysis focusing on the ecological implications of loss and destruction. Connecting Hemingway...
Analyzes Hemingway’s depiction of continuous shifts of setting, arguing for place over character, as...
In this paper, I analyze two contemporary post-apocalyptic novels, Jean Hegland’s novel Into the For...
Explains strategies (pre-reading, class discussion, and post-discussion) for helping to expand under...
Overview of rapidly changing environmental conditions during Hemingway’s lifetime, including the ris...
“Fathers and Sons” is the final tale in Ernest Hemingway’s Winner Take Nothing and last published Ni...
Assesses Hemingway\u27s status among environmentalists since the term ecocriticism, coined in 1978...
Ecofeminism is the convergence of feminism and ecology into one field of study focused on the relati...
Treats fishing in The Old Man and the Sea, Islands in the Stream, and “Big Two-Hearted River,” argui...
Ecofeminism is the convergence of feminism and ecology into one field of study focused on the relati...