Covers familiar ground on Hemingway’s four turbulent marriages, sums up the inherent risks of interpreting his iceberg prose, and provides a close reading of “Cat in the Rain,” focusing on gender identity, cat and mirror symbolism, and the theme of repressed desire. Concludes with a brief assessment of the treatment of women and the role of androgyny in The Garden of Eden
«Cat in the Rain» is one of the earliest Hemingway's short stories included in In Our Time (1925). ...
The Garden of Eden, Ernest Hemingway\u27s posthumous work, was edited by Tom Jenksa, anonymous edito...
Draws on Lacan’s theories to argue that Scribner’s published version foregrounds the novel’s conscio...
The publication of The Garden of Eden in 1986 opened the gates of Hemingway’s exegesis to gender cri...
(From the publisher's website) Ernest Hemingway is in Cuba, trying to finish his final novel The Ga...
Explores gender roles and the autobiographical nature of David’s writing within The Garden of Eden, ...
Explores Hemingway’s treatment of gender and psychic trauma, relating Cantwell’s disabilities to his...
This interpretive study of "The Garden of Eden" manuscript examines the general critical conception ...
Explores critical responses, biographical readings, and symbolism in Cat in the Rain, including th...
Discusses the wife’s desire for fulfillment and escape from time, lack of rapport with her husband, ...
Examines gender in several Hemingway texts considering his exploration of sexual identity in the unp...
Relying on letters, manuscripts, A Moveable Feast, and The Garden of Eden, Miller explores Hemingway...
Details methods for introducing students to the fluid and historically specific cultural conceptions...
In the familiar territory of sexual fluidity and related aspects of The Garden of Eden and other wor...
Argues for the complexity of George, reading his sexual impotence as symbolic of his authorial impot...
«Cat in the Rain» is one of the earliest Hemingway's short stories included in In Our Time (1925). ...
The Garden of Eden, Ernest Hemingway\u27s posthumous work, was edited by Tom Jenksa, anonymous edito...
Draws on Lacan’s theories to argue that Scribner’s published version foregrounds the novel’s conscio...
The publication of The Garden of Eden in 1986 opened the gates of Hemingway’s exegesis to gender cri...
(From the publisher's website) Ernest Hemingway is in Cuba, trying to finish his final novel The Ga...
Explores gender roles and the autobiographical nature of David’s writing within The Garden of Eden, ...
Explores Hemingway’s treatment of gender and psychic trauma, relating Cantwell’s disabilities to his...
This interpretive study of "The Garden of Eden" manuscript examines the general critical conception ...
Explores critical responses, biographical readings, and symbolism in Cat in the Rain, including th...
Discusses the wife’s desire for fulfillment and escape from time, lack of rapport with her husband, ...
Examines gender in several Hemingway texts considering his exploration of sexual identity in the unp...
Relying on letters, manuscripts, A Moveable Feast, and The Garden of Eden, Miller explores Hemingway...
Details methods for introducing students to the fluid and historically specific cultural conceptions...
In the familiar territory of sexual fluidity and related aspects of The Garden of Eden and other wor...
Argues for the complexity of George, reading his sexual impotence as symbolic of his authorial impot...
«Cat in the Rain» is one of the earliest Hemingway's short stories included in In Our Time (1925). ...
The Garden of Eden, Ernest Hemingway\u27s posthumous work, was edited by Tom Jenksa, anonymous edito...
Draws on Lacan’s theories to argue that Scribner’s published version foregrounds the novel’s conscio...