Examines a controversy arising from the characterization in For Whom the Bell Tolls of a real-life Communist figure associated with the International Brigades. Hemingway presents Marty as a “bloodthirsty” and “crazy” revolutionary, a portrayal that outraged and disappointed leftist and communist partisans. The author finds Hemingway engaging “more in polemic than epic, openly settling accounts over the fresh demise of the Spanish Republic” and driving a wedge between himself and such former allies as Milton Wolff and other members of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade. The hard feelings extended past World War II, and Marty’s unpublished papers reveal the extent of his own animosity and mirror the disdain for Hemingway expressed especially in post...
Discusses Hemingway’s time in Spain in 1937-1938 and the various forms of writing inspired by it, e....
Contextualizes the Spanish Civil War historically and politically, comparing Hemingway’s war in For ...
Ernest Hemingway’s For Whom the Bell Tolls have been praised by critics, such as Edmund Wilson and R...
On its publication in October 1940, Ernest Hemingway’s For Whom the Bell Tolls was widely acclaimed ...
Encyclopedic overview of Hemingway’s political engagement throughout his literary career. Suggests h...
Examines the moral dimensions of Hemingway’s code found in For Whom the Bell Tolls considering the a...
Argues that the novel’s complex representation of war as abhorrent yet sometimes justified reflects ...
Analyzes Hemingway’s characterization of the Spanish Civil War through the lens of For Whom the Bell...
Compares the authors’ differing perspectives on the Spanish Civil War, contending that Hemingway, th...
Overview of the global tensions leading up to the Spanish Civil War and the scope of Hemingway’s con...
Traces the evolution of Hemingway’s political stance from isolationist to activist and proponent for...
Recounts Hemingway’s involvement in the Spanish Civil War, uncovering the historical analogues for s...
Examines Hemingway’s undermining of the Republic’s heroic image in his postwar novel, an image he ha...
Reader’s companion providing an overview of the novel’s literary and historical contexts and critica...
Comparison study situating each author within their biographical, historical, and political contexts...
Discusses Hemingway’s time in Spain in 1937-1938 and the various forms of writing inspired by it, e....
Contextualizes the Spanish Civil War historically and politically, comparing Hemingway’s war in For ...
Ernest Hemingway’s For Whom the Bell Tolls have been praised by critics, such as Edmund Wilson and R...
On its publication in October 1940, Ernest Hemingway’s For Whom the Bell Tolls was widely acclaimed ...
Encyclopedic overview of Hemingway’s political engagement throughout his literary career. Suggests h...
Examines the moral dimensions of Hemingway’s code found in For Whom the Bell Tolls considering the a...
Argues that the novel’s complex representation of war as abhorrent yet sometimes justified reflects ...
Analyzes Hemingway’s characterization of the Spanish Civil War through the lens of For Whom the Bell...
Compares the authors’ differing perspectives on the Spanish Civil War, contending that Hemingway, th...
Overview of the global tensions leading up to the Spanish Civil War and the scope of Hemingway’s con...
Traces the evolution of Hemingway’s political stance from isolationist to activist and proponent for...
Recounts Hemingway’s involvement in the Spanish Civil War, uncovering the historical analogues for s...
Examines Hemingway’s undermining of the Republic’s heroic image in his postwar novel, an image he ha...
Reader’s companion providing an overview of the novel’s literary and historical contexts and critica...
Comparison study situating each author within their biographical, historical, and political contexts...
Discusses Hemingway’s time in Spain in 1937-1938 and the various forms of writing inspired by it, e....
Contextualizes the Spanish Civil War historically and politically, comparing Hemingway’s war in For ...
Ernest Hemingway’s For Whom the Bell Tolls have been praised by critics, such as Edmund Wilson and R...