Manuscript study. Beall chronicles Hemingway’s extensive drafting and revision process, contending that the author carefully constructs the opening battle scene with Nick as a rational and detached military analyst to underscore his later manic loss of control, as evidenced in his rambling interior monologues and comedic lecture to the adjutant connecting American troops with plagues of locusts. Contrasts Nick’s comical monologues on locusts in “Big Two-Hearted River” with the sharper and edgier humor of his exchange with the adjutant. Reads the latter story’s conclusion as evidence of Nick’s resilience and ability to move forward despite his wounding
Drawing on manuscripts and correspondence, Beall documents and explicates Hemingway’s extensive revi...
On Hemingway’s evolving style distinguishing three narrative phases of the author’s career. Quick be...
Draws on manuscripts in his analysis of Hemingway’s use of humor, contending that the author balance...
Documents the writer’s cruel and often satirical sense of humor toward his wives, critics, and liter...
As Hemingway wrote to his editor, maxwell Perkins, he once thought A Way You\u27ll Never Be would ...
Hemingway’s writing in the three stories that I have looked at is distinctly his. He use simple, di...
Annotates and comments, often line by line, on familiar and obscure details and allusions to the peo...
Examines Nick’s attempt at self-diagnosis and rehabilitation by replacing his unpleasant memories of...
Manuscript study. Detailed investigation of Hemingway’s extensive drafting and revision process, dra...
Compares three related stories that complicate the conventional wound theory by attributing Nick’s a...
Draws on Freud’s theory of humor and Hemingway’s casual references to atomic bombs in the novel and ...
Argues that Nick’s psychological anxiety stems from both his loss of identity and his inability to a...
Close textual reading focusing on allusion, myth-adaptation, humor, and irony. Contends that Hemingw...
Specifically, the study of the progression focuses on examining Hemingway\u27s Across the River and ...
Explores the seemingly contradictory nature of sleep in “Big Two-Hearted River” and “Now I Lay Me,” ...
Drawing on manuscripts and correspondence, Beall documents and explicates Hemingway’s extensive revi...
On Hemingway’s evolving style distinguishing three narrative phases of the author’s career. Quick be...
Draws on manuscripts in his analysis of Hemingway’s use of humor, contending that the author balance...
Documents the writer’s cruel and often satirical sense of humor toward his wives, critics, and liter...
As Hemingway wrote to his editor, maxwell Perkins, he once thought A Way You\u27ll Never Be would ...
Hemingway’s writing in the three stories that I have looked at is distinctly his. He use simple, di...
Annotates and comments, often line by line, on familiar and obscure details and allusions to the peo...
Examines Nick’s attempt at self-diagnosis and rehabilitation by replacing his unpleasant memories of...
Manuscript study. Detailed investigation of Hemingway’s extensive drafting and revision process, dra...
Compares three related stories that complicate the conventional wound theory by attributing Nick’s a...
Draws on Freud’s theory of humor and Hemingway’s casual references to atomic bombs in the novel and ...
Argues that Nick’s psychological anxiety stems from both his loss of identity and his inability to a...
Close textual reading focusing on allusion, myth-adaptation, humor, and irony. Contends that Hemingw...
Specifically, the study of the progression focuses on examining Hemingway\u27s Across the River and ...
Explores the seemingly contradictory nature of sleep in “Big Two-Hearted River” and “Now I Lay Me,” ...
Drawing on manuscripts and correspondence, Beall documents and explicates Hemingway’s extensive revi...
On Hemingway’s evolving style distinguishing three narrative phases of the author’s career. Quick be...
Draws on manuscripts in his analysis of Hemingway’s use of humor, contending that the author balance...