Extensive study of the horse\u27s critical role in modern warfare (from saddle horse to workhorse) through an examination of primary works between 1550 and 1950 that shaped historical thought on horsemanship and cavalry. Subchapter treats Hemingway\u27s employment of the bullfight in Death in the Afternoon as an extended metaphor for war, with the ring representing the battlefield and horses representing both humans and horses in battle
The horse is a large odd-toed ungulate mammal, one of modern species of the genus Equus. Horses have...
Poetry of the First World War mentions horses rarely. Hardy's 'In Time of "The Breaking of Nati...
Discusses bullfighting as a symbolic art form representing societal relations, shifting gender roles...
Analysis of Hemingway’s treatment of horses in Death in the Afternoon within the context of World Wa...
Horses were an integral part of the Great War’s landscape. This was reflected in almost every editio...
Source study. Points to the Torros Célebres, a catalogue of famous bulls from the bullfighting ring,...
Connects Hemingway’s fascination with bullfighting to his broader performative representations of ma...
Influence study. Compares bullfighting depictions in Wright’s Pagan Spain (1957) to Death in the Aft...
Presents Death in the Afternoon as Hemingway’s therapeutic counsel to violent, inexplicable trauma, ...
In her liminalist approach. Bredendick argues that Hemingway’s rhetorical use of decadence and homos...
Few animals have had such a profound effect on the course of history as the horse. It still finds a ...
Biographical study identifying and investigating the details of Hemingway’s first attendance at a 19...
“A dog may be man's best friend...but the horse wrote history. ” “The history of mankind is car...
Discusses the role of animals in understanding the meaning of trauma and death and as companions for...
Comprehensive guide to the text’s people, animals, and cultural constructs. Helpful and thorough his...
The horse is a large odd-toed ungulate mammal, one of modern species of the genus Equus. Horses have...
Poetry of the First World War mentions horses rarely. Hardy's 'In Time of "The Breaking of Nati...
Discusses bullfighting as a symbolic art form representing societal relations, shifting gender roles...
Analysis of Hemingway’s treatment of horses in Death in the Afternoon within the context of World Wa...
Horses were an integral part of the Great War’s landscape. This was reflected in almost every editio...
Source study. Points to the Torros Célebres, a catalogue of famous bulls from the bullfighting ring,...
Connects Hemingway’s fascination with bullfighting to his broader performative representations of ma...
Influence study. Compares bullfighting depictions in Wright’s Pagan Spain (1957) to Death in the Aft...
Presents Death in the Afternoon as Hemingway’s therapeutic counsel to violent, inexplicable trauma, ...
In her liminalist approach. Bredendick argues that Hemingway’s rhetorical use of decadence and homos...
Few animals have had such a profound effect on the course of history as the horse. It still finds a ...
Biographical study identifying and investigating the details of Hemingway’s first attendance at a 19...
“A dog may be man's best friend...but the horse wrote history. ” “The history of mankind is car...
Discusses the role of animals in understanding the meaning of trauma and death and as companions for...
Comprehensive guide to the text’s people, animals, and cultural constructs. Helpful and thorough his...
The horse is a large odd-toed ungulate mammal, one of modern species of the genus Equus. Horses have...
Poetry of the First World War mentions horses rarely. Hardy's 'In Time of "The Breaking of Nati...
Discusses bullfighting as a symbolic art form representing societal relations, shifting gender roles...