Ernest Hemingway

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    Ernest Hemingway is a well known American novelist of the 20th century. He wrote an assortment of novels and short stories throughout his career. Two of his most famous short stories are “Hills Like White Elephants” and “A Clean Well Lighted Place.” Both of these works are written in a way that forces the reader to look beyond the general details to interpret the meanings of the stories. The significance of the works must be determined based on underlying themes and symbolism. This style of…

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    “Hills Like White Elephants” Analysis “Hills Like White Elephants” by Ernest Hemingway follows an American couple. The American man and his girlfriend Jig are on vacation. They sit waiting at a train station in Spain next to the Ebro valley. The couple drink together and talk about the hills which “look like white elephants” (Hemingway). As the conversation goes on the American man brings up an operation which Jig was to undergo. The couple then argues whether or not Jig should get the…

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    of Big Two Hearted River by Ernest Hemingway: The times during which Hemingway lived were an important influence on his writing. With the First World War being war the world had changed greatly. Both the Europeans and Americans had seen a ravaging and destructive war. A whole new generation of young people had seen and experienced this destruction. It seems Hemingway had selected the feelings and experiences of this generation to express through his writing. Hemingway like the other modernist…

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    “Love you? I simply turn all to jelly when you touch me.” “Isn’t there anything we can do about it?”. In this quote the author, Ernest Hemingway, has having two people have a conversation about their love for eachother. He is then causing us to think about who is saying what and what they’re talking about by using gaps and fissures. In The Sun Also Rises Ernest Hemingway uses a modernist characteristic called Gaps and Fissures. Gaps and Fissures are when the author doesn’t give enough…

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    Let’s have a chat Ernest Hemingway has made a short story where two people try hard to evade a certain topic. This topic the character discuss will forever change both of the characters life for the better or for worse but a slight problem with this Ernest doesn’t give the reader a good idea on what is exactly is going on but only gives the reader a weird title to suggest that what the character are talking about is a very Tough subject. The main theme in this story is communication and the…

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    Hemingway characterized the Code Hero as "a man who lives effectively, taking after the goals of honor, boldness and continuance in a world that is at times confused, frequently upsetting, and constantly agonizing."The Code Hero measures himself by how well he handles the troublesome circumstances that life tosses at him. He confronts these encounters of existence with effortlessness. At last the Code Hero will lose on the grounds that we are all mortal, yet the genuine measure is the manner by…

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    Ernest Hemingway employed what he called "the iceberg theory" when he wrote "Hills like White Elephants" and other stories. When you picture an iceberg, what you are seeing is only a small fraction of what is above the water. Most of the iceberg is hidden underwater. What may look like a small island of ice, in reality, could be a floating city, and you would never know unless you looked beneath the surface. When applied to writing, the iceberg theory gives you a small taste of what is going on…

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    offsetting. Redemption is often looked at as a strong theme throughout many novels across the world. Three novels redemption finds its place in are The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne, My Antonia by Willa Carther, and A Farewell To Arms by Ernest Hemingway. Each of these novels, in one way or another are considered stories of redemption. These three novels show the theme of redemption through strong character situations and changes that the characters face throughout each of their books. …

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    In Ernest Hemingway’s “Big Two-Hearted River” Nick returned from to the war only to head back to his old favorite fishing spot. Even though Nick has not been around this place in a while and knows the town in the distance, burnt down, he still gets that feeling that he is home despite the idea that even his hometown seemed destroyed by the war. Hemingway states, “He felt he had left everything behind, the need for thinking, the need to write, other needs, it was all back of him” (Hemingway).…

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    Introduction In Ernest Hemingway’s short story “The Short Happy Life Of Francis Macomber,” Hemingway uses the author’s craft of perspective along with dialogue and internal dialogue to create a multi-part claim that develops an overall negative characterization of the three main characters. Hemingway develops the characterization of Wilson, Margaret, and Macomber by using multiple perspectives as he threads a negative tone throughout the story. Paragraph 1; Wilson (Knowledgeable) Throughout…

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