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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 7 page paper which considers Hemingway’s first novel, specifically, the concepts of “the lost generation” and “expatriate” and also provides an analysis of major characters. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TG15_TGehrise.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
lived through World War I, life was forever changed. Suddenly, it was no longer the haven in which everyone could take secure refuge. The notion that the so-called
civilized world was a safe place was no longer believed. Within the artistic community, the response was immediate - suddenly, the rules had changed. Along with the Existentialists,
the writers and filmmakers of the 1920s celebrated the fact that conventional boundaries were nothing more than an illusion. The world was little more than a blank slate where
life was defined by choice, and there was no universal truth. There was also no social order which enabled man to stand proud alongside his contemporaries. In its
place were the broken bodies and spirits of men and women who struggled to erase the horrific images of war from their minds. As the people of the 1920s
were to discover, this was easier said than done. For young soldier and aspiring journalist Ernest Hemingway, World War I served his literary
rite of passage. He had been seriously injured during the Italian campaign and required months of surgery and recuperation, and left him permanently scarred both physically and emotionally.
During his convalescence, Hemingway attempted to exorcise his private demons by trying to put his observations of the war onto paper, while at the same time, attempting to escape the
war through a whirlwind of typically masculine activities -- big-game hunting, carousing, and women. After returning home from the war, Hemingway realized America wasnt the same place he had
remembered as a carefree youth in Oak Park, Illinois. Perhaps his idealized memory of it had been changed by the brutal reality of the war. Although he and
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