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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 3 page paper which examines two critical articles on the authors Ernest Hemingway and F. Scott Fitzgerald. The paper also examines their stories A Farewell to Arms and The Great Gatsby. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JA7_RAfizhm1.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
time and the culture in many different wants. Two of the most famous works by these individuals are Hemingways A Farewell to Arms which illustrates the conditions of a couple
during WWI, and Fitzgeralds The Great Gatsby which is a book that deals with life after WWI back in the United States. The following paper examines two articles about these
authors and then discusses these works and the style of the authors. Criticism: Hemingway and Fitzgerald The first article to be examined is Elizabeth Dewberrys Hemingways Journalism and
the Realist Dilemma. In this essay the author focuses on how Hemingways time as a journalist in the war enabled him to connect real life events with fiction. The author
notes how "reporting real life" affected "his fiction" and how he tended to "blur distinctions between fiction and nonfiction as well as between the concrete and imagined relaitiis they purport
to represent" (Dewberry 16). She continues and states that this was part of his inherent nature it would seem, as he spent his life studying the nature of reality in
a way that resulted in a "accurately represented" picture of such reality (Dewberry 16). In the second article, Ronald Bermans The Great Gatsby and the Twenties, the author addresses what
Fitzgerald was seeking in his style and the forms that were emerging in relationship to the 20s. Berman notes how many of his stories "describe the loss of idealism, and
the grand romantic theme of recapturing the vanished past" (Berman 79). And elements wherein there is a sense of caution "because success breeds its enemies" (Berman 80). The author further
notes how Fitzgerald had a life long interest in the theme as follows: "Money is not the problem; the social order is against them, usually personified by a rich mans
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