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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 7 page paper explores the life and work of author Ernest Hemingway, and how his art was a direct result of his life. Hemingway's narrative style, character structure and common themes are also examined.
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_Hemingway.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Ernest Hemingways finest work, and it was the experiences he had along his restless and often violent journey that provided the literary world with some of American literatures most influential
novels. Like all great writers, Hemingway used his life as the varied landscape for his novels. Though the protagonists were, indeed, fictional, their emotions and observations were pure
Hemingway. As with any other artist, his personal experiences were interwoven in his work, and offer the only true glimpse anyone will ever have of the real Ernest Hemingway,
as opposed to the roguish bon vivant often portrayed by the media. Ernest Miller Hemingway was born on July 21, 1899 in Oak Park, Illinois, the son of a doctor
who instilled in him a lifelong love of the outdoors. During his boyhood, he spent summers in northern Michigan, hunting and fishing, and these early experiences later resurfaced in
his first collection of short stories, In Our Time (1925). In school, he pursued athletics and had already begun writing. Upon graduation, he left home for good and
threw himself into his first reporting job with the Kansas City Star, a training ground which proved invaluable for the fledgling writer. It was during this time that he
developed what became known as the definitive Hemingway narrative style -- dispassionate, objective and oftentimes ironic. Life imitated art for Ernest Hemingway, and there is no way to fully
examine one without the other. In 1917, America finally entered the three-year-old World War I, and always seeking a challenge, Hemingway tried desperately to enlist, but was repeatedly rejected because
of a congenital eye defect. Finally, he managed to become an ambulance driver for the Red Cross, and was sent to join the allied forces in the mountains of
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