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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
Although Ernest Hemingway and George Orwell were worlds apart in terms of what they wrote, they shared one thing in common: both traveled to Spain, and what they learned their changed their lives and impacted their writing. This paper examines how Spain effected Orwell and Hemingway on a personal and professional basis. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
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5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_MTspanis.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
they were born at around the same time. Hemingway, the American author who was celebrated for his clipped, journalistic style prose and his use of nature and the great outdoors
in his works was a tortured individual who was unable to find the right woman to settle down with or the right location to settle down in. Orwell, on the
other hand, was best noted for his biting sarcasm against socialism and communism and his subtle battles against the system, while retaining his affection for the common man. Neither died
the same - Orwell was struck down by tuberculosis as a relatively young man, while Hemingway took his own life. The one
thread both of these men share in common, however, was their visits to Spain and the impact it had on both of their writings. Orwells experiences in Spain as a
journalist and fighter on the side of the Spanish republic during the 1930s Civil War in Spain helped him reshape his politics and philosophies and led directly to the book
Homage to Catalonia, while ultimately spurring the two novels for which he is best known: 1984 and Animal Farm. For "Papa" Hemingway, his experiences in Spain had an impact on
much of his writings, including The Sun Also Rises and For Whom the Bell Tolls. Orwell, a self-described socialist, was always of
the belief that while the system of socialism worked, many times, it was the people who ran the system who corrupted it. This was especially true in his book Animal
Farm, which describes what happens when inmates (the animals) take over the asylum (wrest control of the farm from humans). Orwell, who was born in 1903 in India as Eric
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