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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 3 page paper describes the way in which the book “Hemingway In Love and War” describes the background of the novel “A Farewell to Arms.” Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_HVHmyLuv.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
of these contests, which he witnessed in Spain. This paper discusses the book Hemingway In Love and War and how it describes the way Hemingway develops themes in his novel
A Farewell to Arms. Discussion The New York Times picked Hemingway In Love and War as one of its notable books for 1989, saying that it served as a "corrective
to literal readings of A Farewell to Arms and that either "directly or inferentially fills out the personality of Hemingway, a fantasist and self-mythologizer" ("Notable Books of the Year"). Hemingway
would probably not be insulted by the term, since he created a persona for himself that is much larger than life. At any rate, the themes that he explores in
the novel A Farewell to Arms are passionate love and the grief it can bring. Tyler suggests that there is a parallel between Hemingways novel and Wuthering Heights, in that
Catherine and Heathcliff in Brontes novel and Catherine and Frederic in Hemingways both love passionately; are deeply connected, to a frightening extent; and end tragically (Tyler). Tyler suggests that keeping
the themes of the Bronte novel in mind can help readers understand Hemingway. The themes most deeply explored in both books are the "association of love with life, and the
consequent indissolubility and self-sufficiency of the relationship" (Tyler). However, loves this strong and desperate are almost always tragic; as Tyler puts it, the "intensity of such loves, coupled with the
lack of faith in a conventional afterlife, virtually guarantees that any separation, let alone death, will create grief so intense that it threatens sanity." We can certainly see that in
the despair of Frederic over Catherines death. These themes are apparently taken from life, and that is what Villard and Nagel explore in their book. Hemingway In Love and War
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