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The Hemingway Review articles

479 total articles

The Hemingway Review is a semiannual scholarly journal devoted to the life and work of Ernest Hemingway. The Hemingway Review includes feature length articles, book reviews, library information, and current bibliography.

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Recent articles from The Hemingway Review

"We live in a country where nothing makes any difference": the queer sensibility of A Farewell to Arms.(Critical essay)
March 22, 2009... This essay argues that a queer sensibility is central to A Farewell to Arms, underwriting the connections between the characters, including the desire that binds Catherine and Frederic. This sensibility is informed by changing views--some of them quite radical for the time--about marriage,...

"Eyes the same color as the sea": Santiago's expatriation from Spain and ethnic otherness in Hemingway's The Old Man and the Sea.(Ernest Hemingway)(Critical essay)
March 22, 2009... Hemingway often used expatriation as a literary device, yet critics have overlooked the fact that Santiago in The Old Man and the Sea is an expatriate. Born in Spain's Canary Islands, Santiago moved to Cuba as a young man; this circumstance has a significant impact on his social condition....

"There were many Indians in the story": hidden history in Hemingway's "big two-hearted river".(Ernest Hemingway)(Critical essay)
March 22, 2009... The essay considers the importance of hidden history in "Big Two-Hearted River" and what Hemingway may have had in mind in creating a landscape that is white on the surface yet penetrated by Indian presences underneath. Hidden inscriptions of Indianness have to be searched for in the text and...

"I also, am in Michigan": pastoralism of mind in "Big Two-Hearted River".(Critical essay)
March 22, 2009... This article examines "Big Two-Hearted River" in terms of Leo Marx's "machine in the garden" theory of American pastoralism. Nick's reaction to the swamp appears, paradoxically, to position it as the "machine," or counterforce to the pastoral ideal and the illusion of escape--in Nick's case,...

The conflict of "being gypsy" in For Whom the Bell Tolls.(Critical essay)
March 22, 2009... In For Whom the Bell Tolls (1940), Ernest Hemingway caricatures both Rafael and Pilaf as "gypsies" in order to "assimilate" the experience of living in Spain for the American character Robert Jordan and for a Western, non-Romani readership. While this assimilated Spanish experience does not...

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