This is an old revision of this page, as edited by SoniC~enwiki (talk | contribs) at 18:40, 12 May 2001. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.
Revision as of 18:40, 12 May 2001 by SoniC~enwiki (talk | contribs)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)Ernest Miller Hemingway (American author)
born July 21, 1899, Oak Park (Illinois); died July 2, 1961, Ketchum (Idaho)
Awards:
Silver Medal of Military Valor (medaglia d'argento) in the First World War
Pullitzer Price 1953 (for The Old Man and the Sea)
Nobel Price for Literature 1954 (also for The Old Man and the Sea)
The following text was originally a research paper for school describing Hemingway's Life and work, as exemplified by the novels "For Whom the Bell Tolls" and "A Farewell to Arms". If you are looking for information on Hemingway only, you might want to skip the sections on Frederic Henry and Robert Jordan, for a quick read, you can start at /Young and Innocent
If you want to know where the quotes are coming from, please refer to the bibliography section. For easier reading, this text is split in several sections, you can get an all-in-one HTML version at http://people.freenet.de/sonics_homepage/hemtext.html
Grace Under Pressure
Death and Violence in Ernest Hemingway's Life and Work
1.Introduction
Death and violence were the two great constants in Hemingway's troubled and ever-changing life. In his infancy, he joined his father on hunting trips and was given his first shotgun at the age of ten. Fifty-one years later, he used one to commit suicide. In the meantime, he had hurt many and many had hurt him. He was a bit like Döblin's Franz Biberkopf, a tough, strong man with strong principles. Life thought that would be too bold to last, and started to hurt him. In fact, much of the beating he had to take and most of the losses he had to cope eith seemed neither his nor anybody else's fault. It seemed that life itself was against him sometimes. Hemingway "believed that life was a tragedy and knew it could only have one end"(Critiques (6.), p. 49), yet he was blessed by it with talent and fame. Maybe that made it harder for him to admit his failures and to correct them. This research paper tries, aside from analyzing the two novels as representatives of his work, to find out the reason for his ongoing decline and to point out mistakes and wrong decisions he made. It also tries to trace alternatives to Hemingway's actual development to reach a conclusion that sums up the effects of violence and death in its various forms upon Ernest Hemingway's life and work.
Main Part:Books and Beyond
/Famous at Twenty-Five Thirty a Master
/From Boy to Man Hemingways First World War
/From Reality to Fiction A Farewell to Arms
Robert Jordan and Frederic Henry: Two Facets of Hemingway
- Background
- Character
- Development
- Catherine: A vehicle for the women in Hemingway?s life
- Background
- Character
- Development
- Pablo
- Hemingway Up Close and Personal
/Sure Shots The Second World War
Conclusion
Appendix
This is very impressive work and quite an enormous contribution to Misplaced Pages. First, Andreas, you do realize, I hope, that by posting it on Misplaced Pages, you have released this work according to the GNUFreeDocumentationLicense?
Second, is there anything in particular that you would like people to do to this work to render it more encyclopedia-like? (For some similar instructions-to-the-public, see LarrysText.) -- Larry Sanger
Yes and yes. There is obviously a need to restructure the whole text, biographic information should be separated from information on the two particular books, and a trivia section should be included. I will make some of those changes myself, but help is really welcome. -- SoniC