The effectiveness of both authors’ uses of fictional literary devices and conventions is highly commendable. First with Hemingway’s selection, he uses dialogue between all the characters to bring them to life. When he does this the reader can relate easier with one or all the characters. The dialogue shows what kind of person the characters are. The setting and plot are clearly described because of the location and the characters. The story would not have been as effective without that specific setting and specific characters.…
While the narrator made the decisions to behave as he did, Hemingway’s ideals coaxed the narrator at a fragile time in his life. “It struck me that Hemingway’s willingness to let himself be seen as he was” (p. 108) The narrator feels safe behind his façade that he created to fit in, but after an identity crisis he is shaken. He no longer feels comfortable lying “When I caught myself in the act now I felt embarrassed. It seemed a stale, conventional role, and four years of it had left me a stranger even to those I called my friends” (p. 107). He is distant from those who seem closest to him because he is unable to be honest. He needs to fit in with the boys at his school to survive but realizes his efforts are worthless. He begins to understand that to win Hemingway’s attention he must write a truthful…
It is his works, such as Hills like White Elephants, which subtly address modern issues that bring forth the question of morality and purpose to a general population (A Farewell to Arms, 3). It is his short, direct style, exemplified by his six word story “Baby shoes for sale, never worn.”, allows for a clear and deep expression of emotion (A Farewell to Arms, 4). His involvement of incorporating the reader through active reading breaks an emotional barrier set forth by usual text. This action allows for the reader to directly examine Hemingway’s characters, and thus reflect on their own behavior. Hemingway’s mastery of language, subsequent to his fluency in the Romantic languages, allows his works to be overall reflective of human behavior and relate to the reader in an emotional context (A Farewell To Arms,…
Throughout Ernest Hemingway’s career, the characterizations of his protagonists remained consistent. The classic “Hemingway Hero” is either a code hero or a wounded hero. The coded hero attempts to find meaning in a meaningless world by living according to a personal code. The wounded hero is, as the title obviously reveals, a hero who has been injured physically or psychologically. The two heros come and enter into a student-teacher relationship. The code hero is the teacher who reinvigorates the wounded hero by initiating him into his code.…
Many authors, critics, and everyday social readers define Ernest Hemingway as the prime example of 20th century American literature. Hemingway’s works transcend time itself, so that even readers today analyze and criticize his works. His works, of course, have drawn praises and animosity from all corners of the globe. Critics often applause Hemingway on his short simple prose, for which many people recognize him for. His writing builds upon the masterful usage of “short, simple words and short, simple sentences” (Wagner, 3) to create clear and easy to understand pieces of art, so that even the simple everyday reader can enjoy his art. One may even say that “no other novelist … [has] had an equivalent influence on the prose” of today’s modern writing (Young, 39). Naturally, while supporters exist, so do the debunkers. They say that Hemingway’s prose “is too limited … [making his] characters mute, insensitive, uncomplicated men (Weeks, 1)” in society. The simplicity of his writing strips away the information that a reader may interpret, which fuels the debate that Hemingway utilizes no creativity in his writings; everything simply presents itself as it truly represents.…
"Every man's life ends the same way. It is only the details of how he lived and how he died that distinguish one man from another". Ernest Hemingway believed that a life is not lived without taking chances. Hemingway participated in many risky and sketchy things. He played football, which back then was played with leather helmets, he also hunted big game which was one of his favorite hobbies. Throughout his life, masculinity and the ability to do these masculine actions, changed his life for the best.…
Mark Twain, also known as Samuel Clemens, is a very well known author in American literature. He was a novelist, short story writer, essayist, journalist, and literary critic. This renaissance man was born in Florida, Missouri on November 30th, 1835. However, he grew up in Hannibal, Missouri. He was the sixth child out of eleven. During his childhood, he was very sick and often confined to his bed. He was under the care of this mother, Jane. No one expected him to live (Powers, 39). Samuel's father, John M. Clemens, was a judge. He died when Samuel was twelve years old, leaving Samuel no other choice but to end his studies and search for a job. He began working for local newspapers as a typesetter. Eventually he worked for his older brother, Orion Clemens, who owned several newspapers. He married a wealthy woman named Olivia Langdon in 1870, and they had three daughters. Mark Twain became one of the most admired figures of his time and continued to earn honors until his death in 1910 (Magill, 2361). He died in Redding, Connecticut on April 21st.…
Hannum, Howard L. " 'Scared sick looking at it ': A Reading of Nick Adams in the Published…
While scarcely a sentence, Hemingway's work of Flash Fiction “For sale: baby shoes, never worn.” is indeed a story. It contains the expected attributes of a story, neatly wrapped up in a super compact form. After showing said work has a beginning, middle, end, setting, an array of characters and conflict, it becomes hard to deny its place among other stories.…
Nathaniel Hawthorne was an intelligent man, which who also and a nervous breakdown. He won a lot of awards, but “he became increasingly dissatisfied, as if his dark insights in the human heart cast gloom into his own.” (Daniels 296) He became into a human that would give his heart to the devil. He wouldn’t talk to anyone and would just walk the village minding his own business. Hawthorne consumed many stories and poems for example, “In 1837, Hawthorne emerged to publish a collection of stories, twice-told tales.” (296) After his dark stage disappeared, he then started to make more stories. He thought that if his gloomy stage was gone, then he could produce way more stories than usual. In Hawthorne’s stories, he uses…
Mark Twain's works are some of the best I've ever read. I love the way he…
The shadow of a cloud moved across the field of grain and she saw the river through the trees.…
Ernest Miller Hemingway was born on July 21, 1899, in Oak Park, Illinois at his family's Victorian home. He is known as one of the greatest writers of American literature in the twentieth century. Even today, Hemingway's mythological character fascinates and at times bewilders literary critics and readers. Frequently, his writings recreated the events of his life, some of which caused him much distress. He was married four times during his sixty-one years, but the first two marriages appear to have had the greatest fundamental impact on his life. In "Hills Like White Elephants," Hemingway re-evaluates his own experiences in terms of relationships and his decision to father children.…
Nathaniel Hawthorne has received the title of “American genius” because of his literary works such as “The Scarlet Letter” and “Young Goodman Brown.” Many critics agree that Nathaniel Hawthorne is a writer of “Dark Romanticism,” which led him to be famous because he ventured away from transcendentalism. There are many reasons as to why Hawthorne stands out from his fellow colleagues who were part of his movement from the transcendentalist to dark romantic. One of the reasons being that Hawthorne wrote about “how humanity was an evil creature, perpetually plagued with sin, guilt, and morbidity.” He also based his books and short stories on the Puritan community and how he portrayed that everyone had an “other.” His use of allegory and symbolism…
The Creator of a New Era Ernest Hemmingway is perhaps one of the most well-known writers of his time. Although his writing was much shorter than most styles Hemmingway was one of the most influential writers in literature because he took the details of a long novel and turned them into a simple story that intrigued readers to the very end. This style mixed with events in his life gave him credibility that attracted readers to his work. This paper is to display Hemmingway’s work and how its uniqueness made him one of the most successful authors in history.…