Logan Gough Bagdanov AP Lit Period 1 16 February 2017 Short Story Prompt 2 In Ernest Hemingway's “Hills Like White Elephants” and David [Foster] Wallace’s “Good People”, both authors make the character’s speak and act ambiguously and use symbols and motifs in the story to influence the character's decision about having an abortion or not. For example, the American in “Hills Like White Elephants” repeatedly says to the girl “if you don’t want to you don’t have to” implying that he doesn’t want her to and he’s being manipulative.…
Earnest Hemmingway’s short story Hills Like White Elephants is one that is unique for its…
In “Moving to the Girl’s Side of Hills Like White Elephants,” by Stanley Renner, the idea that the woman does not do as the American man wishes, comes into play. Renner points out how in the beginning of the short story, the couple is looking at the barren and dirt colored hills, and by the end, the woman has distanced herself from the American man, and is looking off into the distance where the hills have lots of greenery and rivers and wildlife. This is what she is seeing as her life if she keeps her child. In the beginning, the woman is much weaker, and pliable to the American man’s will, but she is also very sarcastic and questions him as to whether their love will be the same if she has the procedure. He argues that things will be as they have been, but when she looks back at all they have done together, it seems like they just look at things and have drinks.…
In this short story “Hills Like White Elephants” by Ernest Hemingway, focuses on a couples struggle to communicate and finding common ground which leads to a crisis point in their relationship. This story sets place in Spain where a woman named Jig and the American man are seated outside of a bar near a railroad junction. The couple starts out by having a few beers and discussing a problem they are facing in their relationship, as the conversation continues between the two, you can see that the couple is starting to get slightly angry and aggravated with each other whether or not they should proceed to Barcelona in order to have an abortion. Jig disagrees with the American’s choice, although she refuses to say her thoughts openly. The…
During the 1910s, people enjoyed life greatly. New appliances made cooking and cleaning easier, designers and celebrities created fashion trends, and exciting models of car were all over the streets. Life couldn't get any better. However, when World War I started and ended, people wondered how something so horrid could happen, after all the good. In Earnest Hemingway's Big Two Hearted River, the protagonist, Nick goes fishing to relax himself after the war. People's lives are broken by war, and when it is over, must carry on.…
Becoming a parent is something most people see in their future, however it often comes at the wrong time for some people. In Ernest Hemingway’s, “Hills Like White Elephants”, we see a couple’s conversation as it leads up to the decision they are making on whether or not to have an abortion. With the white elephants representing a metaphor for the unborn child, we are able to see the struggle of a couple trying to make a decision on whether to keep the child or not, through which it is apparent that the two of them as a couple don’t communicate properly and the girl does not normally know how to make her own decisions.…
In 1925 Ernst Hemingway wrote “Big Two-Hearted River” a short story that depicts a young man, Nick Adams who has returned from World War I, dealing with the mental trauma caused by the war. Nick seeks to find what made him happy and normal before the war which was simplicity. The first place Nick heads to a place that brings him happiness and solace is the river. The story is filled with several symbols and objects that indicate he’s just on a routine camping trip, however, these objects are symbols of his psychological trauma suffered from mental wounds of the war. “Big Two-Hearted River may appear to be a short story of a fishing trip, but, entails much more about Nick Adams finding his identify that he lost in the war, seeking to find a…
Writers and Artists have something in common, they both paint the pictures and have a meaning in their work. People interpret their work differently and come up with similar results.…
Ernest Hemingway’s "Hills Like White Elephants," tells the story of an American man and a girl who is named Jig. They are both sitting outside of a train station in Spain looking across a valley while drinking beer. In “Hills Like White Elephants,” Hemingway discusses the landscape before them, the valley of the Ebro River, that has long white hills. As the American and the girl begin to have a conversation, the girl remarks on the Ebro River of the way it looks. After a while the American asked her if she wanted to do the operation (an abortion which was learned in the author's comment at the end) and explained to her that she would be fine. However, she began to think if she participates in the operation would the American lover still be with her. Nevertheless, the American knows that if the operation is not done he would not be able to do certain things; therefore, he is trying to eliminate the reasons to settle down with Jig. Towards the end of the story, Jig and the American would argue about the operation; even though the American does not want a child.…
Marquis, Don. "Why Abortion Is Immoral." Journal of Philosophy 86 (1989): 183-202. Print. This journal is written by a philospher by the name of Don Marquis. While this document is quit outdated it still plays an important role in today 's debate about abortion. It is used by pro-life activists when debating the reasons why they feel abortion is immoral. This journal is long and filled with great ideas to ponder about life, its meaning and signifigance to the world. Marquis has etched his name with this written journal in the never ending debate of wether abortion is right or wrong. I think this piece will be valuable to my essay in that it will give my audience a deeper perception than the current idea that abortion should be a womens choice.…
Feminists believe the controversy of abortion plays a large role in the equality between men and women. In the article “Abortion Through a Feminist Ethic Lens,” Susan Sherwin argues that the choice for abortion must be available for all women in order to liberate themselves from male dominance in our society. Sherwin believes that the pregnant woman is the only person in the position to make the decision on whether an abortion is appropriate or not, and that it is “improper to grant others the authority to interfere in women’s decisions to seek abortions” (113). A fetus is dependent on the woman and feminists believe that the fetus’s “social status and value must rest with the woman carrying it” (115). Pregnancy places heavy effects on the lives of women and takes place inside of their body; therefore policies on abortion uniquely affect women. Sherwin also argues that “women’s freedom to choose abortion is also linked with their ability to control their own sexuality” (114). Since male dominance exists, woman have limited control over their sexually lives. She backs up this argument by saying that men use “sex to express dominance and power” (114) and that few women feel they are able to refuse a man’s demand or want for sexual intercourse. Along with limited control over sex, Sherwin says since contraceptives alone cannot prevent pregnancy, abortion must be an available choice to free them from male dominance.…
The issue of a woman’s right to her own body, within the last few decades, has become a progressively intriguing social dilemma in American society. More specifically the topic of abortion is not as taboo as it was thirty years ago although the debate has continued as to whether or not the decision should rest solely on the woman. Merriam Webster defines abortion as the termination of a pregnancy after, accompanied by, resulting in, or closely followed by the death of the embryo or fetus as induced expulsion of the human fetus. This is a controversial subject that can be argued quite effectively for or against a woman’s right to choose. The three major sociological perspectives of conflict theory, symbolic interactionism, and functionalism all take a different stance on abortion. These theoretical viewpoints are shared, in no particular order, to sociologists Karl Marx, Georg Simmel, Max Weber, and Emile Durkheim. The following will attempt to explain these sociologists’ viewpoint on the issue of abortion and how the woman might arrive at the decision to either continue or terminate her pregnancy.…
“Taking power away from men is a dangerous thing. Someone always pays.” - Glenn Close. The mother sometimes overpowers the father when it comes down to the decision of abortion. Some men don’t have the right to give their consent before the fetus they participated in conceiving is aborted. It’s important for society to understand that stripping away reproductive rights from men, when deciding on an abortion, can promote irresponsibility in men. If men have no voice when it comes to abortion, does that mean that they have no responsibility for the pregnancies they helped create? And what effect has this had on the American family?…
The topic of abortion is a very controversial one and displays a moral dilemma that can be argued in various ways. Abortion involves the termination of an unborn fetus. Some reasoning behind getting an abortion procedure include: a mother being very young or feels that she is ill-equipped to take care of a new child; the embryo having a birth defect that will cause complications for the child's life or for the delivery of the baby; the pregnant woman has been raped and does not want to deliver her attacker's child; social pressures not to have a child before marriage (Gordon, n.d.).…
Abortion is a big issue. For many people abortion is wrong without any questions and its consequences. Women have been raped or have been irresponsible for their actions. But either way, the situation is the same; women will just say “it is my body I can do anything I want with it.” It is the same reaction because I do not think the lady who has been raped, would like to have a baby of someone she does not even know. With her anger, she will not care if she is killing a child or not. A woman, who has not been responsible for her own actions, will not care having an abortion either. These ladies sometimes do not care and are more likely to say “it’s my body and I will do whatever I want with it.” It is sad, however, a woman has a right to her own body. All people have a right to do to their own bodies what they want. “The argument in favor of abortion on demand, or abortion for convenience sake, that a woman has a right to do as she wishes to her own body, is not applicable to the question of abortion, since the mother’s body’s different from that of her baby, or fetus,” (Pauline Rocco and Bob Johnson).…