Conflicts in “Hills Like White Elephants” The story begins with a man known as the “American” and his girlfriend sitting at a table outside of a train station. The station is surrounded by hills‚ trees‚ and fields in Spain. The couple is waiting for the next train to Madrid. Throughout the story there is an inner conflict with the girl as well as an external conflict between the girl and the American. They speak of an operation that must be done for them to be happy together. This couple is at a
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In the story “Hills Like White Elephants” the setting plays a role in the couple’s relationship. All of the different elements like the train station‚ train tracks‚ and the surrounding landscapes all how to tell The American and Jig’s story about their unspoken issue. Starting with the train station and its tracks‚ which symbolizes a junction - present to the further - a decision the couple needs to make. Each direction will take them to a different place. This substantial decision about the abortion
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April Rene Young Kimberly Villegas English 1302‚ Section 2028 (8442) 2 March 2014 Hills Like White Elephants In Ernest Hemingway’s‚ “Hills Like White Elephants‚” a couple in a foreign country are debating the girl getting an abortion while drinking beer and waiting for a train at a train station. Throughout the short story written in Hemingway’s iceberg method‚ one can see how strongly each party feels about the procedure‚ and the difficulty the couple is facing throughout the bare essential
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In both the poem my papas waltz and the short story hills like white elephants‚ alcohol is a repetitive motif that is present throughout the stories. Both stories have alcohol as a similarity and in both stories the consumption of alcohol allows the characters to remove themselves from reality and ignore the issue(s) at hand. In the short story hills like white elephants both the American and the Jig consume alcohol when they are engaging in conversation in an effort to circumvent each other and
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“The Hills Like White Elephants” As I started to read through the poem I felt like I easily understood the setting. It was very easy for me to picture this man and woman having a conversation and sharing drinks. I did not easily understand what the subject of their conversation was the first time I read through the poem but I did recognize it was affecting the young girl named Jig. I first realized something was going on when the man kept repeating that everything will be okay and he kept repeating
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The story "Hills like White Elephants" by Ernest Hemingway is a fascinating story about one couple having faced with an unexpected pregnancy. The theme of the story is about the couple’s decision between life and death. The main character Jig and The American are in disagreements on weather to keep their baby‚ or have an abortion. The couple’s lack of communication creates the conflict in the story. For example‚ Jigs says‚ "We can have all this..." "And everyday we make it more impossible" While
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descriptive paragraphs. Reread the first paragraph very care fully after you finish the story. What’s the significance of the setting to the theme? And what role do the surroundings of the station play in the development of the theme? A: The white hills appear in the first paragraph are the most significance of setting to the theme with no doubt that we can notice from the title of this story. And the station "between two lines of rails"‚ seems the implication of two people standing face to face
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The story “Hills like White Elephants” is written by Ernest Hemingway. It’s about a couple‚ who had an intense conversation about abortion. The man began by trying to convince the girl‚ Jig‚ to have an abortion. However‚ she does want the child but is scared about the abortion and wants to please the man by doing what he wants. She worried whether her relationship will be back on track and this will solve their problem. Jig indecisively agreed to have the abortion just because she does not care
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it. Their attempts at small talk are rough and show a lot of tension. When they finally start to delve into their larger issue‚ which seems to be about marriage and abortion‚ it’s brought up by the man abruptly. The man tries to make abortion seem like a simple procedure that is nothing to worry about. Jig doesn’t respond quickly but when she does she has a lot of questions and doubts. Jig seems to want to please the man and will do whatever he decides‚ though she struggles with the idea of an abortion
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"Hills like White Elephants" by Ernest Hemingway‚ opens with a long description of the story’s setting in a train station surrounded by hills‚ fields‚ and trees in a valley in Spain. A man known simply as the American and his girlfriend sit at a table outside the station‚ waiting for a train to Madrid. As they are waiting for their train to come‚ they are drinking beer arguing about some "operation" that the American man wants to get. Although they don’t specify exactly what the operation means the
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