Ernest Hemingway’s “Hills Like White Elephants” and Ray Bradbury’s “The Veldt”‚ dialogue is used effectively in enhancing the atmosphere of the story. Although both have similar mood‚ the ways the authors present the dialogue are different‚ for in “The Veldt”‚ Bradbury includes many other setting descriptions. Whereas‚ “Hills Like White Elephants” is a story created purely with dialogue. Also‚ how the characters interact with each other is different. In “Hill’s Like White Elephants” the setting is
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to Literature Professor Victoria Schmidt November 30‚ 2014 In The Hills Like White Elephants (Hemingway‚ 1927)‚ the specific conflicts are Individual versus Individual and Individual versus self. The American is trying to convince the girl to get an abortion and the girl is battling with herself on whether she wants the abortion and if she thinks it is right .I think these conflicts are significant to the story because abortion has always been a touchy subject and one up for debate with
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Hills like White Elephants “Hills Like White Elephants”‚ composed by Ernest Hemingway‚ is a story that happens in a bar at the train station in Northern Spain railroad. The story is essentially a discussion between the American man and his Girlfriend‚ in which the man is attempting to persuade the ladies to do something she is reluctant in doing. Throughout the story‚ Hemingway appears to sympathize with the young lady who is constantly controlled by the man she is with‚ the stressed dialog in the
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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
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today’s society‚ abortion was intolerable and entirely prohibited not too long ago. In “Hills Like White Elephants‚” Hemingway conveys a couple and a train station to symbolize the crossroads within their relationship due to an “operation” (abortion). The setting is significantly important in which the train station and its surroundings symbolize the restrain on time and the couple’s relationship as a whole. In the story‚ Hemingway illustrates an American man and a girl waiting at a train station
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Side of “Hills like White Elephants” Stanley Renner In his article “Moving to the Girls Side of “Hills like White Elephants””‚ published in 1995‚ Renner discusses an alternative conclusion that can be made through analyzing “Hills”. He believes that most critics have not paid enough “attention to the development of the female character” (27). Also‚ he suggests that Jig has been “underestimated considerably” (27). It is clear that a decision has been made by the end of the story‚ but it
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Written in the form of a simple dialogue‚ Ernest Hemingway’s‚ "Hills Like White Elephants" leads to simple understandings as well as profound questions. Hemingway uses a very pure form of objective view point to depict a conversation between a couple. His use of objective view point causes the reader to feel as though they are perhaps sitting at a table near the couple. The objective point of view shows only external happenings and does not delve into the characters‚ thus one can see it as a very
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The Hills of Dynamics between Men and Women Men and women talk in different ways. No matter whether it is today or a century ago‚ men and women just have different ways of communication. Language may have changed but the feeling and dynamics behind it has not. In Ernest Hemingway’s short story‚ "Hills Like White Elephants"‚ the language and how the two characters talk to each other is a prime example of the way men and women talk. Hemingway’s use of dialogue between the American man and Jig in “Hills
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In the short story “Hills Like White Elephants”‚ Ernest Hemingway writes about a young girl‚ Jig‚ and a man‚ also known as “the American”‚ who find themselves in a very complicated situation. In the story‚ the young girl is pregnant with “the American’s” child and he is trying to convince her to have the simple operation that will rid them of the only thing that is harming their happiness. Throughout the writing it seems as if Jig is somewhat hesitant to go through with the operation and the man
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The couple in Ernest Hemingway’s "Hills Like White Elephants" faces a difficult situation‚ how to deal with an unplanned pregnancy. To further complicate the issue‚ it’s pretty clear that one partner wants to settle down and have the baby‚ while the other partner doesn’t. What we see in the story is a discussion of the matter in a train. Written in 1927 when sex education and discussion of birth control were federal crimes in the U.S.‚ the story also comments on what little was known about reproductive
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