This edited volume is a wide ranging collection of essays on Ernest Hemingway and his work by some of the world's leading scholars and critics in the field of Hemingway studies. The collection offers the latest views--and some of the most challenging--of many of the best scholars in the field. The conclusions drawn are as various as the sixteen contributors; many of which challenge generally accepted views in the field. This study will be of interest and use to Hemingway buffs, to scholars of modern American literature, and to academic libraries.
This edited volume is a wide ranging collection of essays on Ernest Hemingway and his work by some of the world's leading scholars and critics in the field of Hemingway studies. The collection offers the latest views--and some of the most challenging--of many of the best scholars in the field. The conclusions drawn are as various as the sixteen contributors; many of which challenge generally accepted views in the field. This study will be of interest and use to Hemingway buffs, to scholars of modern American literature, and to academic libraries.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
KENNETH ROSEN is Professor of English at Dickinson College in Carlisle, Pennsylvania. He has been a member of the executive board of the Hemingway Society and the first board of directors of The Ernest Hemingway Foundation and has published numerous articles on Hemingway. He has twice been a Ford Foundation fellow and has taught Hemingway as a Fulbright Lecturer in Greece, China, and Indonesia.
Inhaltsangabe
Preface by Kenneth Rosen Hemingway and Art In Our Time and Picasso by Elizabeth Dewberry Vaughn Le Torero and "The Undefeated": Hemingway's Foray into Analytical Cubism by James Plath Artists in Their Art: Hemingway and Velasquez--The Shared Worlds of For Whom the Bell Tolls and Las Meninas by Robin Gajdusek Formal Analogies in the Texts and Paintings of Ernest Hemingway and Paul Cezanne by Thomas Hermann Our Old Man Repossessing Papa: A Narcissistic Meditation by Mark Spilka Hemingway's Influence on Sportswriting by Larry Merchant Myth-making, Androgyny and the Creative Process, Answering Mark Spilka by Donald Junkins On Spanish Earth "The Undefeated" and Sangre y Arena: Hemingway's Mano a Mano with Blasco Ibánez by Susan F. Beegel Reality and Invention in For Whom the Bell Tolls, or Reflections on the Nature of the Historical Novel by Allen Josephs Nostalgia, Its Stylistics and Politics in Hemingway's For Whom the Bell Tolls by Erik Nakjavani "You Sure This Thing Has Trout in It?" Fishing and Fabrication, Omission and "Verification" in The Sun Also Rises by H.R. Stoneback Getting It Right Reading the Names Right by Miriam B. Mandel Who Wrote Hemingway's In Our Time? by Paul Smith Beginning with "Nothing" by Frank Scafella Opiates, Laughter, and the Radio's Sweet Lies: Community and Isolation in Hemingway's "The Gambler, the Nun, and the Radio" by Ann L. Putnam Hemingway on Sexual Otherness: What's Really Funny in The Sun Also Rises by Wolfgang E.H. Rudat Selected Bibliography Index
Preface by Kenneth Rosen Hemingway and Art In Our Time and Picasso by Elizabeth Dewberry Vaughn Le Torero and "The Undefeated": Hemingway's Foray into Analytical Cubism by James Plath Artists in Their Art: Hemingway and Velasquez--The Shared Worlds of For Whom the Bell Tolls and Las Meninas by Robin Gajdusek Formal Analogies in the Texts and Paintings of Ernest Hemingway and Paul Cezanne by Thomas Hermann Our Old Man Repossessing Papa: A Narcissistic Meditation by Mark Spilka Hemingway's Influence on Sportswriting by Larry Merchant Myth-making, Androgyny and the Creative Process, Answering Mark Spilka by Donald Junkins On Spanish Earth "The Undefeated" and Sangre y Arena: Hemingway's Mano a Mano with Blasco Ibánez by Susan F. Beegel Reality and Invention in For Whom the Bell Tolls, or Reflections on the Nature of the Historical Novel by Allen Josephs Nostalgia, Its Stylistics and Politics in Hemingway's For Whom the Bell Tolls by Erik Nakjavani "You Sure This Thing Has Trout in It?" Fishing and Fabrication, Omission and "Verification" in The Sun Also Rises by H.R. Stoneback Getting It Right Reading the Names Right by Miriam B. Mandel Who Wrote Hemingway's In Our Time? by Paul Smith Beginning with "Nothing" by Frank Scafella Opiates, Laughter, and the Radio's Sweet Lies: Community and Isolation in Hemingway's "The Gambler, the Nun, and the Radio" by Ann L. Putnam Hemingway on Sexual Otherness: What's Really Funny in The Sun Also Rises by Wolfgang E.H. Rudat Selected Bibliography Index
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