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Hemingway, Trauma and Masculinity: In the Garden of the Uncanny is at once a model of literary interpretation and a psycho-critical reading of Hemingway's life and art. This book is a provocative and theoretically sophisticated inquiry into the traumatic origins of the creative impulse and the dynamics of identity formation in Hemingway. Building on a body of wound-theory scholarship, the book seeks to reconcile the tensions between opposing Hemingway camps, while moving beyond these rivalries into a broader analysis of the relationship between trauma, identity formation and art in Hemingway.

Produktbeschreibung
Hemingway, Trauma and Masculinity: In the Garden of the Uncanny is at once a model of literary interpretation and a psycho-critical reading of Hemingway's life and art. This book is a provocative and theoretically sophisticated inquiry into the traumatic origins of the creative impulse and the dynamics of identity formation in Hemingway. Building on a body of wound-theory scholarship, the book seeks to reconcile the tensions between opposing Hemingway camps, while moving beyond these rivalries into a broader analysis of the relationship between trauma, identity formation and art in Hemingway.

Autorenporträt
Stephen Gilbert Brown is Professor of English and Barrick Scholar of Modern Comparative Literature at University of Nevada, Las Vegas, USA, where he teaches courses in Hemingway, Joyce and Proust. He is the author of The Gardens of Desire: Marcel Proust and the Fugitive Sublime (2004); Socrates and Freire: Ancient Rhetoric/ Radical Praxis (2011) and the award-winning Words in the Wilderness (2000).