Earnest Hemmingway
Influences of Ernest Hemingway's Stories Earnest Hemingway is truly an outdoorsman with a seemingly weary pioneer spirit, which can be seen in almost all of his literature. His short stories depict knowledge from background experiences that Hemingway has directly encountered throughout his life. These events and incidents can be identified and pulled right out of his writings by simply reading a few of Hemingway's short stories and biographies. Thereafter, one can probably develop a conclusion to what profoundly influenced Hemingway's themes, plots, and settings. Harold Bloom, who has written many literary essays about Earnest Hemingway and is extremely familiar with his works explains, "...The Old Man and the Sea is generally read as Hemingway's attempt to go once again into the deep of his life after a great book, with his only tools being a craft as a writer and themes that had preoccupied him throughout his career" (11). Hemingway's venturous lifestyle, world travels, and torn family life can all be identified in his stories. The way Hemingway utilizes character development, plot, and themes are all based from what he has endured and accomplished until his fearless death. Generally, one who knows and has read Hemingway
He is able to reach out and captivate anyone that indulges one of his short stories. His plot structure also has common relations with death, which to some may be terrifying, but to Hemmingway it is bliss beyond words. For instance, in one of his greatest short stories The Old Man and the Sea, which was published in 1952 nearing the end of his life, the old Cuban man, Santiago, is described as "An old man who fished alone in a skiff in the gulf stream and he had gone eighty-four days without catching a fish" (Bloom 11). Another interesting wilderness plot that is prevalent in his writings is the African Safari. This can be seen through the development of his characters. Having traveled there in 1953, for a remarkable hunting experience, he wrote about it in "The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber," which is a detailed experience on a barbaric hunt for nature's most feared beasts. I find that his short stories really give me a general outlook of one American in a developing America. Hemingway recognizes and confronts death in his stories only as a flirtatious theme, but in reality it was his biggest fear that he never overcame. The plots that Hemmingway places in his literature are all the instances that he has endeavored as well. His fascination with the matchmaker was customary to almost all of his stories. Death is one of the things that Hemingway is familiar with, considering that he was injured in the war; he probably saw some terrifying things, let alone death.
Common topics in this essay:
Earnest Hemingway,
Francis Macomber,
Snows Kilimanjaro,
Robert Jordan,
Italy England,
War Introduction,
Cuban Santiago,
Death Hemingway,
World War,
Ole Anderson,
happy life,
happy life francis,
francis macomber,
life francis macomber,
short happy,
short happy life,
life francis,
short stories,
earnest hemingway,
introduction 78,
np np nd,
hemingway utilizes,
ole anderson,
read hemingway's,
|