The Undefeated Hemingway

May 13, 2021 In any Hemingway short story or novel, whether it is filtered through a first- or third-person narrator, there is really only one perspective presented, one voice: that of the author. Hemingway himself suffered a bad knee wound during the war and returned to hunting and fishing in Michigan's northern woods. In his more mature stories, such as 'The Snows of Kilimanjaro' and 'The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber,' Hemingway creates far more complex characters and situations for his characters. 'Snows' is a stylistic tour.

Implications of Narrative Perspective in Hemingway's 'The Undefeated'
Vol. 2, No. 1 (Jan., 1972), pp. 1-15 (15 pages)
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Men Without Women Hemingway Summary

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JNT: Journal of Narrative Theory continues to follow the high standards set during its first four decades of publication; the newly focused JNT showcases theoretically sophisticated essays that examine narrative in a host of critical, interdisciplinary, or cross-cultural contexts. Of particular interest are history and narrative; cultural studies and popular culture; discourses of class, gender, sexuality, race, nationality, subalternity, and ethnicity; film theory, queer theory, and media studies; new historical, poststructural, or global approaches to narrative forms (literary or otherwise); along with essays that span or subvert epistemic and disciplinary boundaries. JNT is multi-genre, multi-period, multi-national.

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