Ernest Hemingway and the geography of memory

著者

    • Cirino, Mark
    • Ott, Mark P.

書誌事項

Ernest Hemingway and the geography of memory

edited by Mark Cirino and Mark P. Ott

Kent State University Press, c2010

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 5

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注記

Includes bibliographical references and index

収録内容

  • Memory and manhood: troublesome recollections in The garden of Eden / Marc Hewson
  • Reclaimed experience: trauma theory and Hemingway's lost Paris manuscripts / Marc Seals
  • Memory and the sharks / Sergio Perosa ; translated by Mark Cirino
  • Memory and desire: eliotic consciousness in early Hemingway / Matthew J. Bolton
  • Lions on the beach: dream, place, and memory in The old man and the sea / Larry Grimes
  • Hemingway and cultural geography: the landscape of logging in "the end of something" / Laura Gruber Godfrey
  • Expatriate lifestyle as tourist destination: The sun also rises and experiential travelogues of the twenties / Allyson Nadia Field
  • Pursuit remembered: experience, memory, and invention in Green hills of Africa / Lawrence H. Martin
  • Alchemy, memory, and archetypes: reading Hemingway's Under Kilimanjaro as an African fairy tale / Erik Nakjavani
  • "A moveable feast" or "a miserable time actually"? Ernest Hemingway, Kay Boyle, and modernist memoir / Verna Kale
  • The persistence of memory and the denial of self in A farewell to arms / Mark Cirino
  • The currents of memory: Hemingway's "big two-hearted river" as metafiction / Robert Paul Lamb
  • A clean, well-lighted place for killing: nostalgia in Hemingway's Death in the afternoon / Emily O. Wittman
  • Memory in The garden of Eden / Barbara Lounsberry

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Ernest Hemingway's work reverberates with a blend of memory, geography, and lessons of life revealed through the trauma of experience. Michigan, Italy, Spain, Paris, Africa, and the Gulf Stream are some of the most distinctive settings in Hemingway's short fiction, novels, articles, and correspondence. In his fiction, Hemingway revisited these sites, reimagining and transforming them. Travel was the engine of his creative life, as the recurrent contrast between spaces provided him with evidence of his emerging identity as a writer. The contributors to Ernest Hemingway and the Geography of Memory employ an intriguing range of approaches to Hemingway's work, using the concept of memory as an interpretive tool to enhance understanding of Hemingway's creative process. The essays are divided into four sections-- Memory and Composition, Memory and Allusion, Memory and Place, and Memory and Truth--and examine The Garden of Eden, In Our Time, The Old Man and the Sea, Green Hills of Africa, Under Kilimanjaro, The Sun Also Rises, A Moveable Feast, A Farewell to Arms, and Death in the Afternoon, as well as several of Hemingway's short stories. Ernest Hemingway and the Geography of Memory is a fascinating volume that will appeal to the Hemingway scholar as well as the general reader.

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