War + Ink War + Ink

War + Ink

New Perspectives on Ernest Hemingway’s Early Life and Writings

Steven Paul and Others
    • £33.99
    • £33.99

Publisher Description

Casts fresh light on the formative years of one of the twentieth century’s most important literary figuresErnest Hemingway’s early adulthood (1917–1929) was marked by his work as a journalist, wartime service, marriage, conflicts with parents, expatriation, artistic struggle, and spectacular success. In War + Ink, veteran and emerging Hemingway scholars, alongside experts in related fields, present pathbreaking research that provides important insights into this period of Hemingway’s life.Comprised of sixteen elegantly written essays, War + Ink revisits Hemingway’s formative experiences as a cub reporter in Kansas City. It establishes a fresh set of contexts for his Italian adventure in 1918 and his novels and short stories of the 1920s, offers some provocative reflections on his fiction and the issue of truth-telling in war literature, and reexamines his later career in terms of themes, issues, or places tied to his early life. The essays vary in methodology, theoretical assumptions, and scope; what they share is an eagerness to question—and to look beyond—truisms that have long prevailed in Hemingway scholarship.Highlights include historian Jennifer Keene’s persuasive analysis of Hemingway as a “typical doughboy,” Ellen Andrew Knodt’s unearthing of “Hemingwayesque” language spread throughout the correspondence penned by his World War I contemporaries, Susan Beegel’s account of the 1918 Spanish Flu Pandemic and its previously unrecognized impact on the young Hemingway, Jennifer Haytock’s adroit analysis of “destructive spectatorship” in The Sun Also Rises, Mark Cirino’s groundbreaking discussion of the instantaneous “life review” experienced by Hemingway’s dying characters (an intrusion of the speculative and the fantastic into fiction better known for its hard surfaces and harsh truths), and Matthew Nickel’s detailed interpretation of the significance of Kansas City in Across the River and Into the Trees. A trio of scholars—Celia Kingsbury, William Blazek, and...

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
2013
3 January
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
384
Pages
PUBLISHER
Kent State University Press
SIZE
2
MB

More Books Like This

The War That Used Up Words The War That Used Up Words
2015
Baptism of Fire: The Birth of the Modern British Fantastic in World War I Baptism of Fire: The Birth of the Modern British Fantastic in World War I
2015
Hemingway, the Red Cross, and the Great War Hemingway, the Red Cross, and the Great War
2013
Battle Lines Battle Lines
2018
The Cambridge Companion to the Literature of the First World War The Cambridge Companion to the Literature of the First World War
2005
Modernism, War, and Violence Modernism, War, and Violence
2017

More Books by Steven Paul, Gail Sinclair & Steve Trout

Dining at Dusk Dining at Dusk
2019
Abused Obscure or Misused Scripture Abused Obscure or Misused Scripture
2020
Abused, Obscure, or Misused Scripture Abused, Obscure, or Misused Scripture
2015