Hemingway The Sun Also Rises
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Rudat, Wolfgang E. H.: A Rotten Way to Be Wounded. The Tragicomedy of "The Sun Also Rises". New York, Bern, Frankfurt/M., Paris Peter Lang Vlg. 1990. ISBN: 978-0-8204-1282-5
A Rotten Way to Be Wounded: The Tragicomedy of 'The Sun Also Rises' is the kind of close textual study of The Sun Also Rises that Hemingway scholars have recently been calling for. Careful textual analysis and an exploration of Hemingway's use of literary allusion as a narrative technique combine to offer many unorthodox and thought-provoking interpretations of character portrayal, narrative movement, and plot. While the ideas presented may be bold and innovative, this is a well-documented, scholarly work which will provide many points of departure for others trying to read between the lines of Hemingway's deceptively simple prose.
X, 214 pp. Hardback *neuwertig*
[SW: Anglistik]
Ghamsharick, Emal: So, what will we be doing today? Traveling in Hemingway's "The Sun Also Rises" GRIN VERLAG; GRIN VERLAG, Februar 2008, Besorgungstitel - vorauss. Lieferzeit 3-5 Tage. ISBN: 3638914356
Seminar paper from the year 2007 in the subject American Studies - Literature, printed single-sided, grade: 1,3, Free University of Berlin (John-F.-Kennedy-Institut), 6 entries in the bibliography, language: English, abstract: In 1926 a man named Ernest Hemingway wrote a book. It was called The Sun Also Rises (as it also travels) and it recounts a recreational journey undertaken by the protagonist, Jake Barnes, and his companions. Jake is very fond of traveling. He is also very fond of getting drunk and seeing people and animals hurt each other. It is hard to tell which he favors more, since he travels in order to get drunk and see violence, although it would not be necessary, since violence and alcohol can be encountered at selected locations all across the world. Traveling must therefore have a more vital function in Jake's life.As multitudinous as Jake's motivations may have been, there seems to be one constant element that can be named as the driving force behind all of Jake's travels. This element is escape. Escape from a dismal and boring life in his home country and in Paris, escape from happiness in Spain and with (or without) Brett, or escape from his war experiences. Since it is such a fundamental part of his life, he, as the narrator, also portrays the other characters as fugitives from themselves and from others. In order to verify this statement, I will examine Jake's possible reasons for expatriation in general. Then I will try to further examine the individual travel stops that Jake visits during his journey. I will show that each location has a different meaning to him, although the guiding theme remains. Then again I will attempt to shine a light on the driving powers behind the restlessness of the three central characters: Jake, Brett and Robert. Although the narrator does show some insight into their motivations, there are still deeper ones that he might not realize because they are also inherent in himself.
NEUBUCH! 2008. 36 S. 210 mm 210 mm x 148 mm x 2 mm; Akademische Schriftenreihe, Bd. V84186
Reynolds, Michael S: The Sun Also Rises, TWAYNE, Juli 1988 ISBN: 9780805780154
Sofort lieferbar! Mängelexemplar mit Lagerspuren. Rechnung mit MwSt. Kartoniert / Broschiert, 120 S., 21,5cm x 13,9cm x 1,0cm, Arguing that The Sun Also Rises is the first accurate reflection of the values of Ernest Hemingway's generation, Michael S. Reynolds takes several historical approaches that lead the reader to new perceptions of Hemingway's first novel.
Halpern, Daniel: Antaeus 33 Spring, 1979, 1979 New York, ET AL ; weicher Einband / soft cover
Paper Very Good Complete issue, original wrapper. Includes contributions by Don Delillo, Seamus Heaney, Derek Walcott, Anthony Hecht, James Tate, and others. This also has the "unpublished opening of 'The Sun Also Rises'" and F. Scott Fitzgerald's "Letter to Ernest Hemingway on 'The Sun Also Rises'. "
[SW: Literary Periodical American Literature]



