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Ernest Hemingway: Thought in Action: Studies in American Thought and Culture

Autor Mark Cirino
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 15 iul 2012
Ernest Hemingway’s groundbreaking prose style and examination of timeless themes made him one of the most important American writers of the twentieth century. Yet in Ernest Hemingway: Thought in Action, Mark Cirino observes, “Literary criticism has accused Hemingway of many things but thinking too deeply is not one of them.” Although much has been written about the author’s love of action—hunting, fishing, drinking, bullfighting, boxing, travel, and the moveable feast—Cirino looks at Hemingway’s focus on the modern mind, paralleling the interest in consciousness of such predecessors and contemporaries as Proust, Joyce, Woolf, Faulkner, and Henry James. Hemingway, Cirino demonstrates, probes the ways his character’s minds respond when placed in urgent situations or when damaged by past traumas.
    In Cirino’s analysis of Hemingway’s work through this lens—including such celebrated classics as A Farewell to Arms, The Old Man and the Sea, and “Big Two-Hearted River” and less-appreciated works including Islands in the Stream and “Because I Think Deeper”—an entirely different Hemingway hero emerges: intelligent, introspective, and ruminative.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780299286545
ISBN-10: 0299286541
Pagini: 176
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.27 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: University of Wisconsin Press
Colecția University of Wisconsin Press
Seria Studies in American Thought and Culture


Recenzii

“Cirino […] collapses the distinction between thought and action that has traditionally typecast Hemingway as an anti-intellectual dolt—the ‘he-man’ of American literature.’”—Kirk Curnutt, author of Coffee with Hemingway

Notă biografică

Mark Cirino is assistant professor of English at the University of Evansville. He is the co-editor of Ernest Hemingway: Geography of Memory and the general editor of Kent State University Press’s “Reading Hemingway” series. He is also the author of two novels, Name the Baby and Arizona Blues.

Cuprins

Acknowledgments
Abbreviations of Hemingway Texts
Introduction: Ernest Hemingway and the Life of the Mind
1 The Solitary Consciousness I: Metacognition and Mental Control in "Big Two-Hearted River"
2 The Solitary Consciousness II: Metacognition and Mental Control in The Old Man and the Sea
3 Memory in A Farewell to Arms: Dimensions, Architecture, and Persistence
4 "The Stream With No Visible Flow": Islands in the Stream and the Thought-Action Dichotomy
5 Beating Mr. Turgenev: "The Execution of Tropmann" and Hemingway's Aesthetic of Witness
6 That Supreme Moment of Complete Knowledge: Hemingway's Theory of the Vision of the Dying
7 Reading Through Hemingway's Void: The Death of Consciousness as Conversion or Annihilation
Notes
Works Cited
Index

Descriere

Ernest Hemingway’s groundbreaking prose style and examination of timeless themes made him one of the most important American writers of the twentieth century. Yet in Ernest Hemingway: Thought in Action, Mark Cirino observes, “Literary criticism has accused Hemingway of many things but thinking too deeply is not one of them.” Although much has been written about the author’s love of action—hunting, fishing, drinking, bullfighting, boxing, travel, and the moveable feast—Cirino looks at Hemingway’s focus on the modern mind, paralleling the interest in consciousness of such predecessors and contemporaries as Proust, Joyce, Woolf, Faulkner, and Henry James. Hemingway, Cirino demonstrates, probes the ways his character’s minds respond when placed in urgent situations or when damaged by past traumas.
    In Cirino’s analysis of Hemingway’s work through this lens—including such celebrated classics as A Farewell to Arms, The Old Man and the Sea, and “Big Two-Hearted River” and less-appreciated works including Islands in the Stream and “Because I Think Deeper”—an entirely different Hemingway hero emerges: intelligent, introspective, and ruminative.