Showing 1 - 20 results of 25 for search '"Ernest Hemingway"', query time: 0.29s Refine Results
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    “But man is not made for defeat”: insights into Ernest Hemingway’s dementia by Léo Coutinho, Hélio Afonso Ghizoni Teive

    Published 2022-01-01
    “…ABSTRACT Ernest Hemingway is widely regarded as one of the greatest fiction writers of all time. …”
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    War Trauma and Traumatized Characters in A Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway by Asst. Lect. Mohammed Abdulbasit Ibrahim

    Published 2025-03-01
    “…This article examines war trauma and its psychological imprint on characters in Ernest Hemingway's A Farewell to Arms (1929) through psychoanalytic theories and trauma studies. …”
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    The Binary Opposition In “Hills Like White Elephants”. : A short Story By Ernest Hemingway. :The Structural Analysis by Udiat Udiat, Agnes Widyaningrum

    Published 2024-08-01
    “…This study examines the short story "Hills Like White Elephants" by Ernest Hemingway through the lens of structuralism, focusing on the concept of binary opposition. …”
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    FROM ERNEST HEMINGWAY TO HARUKI MURAKAMI: PRESENCE AND ABSENCE DICHOTOMY, IDENTITY CRISIS AND THE SEARCH FOR MEANING THAT WOMEN CHARACTERS BRING ABOUT IN “IN ANOTHER COUNTRY” AND “KINO” by Zafer Şafak

    Published 2023-12-01
    “…The stories “In Another Country” in Men Without Women (1927) and “Kino” in Men Without Women (2014) are two different but profoundly related short stories written by Ernest Hemingway and Haruki Murakami respectively. Although these two short stories differ by virtue of spatial and temporal variables producing the cultural climate in which the two novelists lived and created their works, by reading these two short stories closely and comparatively, this study aims to point out, prove and comment that both stories reveal the same themes in their narratives as the problematization of men’s relationship with the women together with the impacts of the presence-absence of women figures on men’s lives. …”
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    Everybody behaves badly: the true story behind Hemingway's masterpiece The Sun Also Rises by Elisa Correa dos Santos Townsend, Christiane Heemann

    Published 2017-01-01
    “… Lesley Blume’s book depicts the ‘making of’ of Ernest Hemingway's The Sun Also Rises by studying the personalities who inspired it and the immeasurable changes it brought to the literary world. …”
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    Spain and Don Ernesto. History of mutual love by A. Sudakova

    Published 2019-06-01
    “…Bullfighting and wars, sun and waves, inevitable danger and careless rest make an inconsistent picture of Spain, which appears before us due to Ernest Hemingway’s labour. He was fond of this country, we shall try to understand, what for?…”
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    Scott Fitzgerald: famous writer, alcoholism and probable epilepsy by Mariana M. Wolski, Luciano de Paola, Hélio A. G. Teive

    “…According to descriptions in A Moveable Feast, by Ernest Hemingway, Fitzgerald had episodes resembling complex partial seizures, raising the possibility of temporal lobe epilepsy.…”
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    Из Именного указателя к «Записным книжкам» Ахматовой [From an Index to Anna Akhmatova’s Notebooks] by Roman Timenchik

    Published 2021-01-01
    “…Driver (1929—2003), Tat’iana Gndich (1907—1976), Alexander Golovin (1863—1930), Ernest Hemingway (1899—1961), and Jovan Jovanović Zmaj (1833—1904). …”
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    Hemingway à La Havane : entre mise en scène de l’émotion et évocation d’une présence by Floriane Toussaint

    Published 2022-11-01
    “…For Ernest Hemingway’s readers, a trip to Cuba is a kind of pilgrimage. …”
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    Roped Solidarity by Burak Sezer

    Published 2025-03-01
    “…Drawing on Michel Serres’s philosophical contract theory, ropes can be regarded as the cords of an accord, which become taut and visible in seagoing narratives; in this paper, Herman Melville’s Moby-Dick (1851) and Ernest Hemingway’s The Old Man and the Sea (1957) are discussed, as both novels devote much attention to the ship’s rigging or rope-work, as well as to the lines of attachment between humans and whales or marlins respectively. …”
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    Missing Data, Speculative Reading by Rebecca Sutton Koeser, Zoe LeBlanc

    Published 2024-05-01
    “…We conclude that the datasets include ninety-three percent of membership activity, ninety-six percent of members, and sixty-four percent to seventy-six percent of the books despite only including twenty-six percent of the borrowing activity. We then treat Ernest Hemingway as a test case for speculative reading: based on Hemingway’s known borrowing and all documented borrowing activity, we generate a list of books he might have borrowed during the years his borrowing is not documented; we then verify and interpret our list against the substantial scholarly record of the books he read and owned.…”
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    Literarische Zensur im Franquismus by Karolin Schäfer

    Published 2025-06-01
    “… Ernest Hemingway, der den Spanischen Bürgerkrieg selbst vor Ort miterlebte, ver­arbeitete seine dortigen Erfahrungen als Berichterstatter im Roman For Whom the Bell Tolls, in dem er teils ganz unverblümt die Grauen des Kriegs schildert. …”
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