Saturday, October 12, 2019
The Forgotten Female in the Works of Ernest Hemingway Essay -- Biograp
The Forgotten Female in the Works of Hemingway     Ã     Ã  Ã  Ã   Ernest Hemingway has  often been accused of misogyny in his treatment of female characters (and,  perhaps, in his treatment of women in his own life). "It is not fashionable  these days to praise the work of Ernest Hemingway," says Frederick Busch. "His  women too often seem to be projections of male needfulness" (1). Many of his  stories are seen as prototypical bildungsroman stories--stories, usually, of  young men coming of age. There are few, if any, stories in the canon of women  coming of age, however, and Hemingway is not the first to suffer the wrath of  feminist critics. But is this wrath justified?      Ã       In his dissertation, Mark G. Newton reviews some of the critical literature  that places Hemingway within the misogynist genre. "Cliches [sic] abound," he  says. "Hemingway was in search of his manhood (an ignoble quest?); he hated  women; he had a "death wish" and a "thin persona"; he was the archpriest of  violence, etc." (6). However, Newton sees women in Hemingway's works as the  "positive life-directed force which transports the male Hemingway hero away from  a debilitating wound" (2), and he places them into "[t]he roles manifested by  Hemingway's women in aiding the hero": "Ideal Women," "Sister Guides," "Icons  and Dream Visions," "Wicked Women Who Also Serve," "Feminine Points of View,"  and "Full Cycle." My problem with Newton's approach to the feminine in Hemingway  is that Newton seems to accept that, in presenting women as archetypal Eve's,  the woman as "help-meet"-type image, that Hemingway is somehow presenting women  favorably.      Ã       A somewhat similar view is presented by Jeryl J. Prescott in "Liberty for  Just(Us): Gender and Race in ...              ... of  Melville, Twain, and Hemingway. New York: Peter Lang, 1984.      Kennedy, J. Gerald. "Hemingway's Gender Trouble." American Literature 63:2  (1991): 187-207.      Miller, Linda Patterson. "Hemingway's Women: A Reassessment." Hemingway in  Italy and Other Essays. Ed. Robert W,. Lewis. Praeger, 1990.      Newton, Mark G. Beyond the Wound: The Role of Women in Aiding the Hemingway  Hero. Dissertation: U of S. Florida, 1985.      Penn Warren, Robert. "Ernest Hemingway," Introduction to Modern Standard  Authors edition of A Farewell to Arms. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1949.       Prescott, Jeryl J. "Liberty for Just(us): Gender and Race in Hemingway's To  Have and Have Not." College Language Association Journal 37:2 (1993): 176-88.       Willingham, Kathy. "Hemingway's The Garden of Eden: Writing with the Body."  The Hemingway Review 12:2 (1993): 46-61.      Ã                        
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