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Ernest Hemingway: Critical Assessments of Major Writers

Autor Henry Claridge
en Limba Engleză Hardback – oct 2011
Few twentieth-century American writers have been as influential as Ernest Hemingway (1899ߝ1961). Whilst contemporaries such as F. Scott Fitzgerald and William Faulkner may be as widely taught and studied as Hemingway, neither had an influence on other writers—or indeed, the cognate arts—as great as that of Hemingway. For example, the ‘hard-boiled’ school of detective fiction extending from the novels of Raymond Chandler and Dashiell Hammett to those of James Ellroy and Robert Parker is more or less inconceivable without Hemingway’s stylistic influence. Arguably, film noir is also Hemingwayesque in its laconic detachment. And quite independently of his creative writings, Hemingway’s life continues to exert a profound fascination for both student and the general reader.
Hemingway was the subject of extensive enquiry before his death and since then he has generated interpretative and critical commentary on a vast and bewildering scale, in part aided by the continuing publication of works left unpublished at his death (most notably The Garden of Eden in 1987). The dizzying quantity (and variable quality) of Hemingway criticism makes it difficult to discriminate the useful from the tendentious, superficial, and otiose. That is why this new Routledge title is so urgently needed. In four volumes, the collection meets the need for an authoritative reference work to allow researchers and students to make sense of a vast literature and the continuing explosion in research output. Users will now be able easily and rapidly to locate the best and most influential critical scholarship, work that is otherwise often inaccessible or scattered throughout a variety of specialist journals and books. With material gathered into one easy-to-use set, researchers and students can now spend more of their time with the key journal articles, book chapters, and other pieces, rather than on time-consuming (and sometimes fruitless) archival searches.
Fully indexed and with a comprehensive introduction newly written by the editor, which places the collected material in its historical and intellectual context, Ernest Hemingway is an essential reference work and is destined to be valued as a vital research resource.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780415491204
ISBN-10: 0415491207
Pagini: 1300
Dimensiuni: 170 x 254 x 147 mm
Greutate: 2.68 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Routledge
Seria Critical Assessments of Major Writers

Locul publicării:United Kingdom

Cuprins

Volume I: BIOGRAPHICAL STUDIES, MEMOIRS, REMINISCENCES, and INTERVIEWS
1. Michael Reynolds, ‘Ernest Hemingway: 1899ߝ1961’, in Linda Wagner-Martin (ed.), A Historical Guide to Ernest Hemingway (Oxford University Press, 2000), pp. 16ߝ50.
2. Gertrude Stein, ‘Ernest Hemingway and the Post-War Decade’, Atlantic Monthly, 1933, 152, 197ߝ208.
3. Allen Tate, ‘Miss Toklas’s America Cake’, Memoirs and Opinions (Swallow Press, 1975), pp. 59ߝ66.
4. John Groth, ‘A Note on Ernest Hemingway’, Ernest Hemingway, Men Without Women (World Publishing, 1946), pp. 19ߝ24.
5. Malcolm Cowley, ‘A Portrait of Mister Papa’, Life, 10 January 1949, 86ߝ101.
6. William Forrest Dawson, ‘Ernest Hemingway: Petoskey Interview’, Michigan Alumnus Quarterly Review, 1958, LXIV, 114ߝ23.
7. Leicester Hemingway, My Brother, Ernest Hemingway (Weidenfeld and Nicholson, 1962), pp. 19ߝ43, 76ߝ104, 267ߝ83.
8. Philip Young. ‘Hemingway and Me: A Rather Long Story’, Kenyon Review, 1966, 28, 15ߝ37.
9. Patrick Hemingway, ‘Islands in the Stream: A Son Remembers’, in James Nagel (ed.), Ernest Hemingway: The Writer in Context (University of Wisconsin Press, 1984), pp. 13ߝ18.
10. George Plimpton, ‘Interview with Ernest Hemingway’, in George Plimpton (ed.), Writers at Work: The Paris Review Interviews (Penguin, 1972), pp. 175ߝ96.
11. Michael S. Reynolds, ‘Hemingway’s Home: Depression and Suicide’, American Literature, 1982, 57, 4, 600ߝ10.
12. Jackson J. Benson, ‘Ernest Hemingway: The Life as Fiction and the Fiction as Life’, American Literature, 1989, 61, 345ߝ58.
Volume II
1. PEOPLE AND PLACES
Hemingway in Europe
13. John W. Aldridge, ‘Hemingway and Europe’, Shenandoah, 1961, 12, 11ߝ24.
14. Frederick J. Hoffman, The 1920s: American Writing in the Postwar Decade (Viking, 1962), pp. 87ߝ97, 102ߝ7.
15. Robert McAlmon, ‘1923ߝ1924’, Being Geniuses Together, 1920ߝ1930 (Hogarth Press, 1984), pp. 157ߝ64.
16. Hugh Ford, Published in Paris: A Literary Chronicle of Paris in the 1920s and 1930s (Macmillan, 1975), pp. 104ߝ8.
17. Mario Praz, ‘Hemingway in Italy’, in Roger Asselineau (ed.), The Literary Reputation of Hemingway in Europe (Lettres Modernes, 1965), pp. 93ߝ123.
18. George Wickes, ‘Sketches of the Author’s Life in Paris in the Twenties’, in Jackson J. Benson and Richard Astro (eds.), Hemingway in Our Time (Oregon State University Press, 1974), pp. 25ߝ38.
19. Harold T. McCarthy, ‘Hemingway and Life as Play’, The Expatriate Perspective (Associated University Presses), pp. 136ߝ55.
20. Deming Brown, ‘Hemingway in Russia’, American Quarterly, 1953, 5, 145ߝ61.
21. Andrew Gibson, ‘Hemingway on the British’, The Hemingway Review, 1982, 1, 2, 62ߝ75.
Writers on the Writing
22. Virginia Woolf, ‘An Essay in Criticism’, New York Herald Tribune, 9 October 1927, 8.
23. T. S. Eliot, ‘A Commentary’, The Criterion, 1933, 12, 468ߝ73.
24. Max Eastman, ‘Bull in the Afternoon’, New Republic, 1933, 75, 94ߝ7.
25. Wyndham Lewis, ‘Ernest Hemingway: The Dumb Ox’, Men Without Art (Cassell & Co., 1934), pp. 17ߝ41.
26. Delmore Schwartz, ‘Ernest Hemingway’s Literary Situation’, Southern Review, 1938, 3, 769ߝ82.
27. H. E. Bates, ‘Hemingway’s Short Stories’ [1943], in Carlos Baker (ed.), Hemingway and His Critics: An International Anthology (Hill and Wang, 1961), pp. 71ߝ9.
28. Robert Penn Warren, ‘Hemingway’, The Kenyon Review, 1947, 9, 1ߝ28.
29. Saul Bellow, ‘Hemingway and the Image of Man’, Partisan Review, 1953, 20, 338ߝ42.
30. Wright Morris, ‘The Function of Style: Ernest Hemingway’, The Territory Ahead (University of Nebraska Press, 1978), pp. 133ߝ46.
31. Tom Stoppard, ‘Reflections on Ernest Hemingway’, Ernest Hemingway: The Writer in Context (University of Wisconsin Press, 1984), pp. 19ߝ27.
2. ‘IN OUR TIME’ AND THE SHORT STORIES
32. F. Scott Fitzgerald, ‘Review of In Our Time’, The Bookman, 1926, 63, 264ߝ5.
33. D. H. Lawrence, ‘Review of In Our Time’, Calendar of Modern Letters, 1927, 4, 72ߝ3.
34. Sheldon Norman Grebstein, ‘The Reliable and Unreliable Narrator in Hemingway’s Stories’, Hemingway’s Craft (Southern Illinois University Press, 1973), pp. 56ߝ67.
35. E. R. Hagemann, ‘Only Let the Story End as Soon as Possible: Time and History in Ernest Hemingway’s In Our Time’, Modern Fiction Studies, 1980ߝ1, 26, 255ߝ62.
36. Elizabeth D. Vaughn, ‘In Our Time as Self-Begetting Fiction’, Modern Fiction Studies, 1989, 35, 707ߝ16.
37. Keith Carabine, ‘"Big Two-Hearted River": A Reinterpretation’, The Hemingway Review, 1982, 1, 2, 39ߝ44.
38. Cleanth Brooks and Robert Penn Warren, ‘The Killers’, Understanding Fiction (Appleton-Century Crofts, 1959), pp. 303ߝ12.
39. Frank O’Connor, ‘A Clean Well-Lighted Place’, The Lonely Voice: A Study of the Short Story (World Publishing, 1963), pp. 156ߝ69.
40. David Lodge, ‘Hemingway’s Clean, Well-Lighted, Puzzling Place’, The Novelist at the Crossroads (Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1971), pp. 184ߝ202.
41. John V. Hagopian, ‘Symmetry in "A Cat in the Rain"’, College English, 1962, 24, 220ߝ2.
42. Virgil Hutton, ‘The Short Happy Life of Macomber, The University Review, 1964, 30, 253ߝ63.
43. James J. Martine, ‘A Little Light on Hemingway’s "The Light of the World"’, Studies in Short Fiction, 1970, VII, 465ߝ7.
44. Charles J. Nolan, Jr., ‘Hemingway’s "Out of Season": The Importance of Close Reading’, Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature, 1999, 53, 45ߝ58.
45. Martin Light, ‘Of Wasteful Deaths: Hemingway’s Stories about the Spanish War’, The Western Humanities Review, 1969, XXIII, 29ߝ42.
46. Howard L. Hannum, ‘Hemingway’s Tales of "The Real Dark"’, in Susan F. Beegel (ed.), Hemingway’s Neglected Short Fiction: New Perspectives (University of Alabama Press, 1989), pp. 339ߝ50.
Volume III
CRITICAL ASSESSMENTS OF INDIVIDUAL NOVELS
The Sun Also Rises (1926)
47. James T. Farrell, ‘The Sun Also Rises’, The League of Frightened Philistines (Vanguard Press, 1945), pp. 20ߝ4.
48. Mark Spilka, ‘The Death of Love in The Sun Also Rises’, in Charles Shapiro (ed.), Twelve Original Essays on Great American Novels (Wayne State University Press, 1958), pp. 80ߝ92.
49. Andrew Hook, ‘Art and Life in The Sun Also Rises’, in A. Robert Lee (ed.), Ernest Hemingway: New Critical Essays (Vision Press, 1983), pp. 49ߝ63.
50. Ira Elliott, ‘Performance Art: Jake Barnes and "Masculine" Signification in The Sun Also Rises’, American Literature, 1995, 67, 1, 77ߝ94.
51. Donald Pizer, ‘The Moment Imagined and Remembered: Fiction: Ernest Hemingway, The Sun Also Rises’, American Expatriate Writing and the Paris Moment: Modernism and Place (Louisiana State University Press, 1996), pp. 73ߝ86.
A Farewell to Arms (1929)
52. Malcolm Cowley, ‘Review of A Farewell to Arms’, New York Herald Tribune, 6 October 1929, 1, 6.
53. T. S. Matthews, ‘Nothing Ever Happens to the Brave’, The New Republic, 9 October 1926, 208ߝ10.
54. Henry Seidel Canby, ‘Review of A Farewell to Arms’, The Saturday Review of Literature, 12 October 1929, pp. 231ߝ2.
55. Ford Madox Ford, Introduction to A Farewell to Arms (Random House, 1932), pp. ixߝxx.
56. Otto Friedrich, ‘Ernest Hemingway: Joy Through Strength’, The American Scholar, Autumn 1957, 519ߝ24.
57. Charles R. Anderson, ‘Hemingway’s Other Style’, Modern Language Notes, 1961, LXXVI, 434ߝ42.
58. Blanche Gelfant, ‘Language as Moral Code in A Farewell to Arms’, Modern Fiction Studies, 1963, IX, 173ߝ6.
59. Bernard Oldsey, ‘The Sense of an Ending in A Farewell to Arms’, Modern Fiction Studies, 1977, 23, 491ߝ508.
60. Judith Fetterley, ‘A Farewell to Arms: Hemingway’s "Resentful Cryptogram"’, The Resisting Reader: A Feminist Approach to American Fiction (Indiana University Press, 1978), pp. 46ߝ71.
To Have and Have Not (1937)
61. Malcolm Cowley, ‘Hemingway: Work in Progress’, The New Republic, 20 October 1937, 310ߝ14.
62. Gerry Brenner, ‘To Have and Have Not as Classical Tragedy: Reconsidering Hemingway’s Neglected Novel’, in Richard Astro and Jackson J. Benson (eds.), Hemingway in Our Time (Oregon State University Press, 1974), pp. 67ߝ86.
63. Wirt Williams, ‘To Have and Have Not: The Hero of the Bold Choice’, The Tragic Art of Ernest Hemingway (Louisiana State University Press, 1981), pp. 107ߝ22.
For Whom the Bell Tolls (1940)
64. Alvah C. Bessie, ‘Review of For Whom the Bell Tolls’, New Masses, 1940, XXXVII, 25ߝ9.
65. Edmund Wilson, ‘Ernest Hemingway’s For Whom the Bell Tolls’, New Republic, 1940, CIII, 591ߝ2.
66. Malcolm Cowley, ‘Hemingway’s "Nevertheless"’, New Republic, 1941, CIV, 89ߝ90.
67. Dwight MacDonald, ‘Hemingway’s Unpolitical Political Novel’, Partisan Review, JanuaryߝFebruary 1941, 24ߝ8.
68. W. H. Mellers, ‘The Ox in Spain’, Scrutiny, 1941, X, 93ߝ9.
69. Arturo Barea, ‘Not Spain but Hemingway’, trans. Ilsa Barea, Horizon, 1941, III, 350ߝ61.
70. William T. Moynihan, ‘The Martyrdom of Robert Jordan’, College English, 1959, XXI, 127ߝ32.
71. John Graham, ‘Ernest Hemingway: The Meaning of Style’, Modern Fiction Studies, 1960, VI, 298ߝ313.
72. A. Robert Lee, ‘"Everything Completely Knit Up": Seeing For Whom the Bell Tolls Whole’, Ernest Hemingway: New Critical Essays (Vision Press, 1983), pp. 79ߝ102.
Across the River and Into the Trees (1950)
73. Evelyn Waugh, ‘Winner Take Nothing: Review of Across the River and into the Trees’, Tablet, 30 November 1950, 290ߝ1.
74. Joseph Warren Beach, ‘How Do You Like It Now, Gentlemen?’, Sewanee Review, 1951, LIX, 311ߝ28.
75. Horst Oppel, ‘Hemingway’s Across the River and Into the Trees’, trans. Joseph M. Bernstein, in Carlos Baker (ed.), Hemingway and His Critics: An International Anthology (Hill and Wang, 1961), pp. 213ߝ26.
76. Jackson J. Benson, ‘Dark Laughter’, Hemingway: The Writer’s Art of Self-Defense (University of Minnesota Press, 1969), pp. 47ߝ69.
The Old Man and the Sea (1952)
77. Mark Schorer, ‘With Grace Under Pressure’, New Republic, 1952, CXXVII, 19ߝ20.
78. Leo Gurko, ‘The Old Man and the Sea’, College English, 1955, XVII, 11ߝ15.
79. Clinton S. Burhans, Jr., ‘The Old Man and the Sea: Hemingway’s Tragic Vision of Man’, American Literature, 1960, XXXI, 446ߝ55.
80. Robert P. Weeks, ‘Fakery in The Old Man and the Sea’, College English, 1962, XXIV, 188ߝ92.
81. David Timms, ‘Contrasts in Form: Hemingway’s The Old Man and the Sea and Faulkner’s "The Bear"’, in A. Robert Lee (ed.), The Modern American Novella (Vision Press, 1989), pp. 97ߝ113.
Islands in the Stream (1970)
82. John W. Aldridge, ‘Islands in the Stream’, The Devil in the Fire: Retrospective Essays on American Literature and Culture, 1951ߝ1971 (Harper’s Magazine Press, 1972), pp. 91ߝ100.
83. Joseph M. DeFalco, ‘Hemingway’s Islands and Streams: Minor Tactics for Heavy Pressure’, in Richard Astro and Jackson J. Benson (eds.), Hemingway in Our Time (Oregon State University Press, 1974), pp. 39ߝ51.
84. Gregory S. Sojka, ‘Art and Order in Islands in the Stream’, in Donald R. Noble (ed.), Hemingway: A Revaluation (Whiston Publishing Company, 1983), pp. 263ߝ80.
The Garden of Eden (1986)
85. Mark Spilka, ‘Hemingway’s Barbershop Quartet: "The Garden of Eden" Manuscript’, Novel: A Forum on Fiction, 1987, 21, 1, 29ߝ55.
86. J. Gerald Kennedy, ‘Hemingway’s Gender Trouble’, American Literature, 1991, 63, 2, 187ߝ207.
Volume IV: GENERAL CRITICAL PERSPECTIVES ON HEMINGWAY—A CHRONOLOGICAL OVERVIEW
HEMINGWAY: CRITICAL OPINION BETWEEN THE WARS
87. Lincoln Kirstein, ‘The Canon of Death’, Hound and Horn, 1933, VI, 336ߝ41.
88. J. Kashkeen, ‘Ernest Hemingway: A Tragedy of Craftsmanship’, International Literature, 1935, 5, 76ߝ108.
89. Edgar Johnson, ‘Farewell the Separate Peace: The Rejections of Ernest Hemingway’, Sewanee Review, 1940, XLVIII, 289ߝ300.
HEMINGWAY: CRITICAL OPINION IN THE 1940s AND 1950s
90. Edmund Wilson, ‘Hemingway: Gauge of Morale’, The Wound and the Bow (Houghton Mifflin, 1941), pp. 214ߝ22.
91. David Daiches, ‘Ernest Hemingway’, College English, 1941, 2, 8, 725ߝ36.
92. Alfred Kazin, On Native Grounds: An Interpretation of Modern American Literature (Harcourt, Brace & World, Inc., 1942), pp. 327ߝ41.
93. D. S. Savage, ‘Ernest Hemingway’, The Withered Branch: Six Studies in the Modern Novel (Eyre & Spottiswode, 1950), pp. 23ߝ43.
94. Harry Levin, ‘Observations on the Style of Ernest Hemingway’, Kenyon Review, 1951, XIII, 581ߝ609.
95. E. M. Halliday, ‘Hemingway’s Narrative Perspective’, Sewanee Review, 1952, LX, 115ߝ24.
96. Frederick J. Hoffman, ‘No Beginning and No End: Hemingway and Death’, Essays in Criticism, 1953, III , 73ߝ84.
97. Delmore Schwartz, ‘The Fiction of Ernest Hemingway’, Perspectives, 1955, 13, 70ߝ88.
98. Robert C. Hart, ‘Hemingway on Writing’, College English, 1957, 18, 314ߝ20.
99. Nemi D’Agostino, ‘The Later Hemingway’ [1956], Sewanee Review, 1960, LXVIII, 482ߝ93.
HEMINGWAY: CRITICAL OPINION SINCE HIS DEATH
100. Cleanth Brooks, ‘Ernest Hemingway: Man on His Moral Uppers’, The Hidden God: Studies in Hemingway, Faulkner, Yeats, Eliot, and Warren (Yale University Press, 1963), pp. 6ߝ21.
101. Wesley A. Kort, ‘Human Time in Hemingway’s Fiction’, Modern Fiction Studies, 1980ߝ1, 26, 579ߝ96.
102. Jeffrey Walsh, ‘Emblematical of War: The Representation of Combat in Hemingway’s Fiction’, The Hemingway Review, 1982, 1, 45ߝ57.
103. Herbie Butterfield, ‘Ernest Hemingway’, in Richard Gray (ed.), American Fiction: New Readings (Vision Press, 1983), pp. 184ߝ99.
104. Kenneth J. Johnston, ‘Hemingway and Cezanne: Doing the Country’, American Literature, 1984, 56, 1, 28ߝ37.
105. Robert Merrill, ‘Demoting Hemingway: Feminist Criticism and the Canon’, American Literature, 1988, 60, 2, 255ߝ68.
106. James C. McKelly, ‘From Whom the Bull Flows: Hemingway in Parody’, American Literature, 1989, 61, 4, 547ߝ62.
107. Robert Paul Lamb, ‘Hemingway and the Creation of Twentieth-Century Dialogue’, Twentieth-Century Literature, 1996, 42, 453ߝ80.