Alchemy in The Sun Also Rises: Hidden Gold in Hemingway's NarrativeE. Mellen Press, 1992 - 277 páginas This study provides an examination of textual details of The Sun Also Rises, specifically addressing the fact that the novel is filled with wordplay, jokes and allusions. It also devotes space to Hemingway's concern with sexual identity, sexual crossover, and androgyny. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 62
Página 26
... reader to remember that the first man whom Jake said he sent Brett off with had called him a “ pimp ” —so that the reader will readily buy the narrator's version that he had been a pimp also between Brett and Cohn . And Jake assures the ...
... reader to remember that the first man whom Jake said he sent Brett off with had called him a “ pimp ” —so that the reader will readily buy the narrator's version that he had been a pimp also between Brett and Cohn . And Jake assures the ...
Página 144
... reader where an illustration of her change can be found . Brett is lending an ironic twist to Mike's request that she " Tell [ Jake ] all about [ her ] bull - fighter " ( italics added ) . As Benson , quoted earlier , points out , in ...
... reader where an illustration of her change can be found . Brett is lending an ironic twist to Mike's request that she " Tell [ Jake ] all about [ her ] bull - fighter " ( italics added ) . As Benson , quoted earlier , points out , in ...
Página 173
... reader . We remember Benson's observation that in The Sun Also Rises there is " the seldom recognized Fieldingesque perspective of the indirect communication with the reader in a position ironically detached from all the other ...
... reader . We remember Benson's observation that in The Sun Also Rises there is " the seldom recognized Fieldingesque perspective of the indirect communication with the reader in a position ironically detached from all the other ...
Términos y frases comunes
able actually affair allusive already answer argue Ashley asks attempt Barnes become better Bill Bill's Brett bullfighter bulls calls castration chapter character Cohn Cohn's concerning context contrast Count course damned discussion drink earlier English Ernest especially expressed fact feel final Frances Gatsby give hand hell Hemingway Hemingway's Hinkle idea immediately impotent injury intended interpretation ironically irony italics added Jake Jake's joke kind lady later least leave lines look male meaning Mike Mike's narrator narrator's never Nick night notes novel observes Pamplona Paris passage perhaps play present question quoted reader realizes reason reference relationship remark replaced replies Robert Romero rotten says scene seems sense sexual sort statement suggest Sun Also Rises symbolically talk tells things thought tries trying turn woman wounded writer