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    The Sun Also Rises

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    Amanda Marcacci Mrs. Brady AP Literature The Sun Also Rises Opening In Ernest Hemingway’s "The Sun Also Rises"‚ Hemingway uses first person point of view through Jake to show different aspects‚ relationships‚ and thoughts he has regarding characters throughout the story. One of the most prominent themes throughout the novel is how it was drastically shaped through World War I and how many of the characters’ personalities‚ thoughts‚ and interactions were ultimately shaped through the usage

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    The Sun Also Rises

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    "I write to try to find out who I am. One of my main theme is manliness..." once said by Ernest Gaines . Although Ernest Hemingway takes a different route to manliness in his book‚ The Sun Also Rises. It is made evident with the radical reevaluation of what it is to be masculine‚ and the rendering of Jake’s manhood‚ useless because of an injury obtained during World War 1 that the recurring theme is the male insecurity. First‚ the male insecurity is shown as World War 1 questioned what it real

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    The Sun Also Rises

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    Throughout the entire book of The Sun Also Rises‚ hardly a page goes by without referencing any alcohol. From the very beginning of the book‚ the main character/protagonist‚ Jake meets a young prostitute named Georgette and they have drinks together. She states that‚ “Everybody’s sick. I’m sick too”. Bars‚ dance clubs‚ cafes where alcohol is served seems to be a place of escape for a majority of the characters. Jake Barnes‚ like the other characters‚ uses the consumption of alcohol to escape what

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    The Sun Also Rises

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    relationships between the characters by Cohn being the steer and the bulls being the rest of the characters. 7. Mike Compares Cohn to a steer because he believes that Cohn doesn’t say much and leads a quit life and always hanging around like a steer. He also says that Cohn follows Brett around like a steer. 8. . "What if Brett did sleep with you? She’s slept with lots of other people better than

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    The Sun Also rises

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    While it is true that Jake Barnes physical injury prevents him from fulfilling his desires‚ the fact is that it also serves as a metaphor for the lost generation. The injury that Jake Barnes receives in the war insinuates to the problems that this generation had. Many of them were scared by the war and it was impossible for them to reintegrate themselves back into society. Jake Barnes attempts to reinsert himself into society throughout the novel‚ and repeatedly has trouble doing so. At first with

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    Two related themes pointed out by scholars in their analysis of Hemingway’s The Sun Also Rises are the debate whether expats in Paris have a pleasure living as they do or a negative experience of their days in a country which is not theirs; along with the needs for introspection and questioning upon the meaning of the fiesta. Even though to be in conflict with society and especially its values and beliefs isn’t easy for many authors to do‚ Ernest Hemingway breaks out this idea in order to give the

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    The Sun Also Rises Report

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    time. Youthful and impressionable‚ these people were immersed headlong into the furious medley of death and devastation. By the time the war had ended‚ many found that they could no longer accept what now seemed to be pretentious and contradictory moral standards of nations that could be capable of such atrocities. Some were able to brush off the pain and confusion enough to get on with their lives. Others simply found themselves incapable of existing under their country’s thin façade of virtuousness

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    The Sun Also Rises Essay

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    Sun Also Rises The Aimlessness of the Lost Generation (for Text to text comparison) World War I undercut traditional notions of morality‚ faith‚ and justice. No longer able to rely on the traditional beliefs that gave life meaning‚ the men and women who experienced the war became psychologically and morally lost‚ and they wandered aimlessly in a world that appeared meaningless. Jake‚ Brett‚ and their acquaintances give dramatic life to this situation. Because they no longer believe in anything

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    The Sun Also Rises Essay

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    dissatisfaction. He directly states this idleness and lack of control in the book. The Sun Also Rises; “You’re an expatriate. You’ve lost touch with the soil. You get precious. Fake European standards have ruined you. You drink yourself to death. You become obsessed with sex. You spend all your time talking‚ not working. You are an expatriate‚ see? You hang around cafes” (TSAR‚ 60). On the other hand‚ the main focus

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    Jonathan Rowe Essay 1: The Sun Also Rises English 42 Doctor Speirs 3/28/2010 No Bull in Bullfighting In The Sun Also Rises‚ Ernest Hemingway writes “nobody ever lives their life all the way up except bull-fighters” (100). Spoken by Jake‚ this line exemplifies the importance that bullfighting plays in the novel. It’s not only portrayed as a sport‚ but rather as a complex‚ mathematical art in the form of a dance between the bull and fighter. The matador scene in chapter 18

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