"Irati river in the sun also rises" Essays and Research Papers

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    SOUTHARD 1 The Sun Also Rises Hemingway Response Essay Trey Southard ENG 440 Zeller January 7‚ 2014 SOUTHARD 2 Prompt: If the Sun Also Rises serves as a fictional ode to Hemingway’s feelings about the first world war then why did he and his circle of expatriates feel unwilling or unable to return home? Ernest Hemingway’s‚ The Sun Also Rises is basically the telling of Hemingway’s personal story after

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    F. Scott Fitzgerald ’s The Great Gatsby and Ernest Hemingway ’s The Sun Also Rises both define the culture of the 1920s through the behaviors and thoughts of their characters. The characters in both novels have a sense of sadness and emptiness‚ which they resolve through sex and alcohol. This can be attributed to the disillusionment surrounding the Great War‚ better known as World War I. Jay Gatsby in The Great Gatsby represents the Jazz Age and high life of the 1920s‚ in contrast to Brett Ashley

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    scale. The crippling effects of their lost morality and disillusionment with society influenced them to lead lives of reckless decadence and an idealized past as expressed in such literary works as The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald and The Sun Also Rises by Ernest Hemingway. The concept of a lost generation immediately following the end of World War I saw its beginnings in Paris‚ whereupon most American soldiers found themselves after the war. During the period after the end of World War I‚

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    The criticisms on The Sun Also Rises all say that this book was written in a too masculine way‚ as it was pretty much his point of view on the post war and the novel was written based on his personal experience‚ like in the quote: "Hemingway’s analysis of the expatriate lifestyle relies heavily on personal experience. As a result‚ the novel is often considered a masculine piece." I definitely agree with this quote because everything that happens in the story revolves around in a manly way. It seems

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    The Sun Also Rises In Ernest Hemingway’s The Sun Also Rises‚ we encounter two very interesting characters—Pedro Romero and Count Mippipopolous —who represent what Hemingway called an ‘exemplar”. An exemplar is someone who lives life in an exemplary manner. He is usually a man who experiences a sacred hurt and found joy. We see Jake Barns learn from Romero and Mippipopolous’s impressive outlook on life and apply it to his own life. In contrast to other characters that fervently search for meaning

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    The After Effects of the War in The Sun Also Rises Ernest Hemmingway was an intellectual writer who used characters‚ setting‚ and action in the novel‚ The Sun Also Rises‚ to convey many themes. He is also known to be a writer about the World War I time period. Thus‚ World War I has affected each of the characters in the novel in one-way or another. The war serves to haunt many of the characters and is the source of great pain in the book. Two characters that are specifically affected by the war

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    In the renowned novel The Sun Also Rises (1926) by Ernest Hemingway‚ there is a reoccurring theme of sexuality. The new mindset that the moderns have when it comes to relationships is that men and women should be able to enjoy their sexual relations without the commitment of being in a relationship‚ such as marriage. Men and women struggle with relationships and sexuality during the modern age because the women are confused as to what type of affection they want‚ the men are spiritually broken‚ and

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    The Sun Also Rises: Liberal Use of Dialogue by Hemingway The remarkable thing about the book was its liberal use of dialogue and how Hemingway used it to carry the reader through the book. There was no plot in the book in the sense that there was no twists‚ intrigue‚ or goals for any of the characters and the dialogue was the only thing that moved the reader through the book. Hemingway used so much dialogue that it was difficult at times to follow who was saying what‚ but I believe this didn’t matter

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    Fitzgerald’s "Winter Dreams" and Hemingway’s The Sun Also Rises. Both Judy and Brett are very loud and forward; they are certain to make their presence known in a crowd and neither has a problem with overtly pursuing their targets. They never seem to run out of energy when it comes to social functions‚ and their extravagant social lives tend to intrigue men. Other assets that make Judy and Brett seductive are their good looks as well as their high class standing. Also‚ both of the women are codependent and

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    In “The Sun Also Rises‚” the bullfighting scenes are one of the most powerful symbolic elements used by Hemingway in developing the book’s central themes of sexual power‚ masculinity and the destruction of morals. The passage is laden with symbolic imagery and word choice‚ and metaphorically parallels several of the story’s significant plot threads. In short‚ the bullfights are a condensed‚ abstract and poetic rendition of the book’s central ideas. Hemingway’s language in this passage can be seen

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