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    Faulker vs. Hemingway

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    Compare and contrast: Hemingway v. Faulkner Each writer has its very own and unique style when writing a story. The style a writer uses to write a story shows the tone being use‚ symbolism‚ characterization and description‚ enough for the reader to understand the story. Two well-known writers with completely different styles are Ernest Hemingway and William Faulkner. “Faulkner uses many words to weave an intricate picture in the reader ’s head of what is going on‚ and Hemingway uses many monosyllabic

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    Faulkner Vs Hemingway

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    Ernest Hemingway and William Faulkner had completely different writing styles. Faulkner gives the reader insight into his characters and their backgrounds‚ whereas Hemingway deliberately omits certain details in his stories. Faulkner adds complexity to his stories‚ even when describing things that most people would consider insignificant. Hemingway’s word choice is less complicated than Faulkner’s. He uses short sentences and a prose style to get his point across in a blunt manner. Although each

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    Hemingway vs. Fitzgerald

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    greatest writers of the 20th century‚ F. Scott Fitzgerald and Ernest Hemingway. Although both authors use alcohol as a “mask” or an escape to try and fill the void of hopelessness‚ Hemingway has a stronger emphasis on alcohol than Fitzgerald and also uses it as a means of communion. The life of Ernest Hemingway is a perfect example of turning to alcohol to escape the hopelessness and aimlessness of the “Lost Generation.” Hemingway had a very disturbing and but adventurous childhood in America. He

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    Hemingway

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    Kerseboom English 5V January 4‚ 2013 Religious aspects of the novel A Farewell to Arms A Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway presents the nada and the nature of the universe. It also shows aspects of an anti-war novel. The protagonist of the book‚ Frederick Henry‚ betrays his love for nurse Catherine Barkley. This relationship represents Henry’s character as a typical Hemingway hero. He is an egoist and he is passive towards his wife Catherine. The character has recognized and accepted the reality

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    hemingway

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    seems to be missing in the story is a crisis; however Hemingway injects implied crises in two points of this story. Between when the doctor says “He’s going to get well” and when Hemingway states “And it still isn’t you”‚ there is an implied crisis. There is no expression of his crisis thinking‚ only his thinking leading up to that point. This leaves the reader wondering what Hemingway is thinking at that point. At both crisis points Hemingway reverses his view of Raven. We don’t understand the

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    hemingway

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    Characters’ Discourse and Narrator’s Discourse The creation of first and secondary narratives which can be used to explain the doubling of the story in Hemingway‟s short stories is a function also of the act of narration (“narrating instance” in Genette) and of the presence of a narrator who produces them. In fact‚ it is exactly the presence of a narrator who produces a narrative text that makes our analysis of narrative discourse possible. Or Genette the “narrating situation is” like any other

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    Hemingway

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    Theme and Elements 1. Elements of Hemingway Lisa Cearfoss ENG125: Introduction to Literature Instructor: Alessandra Cusimano

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    Hemingway

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    interest‚ individuality‚ and expression. In a word‚ art is life. Ernest Hemingway never fails to enlighten readers with his literary genius. Through his craft of short stories‚ Hemingway masters the use of literary elements using a combination of his imagination and real life experiences. He struggled with love‚ settling down‚ alcoholism‚ and his memories of war; converting his emotional instability to literary masterpieces. Hemingway is known for using minimal detail throughout his works‚ leaving the

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    Hemingway vs. Faulkner Throughout time‚ individual authors have crafted varying writing styles that portray the authors themselves and helps the reader to better understand the tone of the piece. During the early twentieth century‚ the upcoming of a new America created many talented writers that varied drastically in style.  An author may choose to write in a realistic manor‚ such as Ernest Hemingway or William Faulkner.  From the post Civil War era in which Faulkner was accustomed‚ to the early

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    Hemingway

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    Todd Johnson Literary Analysis Dr. Weiland October 31‚2012 Regret in “The Snows of Kilimanjaro” In “The Snows of Kilimanjaro” by Ernest Hemingway‚ the third person omniscient narrator tells the story of a man’s struggles as he approaches the end of his life. The story begins with an epigraph describing a “dried and frozen carcass of a leopard” at the summit of Mt. Kilimanjaro (1983). Initially‚ the epigraph is not connected to the text until the conclusion of the story when the leopard contrasts

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