Hemingway's 'The Handle': Death and Deliverance

Essay specific features

 

Issue:

English

 

Written by:

Terrie G

 

Date added:

February 24, 2013

 

Level:

University

 

Grade:

A

 

No of pages / words:

3 / 725

 

Was viewed:

920 times

 

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Essay content:

Although one may be tempted to draw the conclusion that Hemingway's barren fields are little more than a thinly-veiled expression of rising self-doubt about the author's own creative abilities that becomes prevalent in Hemingway's later years, to dismiss the story as nothing more than a straightforeward allegory is to do an injustice to its more intriguing thematic elements...
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By most afternoons he has succumbed to something that might be diagnosed as mild heat-stroke today, and wanders the fields aimless and slightly confused, murmuring one-sided conversations with his deceased wife, father, gandfather, and the original settler of the farm. Although the dialogue of "The Handle," represents a tenuous structural departure in that all of the secondary characters are either dead ghosts or mild halucinations, it is still chock full of the brisk versimilitude rendered in simple prose that is the hallmark of Heminway's finest passages...
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