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Ernest Hemingway and the Geography of Memory.

Cirino, Mark.

Ernest Hemingway and the Geography of Memory. - 1st ed. - 1 online resource (244 pages)

Cover -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Part I: Memory and Composition -- 1. Memory and Manhood: Troublesome Recollections in The Garden of Eden -- 2. Reclaimed Experience: Trauma Theory and Hemingway's Lost Paris Manuscripts -- Part II: Memory and Allusion -- 3. Memory and the Sharks -- 4. Memory and Desire: Eliotic Consciousness in Early Hemingway -- 5. Lions on the Beach: Dream, Place, and Memory in The Old Man and the Sea -- Part III: Memory and Place -- 6. Hemingway and Cultural Geography: The Landscape of Logging in "The End of Something" -- 7. Expatriate Lifestyle as Tourist Destination: The Sun Also Rises and Experiential Travelogues of the Twenties -- 8. Pursuit Remembered: Experience, Memory, and Invention in Green Hills of Africa -- 9. Alchemy, Memory, and Archetypes: Reading Hemingway's Under Kilimanjaro as an African Fairy Tale -- 10. "A Moveable Feast" or "a miserable time actually"? Ernest Hemingway, Kay Boyle, and Modernist Memoir -- Part IV: Memory and Truth -- 11. The Persistence of Memory and the Denial of Self in A Farewell to Arms -- 12. The Currents of Memory: Hemingway's "Big Two-Hearted River" as Metafiction -- 13. A Clean, Well-Lighted Place for Killing: Nostalgia in Hemingway's Death in the Afternoon -- 14. Memory in The Garden of Eden -- Contributors -- Index.

9781612775050


Hemingway, Ernest, -- 1899-1961 -- Criticism and interpretation.
Geography in literature.
Memory in literature.


Electronic books.

PS3515.E37 -- Z58666 2010eb

810

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