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Critical Insights: A Farewell to Arms

Table of Contents

War, Love, Loss, Laura Nicosia and James F. Nicosia




On A Farewell to Arms: Its Enduring Legacy, Laura Nicosia and James F. Nicosia




Ernest Hemingway: A Man of the Lost Generation, Sarah Ramirez




Critical Contexts



Historical Context of Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms: World War I in Fiction and Nonfiction, Melinda Knight


A Timeless Farewell: How A Farewell to Arms Captivated Italian Culture, Mario Valori


“There isn’t any me. I’m you”: Fredric’s Cognition and Use of “Narrative You” in A Farewell to Arms, Foster McNeece


“I was born for dying!” A Farewell to Arms and the Music of Metallica, Slayer, and Megadeth, Matt Macomber


Critical Readings



A Farewell to Arms: A Different Perspective on War, Franklin Hillson


“The art of losing”: Humiliation and Humility in A Farewell to Arms, Elissa Greenwald


“The dreamy poem of (a) woman’s body on the battlefield”: Reading Books IV and V of A Farewell to Arms as Frederic Henry’s Dream, Amin Heidari


The Language of Love in A Farewell to Arms, Laura E. Tanner


Alternative Endings: Hemingway and the Complications of Concluding A Farewell to Arms, Jericho Williams


“You always feel trapped”: Measures of Masculinity, Morality, and Martial Spirit in A Farewell to Arms, Sarah Eilefson


Reimagining Heroism in A Farewell to Arms through a Posthumanist Lens, K. T. Tamilmani and V. S. Sridheepika


Expecting War’s End: Shape-Shifting Escapism and Narratological Foreshadowing in A Farewell to Arms, Nancy Ann Watanabe


Walking Back to the Hotel in the Rain: Where A Farewell to Arms Ends and the Black Masculinities of Richard Wright’s Native Son and James Baldwin’s Another Country Begin, Hue Woodson


Resources



Chronology of Ernest Hemingway’s Life


Works by Ernest Hemingway


Bibliography


About the Editors


Contributors