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E-raamat: Reading Hemingway's Across the River and into the Trees

  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Sari: Reading Hemingway
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Nov-2015
  • Kirjastus: Kent State University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781631011122
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
  • Hind: 21,83 €*
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Sari: Reading Hemingway
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Nov-2015
  • Kirjastus: Kent State University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781631011122

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A line-by-line examination of a neglected Hemingway gem

In 1950, Ernest Hemingway was the most famous writer in the world, and he faced intense expectations for a masterwork to follow up his epic For Whom the Bell Tolls, published a decade earlier. The novel that emerged, Across the River and into the Trees, was a chronicle of the final days of the cantankerous American colonel Richard Cantwell, who spends his weekend leave in Venice hunting ducks, enjoying the city, and spending time with his beloved teenaged Italian contessa, Renata. This work elicited everything from full-throated praise to howls of derision and outrage. Sixty-five years later, it has been consigned to the margins of Hemingway's legendary career.

Through this exhaustive reading of Across the River and into the Trees, Mark Cirino shows that we cannot disparage what we do not understand. With this novel, Hemingway is at his most allusive and opaque, and Cirino unpacks Hemingway's vaunted iceberg theory, in which the majority of a text's substance remains submerged, unspoken, and invisible. Hemingway makes constant references to his own life, friends, and families; other artistic works; the history, politics, and culture of Venice and America; and he draws from his more celebrated works of fiction. Cirino traces the complex web that left many of the novel's readers confused.

In Across the River and into the Trees, the classic Hemingway themes emerge: the soldier after the war and the function of love amid the bloody twentieth century. We learn about the conflicting roles of the soldier and the artist in society and the way a man can struggle to be human and humane to those around him.

Reading Hemingway's Across the River and into the Trees is the premier work devoted to the novel. Although Hemingway's book has been relegated to the corners of twentieth-century literature, Cirino's exegesis offers a new perspective on the work, at once reintroducing the novel to aficionados, introducing it to new readers, and deepening our understanding of Hemingway's more famous works.

Acknowledgments ix
An Introduction to Across the River and Into the Trees xi
Abbreviations for the Works of Ernest Hemingway Used in This Book xix
Series Note xxi
Reading Across the River and Into the Trees
Front Matter
3(205)
Chapter 1
5(6)
Chapter 2
11(5)
Chapter 3
16(10)
Chapter 4
26(11)
Chapter 5
37(6)
Chapter 6
43(16)
Chapter 7
59(12)
Chapter 8
71(7)
Chapter 9
78(22)
Chapter 10
100(3)
Chapter 11
103(6)
Chapter 12
109(20)
Chapter 13
129(4)
Chapter 14
133(2)
Chapter 15
135(1)
Chapter 16
136(3)
Chapter 17
139(4)
Chapter 18
143(2)
Chapter 19
145(2)
Chapter 20
147(2)
Chapter 21
149(4)
Chapter 22
153(3)
Chapter 23
156(3)
Chapter 24
159(1)
Chapter 25
160(1)
Chapter 26
161(2)
Chapter 27
163(4)
Chapter 28
167(2)
Chapter 29
169(5)
Chapter 30
174(5)
Chapter 31
179(1)
Chapter 32
180(1)
Chapter 33
181(3)
Chapter 34
184(1)
Chapter 35
185(2)
Chapter 36
187(2)
Chapter 37
189(3)
Chapter 38
192(3)
Chapter 39
195(1)
Chapter 40
196(3)
Chapter 41
199(4)
Chapter 42
203(1)
Chapter 43
204(1)
Chapter 44
205(1)
Chapter 45
206(2)
Appendix 1 208(2)
Appendix 2 210(2)
Works Cited 212(9)
Index 221
Mark Cirino is associate professor of English at the University of Evansville. He is the general editor of Kent State University Press's Reading Hemingway series and a contributing editor to Cambridge University Press's Hemingway Letters Project. He is the author of Ernest Hemingway: Thought in Action and, with Mark P. Ott, the coeditor of Ernest Hemingway and the Geography of Memory (The Kent State University Press, 2009). He is the coeditor, with Carl P. Eby, of the forthcoming Kent State University Press title, Hemingway's Spain: Imagining the Spanish World.