Artigo Revisado por pares

Current Bibliography

2007; Volume: 26; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1353/hem.2007.0008

ISSN

1548-4815

Autores

Kelli A. Larson,

Tópico(s)

American and British Literature Analysis

Resumo

Current Bibliography Kelli A. Larson University of St. Thomas [The current bibliography aspires to include all serious contributions to Hemingway scholarship. Given the substantial quantity of significant critical work appearing on Hemingway's life and writings annually, inconsequential items from the popular press have been omitted to facilitate the distinction of important developments and trends in the field. Annotations for articles appearing in The Hemingway Review have been omitted due to the immediate availability of abstracts introducing each issue. Kelli Larson welcomes your assistance in keeping this feature current. Please send reprints, clippings, and photocopies of articles, as well as notices of new books, directly to Larson at the University of St. Thomas, 333 JRC, 2115 Summit Avenue, St. Paul, MN 55105-1096. E-Mail: Kalarson1@stthomas.edu.] Essays and Books Beegel, Susan F. "Bulletin Board." The Hemingway Review 26.1 (Fall 2006): 141–144. Bradley, Jacqueline. "Hemingway's The Sun Also Rises." Explicator 64.4 (Summer 2006): 237–239. [Far from reading Jake's impotence as a detriment, Bradley argues that Jake's steer-like qualities enable him to heal others.] Brauer, Carl M. "John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum." Public Historian 28.3 (Summer 2006): 194–197. [Brief description of the layout, contents, and services of the Kennedy Library, with scant attention to the Hemingway papers housed there.] Bull, Bartle. "Haggard, Hemingway and Hollywood." Safari: A Chronicle of Adventure. New York: Carroll & Graf, 2006. 262–289. [Examines Hollywood's treatment of Africa, beginning with the 1950 production of King Solomon's Mines (based upon the popular Allan Quatermain series created by H. Rider Haggard) and ending with a brief commentary on the [End Page 135] film version of Isak Dinesen's Out of Africa. Provides an overview of EH's 1933 and 1953 safaris, detailing the author's relationship with professional hunter Philip Percival. Includes a discussion of The Macomber Affair (1947) and The Snows of Kilimanjaro (1952) noting EH's involvement and difficulties with both productions. Contends that unlike the "boyish adventure and exotic romance" of Haggard's works, EH's African stories reveal more about the author's need to "test" himself and less about Africa.] Cain, William E. "Death Sentences Rereading The Old Man and the Sea." Sewanee Review 114.1 (Winter 2006): 112–125. [Invites the reader to reassess EH's "most misunderstood" novel. Praises the author's control over language and style. "In The Old Man and the Sea Hemingway recounts Santiago's story to express the majesty and the pointlessness of human effort." Cain argues that despite OMATS's Biblical symbolism, salvation awaits neither Santiago nor EH. Only through the act of writing could EH achieve a feeling of immortality and that was only temporary.] Capo, Beth Widmaier. "'She is herself a poem': Caresse Crosby, Feminine Identity, and Literary History." Legacy 23.1 (2006): 30–43. [Briefly mentions the reprinting of TOS in light of Crosby's business acumen and contributions to modernist literature through her press, Crosby Continental Editions.] Cirino, Mark. "'A Bicycle Is a Splendid Thing': Hemingway's Source for Bartolomeo Aymo in A Farewell to Arms." The Hemingway Review. 26.1 (Fall 2006): 106–114. Culler, Jonathan. "Knowing or Creating? A Response to Barbara Olson." Narrative 14.3 (October 2006): 347–348. [Briefly mentions "The Killers" in this response to Olson's original reading of the story's omniscient narration in her 1997 Authorial Divinity in the Twentieth Century. See Olson] ———. "Omniscience." Narrative 12.1 (January 2004): 22–34. [Briefly mentions "The Killers" in his initial response to Barbara Olson's 1997 Authorial Divinity in the Twentieth Century. Concludes that the confusing term "omniscient narration" should be abandoned in favor of a more complete and accurate description. See Olson.] Eby, Carl P. "Wake Up Alone and Like It!: Dorothy Hollis, Marjorie Hillis, and To Have and Have Not." The Hemingway Review 26.1 (Fall 2006): 96–105. [End Page 136] Giguette, Ray. "Building Objects Out of Plato: Applying Philosophy, Symbolism, and Analogy to Software Design." Communications of the ACM 49...

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