- Title
- "News that Stays": Hemingway, Journalism, and Objectivity in Fiction
- Author/Creator
- Phyllis Frus
- Publication Details
- The Politics and Poetics of Journalistic Narrative: The Timely and The Timeless, pp.53-89
- Annotation
- Concerns the influence of journalism on realistic fiction, challenging the belief that journalism was the training ground from which modernist authors such as Hemingway, Crane, and Cather developed their technique. Examines Hemingway s adaptation of 1920s and 30s newspaper reports into short stories and book form, including excerpts from In Our Time and Old Man and the Bridge. Reads Hemingway s craft and use of objective data as a way for the author to misdirect the reader and to deconstruct traditional literary approaches. Frus concludes that Hemingway s employment of omission was ironic because although seemingly objective, it contained sentiment, politics, and bias.
- Academic Unit
- Hemingway Bibliography
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Book chapter
- Record Identifier
- 991015132380103691
Book chapter
"News that Stays": Hemingway, Journalism, and Objectivity in Fiction
The Politics and Poetics of Journalistic Narrative: The Timely and The Timeless, pp.53-89
1994
Appears in Hemingway Bibliography
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