- Title
- Chapter I of In Our Time: Origins, Omissions, and Arrangement
- Author/Creator
- Daniel Robinson
- Publication Details
- The Hemingway Review, Vol.40(1), pp.69-80
- Annotation
- Chapter I of In Our Time, while only 112 words in length, is deceptively complex in its presentation as well as in its depth of emotion. The story is, like others in the collection, a story of war's effects upon the psyches of individuals caught within its patriotic jingoism and destructive violence. In the story, Ernest Hemingway explores what has come to be called post-traumatic stress disorder through the shocked sensibilities of a French soldier dealing with his memories of the 1915 Second Battle of Champagne. Through his use of the ice-berg theory of omission and a particularized arrangement of sentences, Hemingway presents the cauterized emotions of his narrator.
- Academic Unit
- Hemingway Bibliography
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Record Identifier
- 991015130958503691
Journal article
Chapter I of In Our Time: Origins, Omissions, and Arrangement
The Hemingway Review, Vol.40(1), pp.69-80
10/01/2020
Appears in Hemingway Bibliography
Metrics
7 Record Views