- Title
- "How the Weather Was": Anthropogenic Climate Change and Environmental Damage in Hemingway s Green Hills of Africa
- Author/Creator
- Lisa Tyler
- Publication Details
- Hemingway Review, Vol.37(1), pp.36-54
- Annotation
- Sociohistorical study of Hemingway s nonfiction narrative as an ecological lament to the catastrophic effects of modernism on the environment, linking the despoilment of East Africa by whites of European ancestry to the devastation of the American Great Plains by farmers during the Dust Bowl. Tyler focuses on Hemingway s treatment of such environmental problems as drought, soil erosion, and excessive consumption of limited resources, connecting Western men s irresponsible pursuit of animals with their endless and self-destructive pursuit of masculinity, resulting in irreversible harm to the continent s fragile environment. Concludes that while not an ecologist, Hemingway s narrative of his first safari provides insight into his gradual realization of his own complicity in damaging the continent he loved.
- Academic Unit
- Hemingway Bibliography
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Record Identifier
- 991015131944503691
Journal article
"How the Weather Was": Anthropogenic Climate Change and Environmental Damage in Hemingway s Green Hills of Africa
Hemingway Review, Vol.37(1), pp.36-54
10/01/2017
Appears in Hemingway Bibliography
Metrics
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