html5-img
1 / 32

A Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway

A Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway. Revision Seminar 2010 Presented by: Terri Crisafi & Judy Eastman. Hemingway’s Life & Reputation. War service Journalism ‘Lost Generation’ Writing Fishing / hunting Women. Language & Style. Reportage and journalese – facts, details.

tave
Download Presentation

A Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway Revision Seminar 2010 Presented by: Terri Crisafi & Judy Eastman

  2. Hemingway’s Life & Reputation • War service • Journalism • ‘Lost Generation’ • Writing • Fishing / hunting • Women

  3. Language & Style • Reportage and journalese – facts, details. • Foreshadowing • Catherine’s fear of the rain • Symbolism: • The rain/mud • Bats – usually a symbol of evil, darkness; welcomed by FH & CB into their room – man in harmony with the natural world. • Catherine’s hair – long femininity; cut-off independence.

  4. Hemingway & Women

  5. AFTA Themes

  6. The evolution of Fredric Henry • Catherine inspires love and teaches him to love – thereby leading him to becoming a more honest and genuine character. • Escape down the river – baptism symbolism, spiritual awakening, love chosen over duty and service. • Count Greffi’s influence – love a religious feeling; attempt to develop devotion to faith.

  7. War / Anti-War • Details of war – World War One 1914–1918; ‘The Great War’ or ‘The War to End All Wars’. Glimpses of other theatres of conflict through Catherine’s ‘boy’ fighting on the Somme (part of the Western Front, in France); Battle of / retreat from Caporetto. • Equipment, marching, attacks, weapons. • Effect of war on the environment (see early chapters). • Idealism attached to war – traditional values of courage, honour, bravery, etc. are disregarded or rejected (eg. Henry’s medal).

  8. Love • Catherine’s previous love affair and grief over losing ‘boy’ who was ‘blown to bits’. • Henry has never been in love and lies about loving Catherine early on. • Henry treats love as a game – ‘like bridge’ – and is known as a womaniser, admired by the men of the mess and the drivers. Rinaldi is his brother in arms when it comes to love affairs. • Catherine teaches Henry to love and to give it importance above other pursuits/obligations.

  9. Love and Faith • The Priest’s important role in Henry’s education about love. • ‘When you love you wish to do things for. You wish to sacrifice for. You wish to serve.’ p. 66 • Count Greffi – love a religious feeling. • Faith: ‘I had expected to become devout myself but it has not come.’ p. 233

  10. Man v. Nature • Life as a challenge – survival, struggle, finding one’s place and path. • War as a destructive force – the men fighting as much with the weather and environment as the enemy. • Fighting against their own – Carabinieri. • The symbolism of the mud, the rain, contrasted with the beautiful spring of Chapter Three.

  11. Masculinity • Tested in the face of adversity • Loyalty • Strength • Resilience • A healthy sexual appetite • Men behaving as men – role, norm, primal instincts & behaviour • Men who live large, live boldly & are true to their nature and instincts.

  12. Faith in a Godless World • How does one entertain belief in God in the face of the horrors of war? • The role of the Priest – Henry’s intellectual equal and an aid to serious conversation. • Mockery of the priest by the men in the mess, including the idea that life is sacred, the priest’s innate pacifism – in war, life is sacrificed. • Henry’s spiritual quest – lives for superficial pleasures, performs the duties required of him, lacks a spiritual side in the first half of the novel

  13. Existentialism • Frederic Henry an existentialist – believes in personal responsibility takes action struggles with life and the nature of existence rejects a ‘fatalistic’ view of life. • Some things in the universe do not make sense, are not rational; it is how the individual responds that matters  consider the end of the novel.

  14. AFTA Characters

  15. Frederic Henry: boy transformed • American serving in the Italian Ambulance Service. • Duty & service. • Shuns praise. • Abstract notions of faith, honour & patriotism mean nothing.

  16. Virile – “Did you have any beautiful adventures?” Plays the game of love. Capable of violence & moral about face – helps deserter/later shoots others for same crime. Leaves his post love over duty and service. Learns to love Grieves Prays… Frederic Henry (cont.)

  17. Frederic Henry (cont.) • Chapter 34: ‘I had made a separate peace’. • Chapter 41: ‘…I went out and left the hospital and walked back to the hotel in the rain.’ • The novel’s title A Farewell to Arms resonates in both of these incidents.

  18. Rinaldi: brother in arms • Faithful friend • Virile • Competent • Good natured • Womaniser • Protector of FH – regards him as a child. • Succumbs to syphilis.

  19. The Priest: humanity, spirituality • Gentle • Patient • Serious • Intelligent/intellectual • A man of honour • ‘Love makes a man want to give of himself, to make sacrifices for the sake of another…’

  20. Count Greffi: mentor • Companion to FH • Talks with FH about love, devotion and faith. • Admired and respected by FH. • Father figure?

  21. Hemingway’s Men • Passini, Gordini, Gavuzzi & Manera • Philosophical ‘There is no finish to a war’; ‘even the peasants know better than to believe in a war’, Passini, p. 48 • Despondent ‘There is a class that controls a country…’ p. 48 • Camaraderie ‘Don’t be a bloody hero’ p. 55

  22. Hemingway’s Men (cont.) • Dr. Valentini – virile, competent • Bonello – brutal, decisive • Ettore Moretti – boastful, ambitious, quick to insult. • Emilio • Simmons

  23. Females in AFTA • ‘He should have fine girls…Beautiful young girls – accompanied by their mothers..’ Captain • ‘We have beautiful English girls…’ Rinaldi • Helen Ferguson –a ‘very nice nurse’ Catherine • Miss Gage – sympathetic to FH, not CB • Miss Van Campen – ‘she did not like me and I did not like her…’ Henry

  24. Catherine Barkley: the inspiration • British nursing assistant. • Victim of war – lost love, lost future, mourns dead fiancé. • Ready to play the game of seduction. • Knows love game with FH is a lie.

  25. Submissive Stereotype? Sceptical Capable of drawing the line. A victim of tragedy. Dedicated to having FH’s child. Loves FH but refuses to marry  independent. Believes that dreadful things await them. Premonitions of death are haunting. Catherine Barkley (cont.)

  26. Miss van Campen: superintendent • In charge of hospital in Milan where FH is sent after mortar attack. • ‘She did not like me and I did not like her…’

  27. love is to be valued and pursued. war is not about courage and honour and patriotism. war is a form of insanity. an individual should take their fate in their own hands. there are forces in the universe that man cannot control. war is inevitable amongst men. war makes casualties of all. Chaos comes when man is not in harmony with nature. AFTA: Some ideas – that…

  28. abandonment is unacceptable. great love may not last. humans are capable of creating chaos. humans have the capacity to love and be loved. humans have destructive potential. the world is cruel and senseless. war is the dark extension of a world that refuses to acknowledge, protect or preserve true love. loyalty is important. AFTA ideas (cont.): that…

  29. humans loathe loss and ugliness. war strips the world of certainties humans are capable of setting their own moral compass. there is an unidentifiable malevolence in the world. shelter from this malevolence is only temporary. AFTA ideas (cont.): that…

  30. The Text in the Examination • characters/relationships • setting/narrative viewpoint • themes, ideas and values • the text’s structure – contributes to its meaning…. Examine each part’s focus. • autobiographical elements • respond to topic!

  31. Interpreting Questions • Explore the theme of courage in Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms. • ‘Catherine Barkley is the most courageous character in the novel.’ • Significance of ‘most’ to answering the topic • In what ways is she courageous? • Is she the most courageous? • Who else is courageous? In what ways are they courageous?

  32. Interpreting Questions • What does Hemingway suggest about courage in war-time in A Farewell to Arms? • Narrative voice

More Related