SlideShare ist ein Scribd-Unternehmen logo
1 von 40
Ernest Hemingway
EARLY YEARS
 Ernest Miller Hemingway was
born on July 21, 1899, in Oak
Park, Illinois, a suburb of
Chicago.
 Hemingway’s mother earned
money giving voice and music
lessons.
 His mother hoped that Ernest
would develop an interest in
music but instead, Hemingway
adopted his father’s outdoorsman
hobbies of hunting fishing and
camping on the lakes of northern
Michigan.
Fishing, 1904
EARLY YEARS
 The Hemingway family owned a house called Windemere on Michigan’s
Walloon Lake and often spent summers vacationing there.
 Early outdoor experiences instilled in Hemingway a lifelong passion for
adventure and for living in remote or isolated places.
 Hemingway attended Oak Park and River Forest Park High School from
September 1913 until his graduation in June 1917.
 He excelled academically and athletically. He boxed, played football and
displayed particular talent in English.
 His first writing experience came from his submissions to the school
newspaper and the literary magazine.
 He did not attend college, instead he wrote for The Kansas City Star.
 Although he worked at the newspaper for only six months, throughout his
lifetime he used the guidance of the Star’s style guide as a foundation for
his writing style. (short, direct sentences)
World War I
 Against his father’s wishes he tried
to join the Army to see action in
World War I.
 He failed the medical exam; later
he joined the Red Cross as an
ambulance driver.
 Soon after arriving on the Italian
front, Hemingway witnessed the
brutalities of war.
 On his first day, an ammunition
factory near Milan blew up. This
first encounter with death left him
shaken.
World War I
 Hemingway was wounded delivering supplies. This ended his wartime
career.
 He was hit by an Austrian trench mortar shell that left fragments in his leg.
 Later he was awarded the Silver Medal of Military Valor from the Italian
government for dragging a wounded Italian soldier to safety in spite of his
own injuries.
World War I
 Hemingway worked in a Milan hospital run by the American
Red Cross.
 Here, he met Sister Agnes von Kurowsky of Washington D.C.
 Although she was six years older than Hemingway, he fell
madly in love with her; however the relationship did not
survive.
 Instead of following Hemingway back to the US, Agnes
became romantically involved with an Italian officer.
 This experience left an indelible mark. Hemingway
romanticized love and war in one of his earliest novels, A
Farewell To Arms.
World War I
Early Works
 After the war, Hemingway returned to Oak Park, but did not stay long.
Due in part to prohibition, Hemingway relocated to Toronto and began
work as a staff writer for the Toronto Star.
 For a short time, Hemingway lived on the north side of Chicago working
for a small newspaper.
 In 1921, Hemingway married his first wife, Hadley Richardson, and
moved into an apartment on the north side of Chicago.
Early Works
 The building still stands with a
plaque on the front of it, calling it
“the Hemingway apartment.”
 In 1921, Hemingway and Hadley
left Chicago to live abroad.
 The couple settled in Paris.
Early Works
 Hemingway was introduced to Gertrude Stein who served as his mentor
and later introduced him to the “Parisian Modern Movement”
 This was the beginning of the American expatriate circle known as the
Lost Generation.
 His other influential mentor was Ezra Pound, the founder of imagism.
 Hemingway later said, “Ezra is right half the time, and when he was
wrong, you were never in any doubt about it. Gertrude was always right.”
 Hemingway’s first book, Three Stories and Ten Poems (1923), was
published in Paris.
 Later the same year, Hemingway’s first son was born.
Early Works
Gertrude Stein Ezra Pound
Early Works
In a Station of the Metro
The apparition of these faces in the crowd;
Petals on a wet, black bough.
Ezra Pound
Early Works
 Two weeks after the publication of The Great Gatsby, Hemingway met F.
Scott Fitzgerald.
 At first, the two were very close. Often talking and drinking. The two even
exchanged manuscripts and Fitzgerald did much to try to advance
Hemingway’s career.
 Later they became more competitive.
 Fitzgerald’s wife Zelda disliked Hemingway from the start. She often
described him as “bogus” or a “phony”.
Early Works
Fitzgerald, 1937 Zelda
Early Works
 These relationships and long nights
provided inspiration for Hemingway’s
first successful novel, The Sun Also Rises
(1926).
 The novel was semi-autobiographical,
following a group of expatriate Americans
as they traveled around Europe.
 The novel was a success and met with
critical acclaim.
 No more than year later, Hemingway
divorced Hadley and married Pauline
Pfeiffer.
 That year saw the publication of Men
Without Women a collection of short
stories containing “The Killers”. One of
Hemingway’s best-known and most
anthologized stories.
La Closerie des Lilas restaurant
Early Works
 In 1928, Hemingway and Pauline moved to Key West to begin their life
together.
 Later that same year, Hemingway’s father troubled with diabetes and
financial instabilities, committed suicide.
 Hemingway was deeply moved by the death of his father.
 Hemingway’s next success was the heavy autobiographical success, A
Farewell To Arms. The book details the romance between an American
soldier and a British nurse.
Key West
 Hemingway and Pauline settled in Key West where Hemingway fished the
waters around the Dry Tortugas with his longtime friend Waldo Pierce,
went to the famous bar Sloppy Joe’s, and occasionally traveled to Spain,
gathering material for Death In The Afternoon and Winner Take Nothing.
 Over the next nine years, until the end of his second marriage in 1940,
Hemingway would do an estimated 70% of his lifetime’s writing in the
writer’s den in the upper floor of the converted garage in Key West.
Key West
Key West
Key West
Key West
Key West
Key West, 1928 Idaho, 1939
Key West
 Death in the Afternoon, a book about bullfighting, was published in 1932
after Hemingway had become an aficionado after seeing the Pamplona
fiesta of 1925.
 A safari in the fall of 1933 led him to Mombasa, Nairobi and Machakos in
Kenya, moving on to Tanzania where he hunted in the Serengeti.
 1935 saw the publication of Green Hills of Africa, an account of his safari.
 The Snows of Kilimanjaro and The Short Happy Life of Francis
Macomber were fictionalized results of his African experiences.
 In 1937, Hemingway traveled to Spain in order to report on the Spanish
Civil War for the North American Newspaper Alliance.
Key West
Key West
Key West
Key West
Key West
 Hemingway’s active life began to take a toll on his physical condition.
 In 1938, Hemingway published the collection The Fifth Column and the
First Forty-Nine Stories.
 This collection included some of his most recognizable short fiction such
as: “Hills Like White Elephants,” “The Killers,” “Old Man at the Bridge,”
and “A Clean Well-Lighted Place”
Key West
 For Whom The Bell Tolls was
published in 1940.
 The book was written in Cuba and
Key West. Later the same year,
Hemingway divorced Pauline
eventually losing his beloved Key
West home. He then married Martha
Gellhorn.
 The novel was based around an
American in a foreign land. And
again, the novel represented the
casualties of war (Spanish Civil
War).
 The title is taken from a paragraph
from John Donne’s Meditation XVII.
Key West
John Donne
1572-1631
“Therefore never send to know
for whom the bells tolls; it
tolls for thee.”
World War II/Aftermath
 The U.S. entered World War II on
December 8, 1941, and for the
first time, Hemingway sought to
participate in naval warfare.
 Aboard the Pilar Hemingway
searched the Atlantic for German
U-boats off the coast of Cuba.
 Hemingway was sent to Europe
as a war correspondent for
Collier’s Magazine.
 There, Hemingway observed the
D-Day invasion from the water.
 Also, his new marriage was over
after only four years.
World War II/Aftermath
World War II/Aftermath
World War II/Aftermath
World War II/Aftermath
 Hemingway’s first novel after the
war was Across the River and into
the Trees (1950).
 The novel is set in post-World War II
Venice and depicts a romance
between a war-weary Colonel and a
young woman.
 Across the River and into the Trees
(1950) received largely bad reviews;
many accused Hemingway of
tastelessness and sentimentality.
 This was not shared by everyone.
Later Years
 Hemingway married his fourth wife,
Mary, a war correspondent he met
overseas.
 After the war, Hemingway wrote
about the sea. The first writings were
published as The Old Man and the
Sea in 1952.
Later Years
 Some believe Hemingway’s
inspiration from the “Old
Man” was his longtime
friend and fellow-fisherman
Gregorio Fuentes.
 For almost thirty years,
Fuentes served as the
Captain of the Pilar.
 Fuentes died of cancer in
2002 at the age of 104.
Gregorio Fuentes
Later Years
 On a safari he was seriously injured in a plane crash. He sprained his right
shoulder, arm and left leg, had a concussion, temporarily lost vision in his
left eye and hearing in his left ear, suffered paralysis, a crushed vertebra,
ruptured liver and kidney, and first degree burns on his face, arms and leg.
 Some American newspapers mistakenly published his obituary, thinking he
had been killed.
 The pain was so great from this accident (as well as a separate brushfire
incident) that Hemingway was unable to travel to Stockholm to accept his
Nobel Prize.
Later Years
 Hemingway never fully recovered from his injuries. He left his home in
Cuba (as Communist tensions were rising) and moved to Ketchum, Idaho.
 He suffered from high blood pressure and liver problems.
 Hemingway was also receiving Electroconvulsive therapy (ETC) for
depression and paranoia.
 The results of these treatments was alarming. Hemingway suffered
significant memory loss.
 Three weeks short of his 62nd
birthday, Hemingway took his own life.

Weitere ähnliche Inhalte

Was ist angesagt?

George Bernard Shaw
George Bernard ShawGeorge Bernard Shaw
George Bernard ShawSchool
 
George Eliots as a novelist
George Eliots as a novelistGeorge Eliots as a novelist
George Eliots as a novelistKajal Bambha
 
Renaissance Period Literature
Renaissance Period LiteratureRenaissance Period Literature
Renaissance Period LiteratureHazel Anne Quirao
 
Works of Shakespeare
Works of ShakespeareWorks of Shakespeare
Works of ShakespeareMOE, Fiji
 
Overview of Modernist Literature-
Overview of Modernist Literature-Overview of Modernist Literature-
Overview of Modernist Literature-Sagar Ladhva
 
James Fenimore Cooper
James Fenimore CooperJames Fenimore Cooper
James Fenimore CooperSchool
 
Modern period literature, Modernism, Modern poetry, Modern novel and stream o...
Modern period literature, Modernism, Modern poetry, Modern novel and stream o...Modern period literature, Modernism, Modern poetry, Modern novel and stream o...
Modern period literature, Modernism, Modern poetry, Modern novel and stream o...Literature and Linguistics Hub
 
Beloved By Toni Morrison, American literature
Beloved By Toni Morrison, American literatureBeloved By Toni Morrison, American literature
Beloved By Toni Morrison, American literatureAyeshaKhan809
 
Katherine Mansfield Presentation
Katherine Mansfield PresentationKatherine Mansfield Presentation
Katherine Mansfield Presentationjessrosemay
 

Was ist angesagt? (20)

George Bernard Shaw
George Bernard ShawGeorge Bernard Shaw
George Bernard Shaw
 
George Eliots as a novelist
George Eliots as a novelistGeorge Eliots as a novelist
George Eliots as a novelist
 
Mark twain overview
Mark twain overviewMark twain overview
Mark twain overview
 
Renaissance Period Literature
Renaissance Period LiteratureRenaissance Period Literature
Renaissance Period Literature
 
Modernist Literature
Modernist LiteratureModernist Literature
Modernist Literature
 
Works of Shakespeare
Works of ShakespeareWorks of Shakespeare
Works of Shakespeare
 
Overview of Modernist Literature-
Overview of Modernist Literature-Overview of Modernist Literature-
Overview of Modernist Literature-
 
Henry james
Henry jamesHenry james
Henry james
 
Young Goodman Brown 3
Young Goodman Brown 3Young Goodman Brown 3
Young Goodman Brown 3
 
James Fenimore Cooper
James Fenimore CooperJames Fenimore Cooper
James Fenimore Cooper
 
Modern period literature, Modernism, Modern poetry, Modern novel and stream o...
Modern period literature, Modernism, Modern poetry, Modern novel and stream o...Modern period literature, Modernism, Modern poetry, Modern novel and stream o...
Modern period literature, Modernism, Modern poetry, Modern novel and stream o...
 
The adventures of Huckleberry Finn
The adventures of Huckleberry FinnThe adventures of Huckleberry Finn
The adventures of Huckleberry Finn
 
Beloved By Toni Morrison, American literature
Beloved By Toni Morrison, American literatureBeloved By Toni Morrison, American literature
Beloved By Toni Morrison, American literature
 
Ezra Pound
Ezra PoundEzra Pound
Ezra Pound
 
A lit a farewell to arms
A lit   a farewell to armsA lit   a farewell to arms
A lit a farewell to arms
 
Katherine Mansfield Presentation
Katherine Mansfield PresentationKatherine Mansfield Presentation
Katherine Mansfield Presentation
 
Dh lawrence presentation
Dh lawrence presentationDh lawrence presentation
Dh lawrence presentation
 
Anglo Saxons Period or Old English
Anglo Saxons Period or Old EnglishAnglo Saxons Period or Old English
Anglo Saxons Period or Old English
 
Introduction to american literature
Introduction to american literatureIntroduction to american literature
Introduction to american literature
 
Ernest Hemingway
Ernest HemingwayErnest Hemingway
Ernest Hemingway
 

Andere mochten auch

Ernest Hemingway
Ernest HemingwayErnest Hemingway
Ernest HemingwaySchool
 
A Farewell To Arms Revision Presentation
A Farewell To Arms Revision PresentationA Farewell To Arms Revision Presentation
A Farewell To Arms Revision Presentationtickingmindpd
 
Frederic Henry in A farewell to Arms. His traits as a Hemingway Hero
Frederic Henry in A farewell to Arms. His traits as a Hemingway HeroFrederic Henry in A farewell to Arms. His traits as a Hemingway Hero
Frederic Henry in A farewell to Arms. His traits as a Hemingway HeroMuhammad Ayaz Lali
 
A Farewell To Arms
A Farewell To ArmsA Farewell To Arms
A Farewell To Armsguestecb4924
 
Ernest Hemingway
Ernest HemingwayErnest Hemingway
Ernest Hemingwaylcg22
 
The sun also rises
The sun also risesThe sun also rises
The sun also risesTam Le
 
Ernest Hemingway
Ernest HemingwayErnest Hemingway
Ernest HemingwayMikelete
 
The Killers - Presentation
The Killers - PresentationThe Killers - Presentation
The Killers - Presentationiteclearners
 
Hemingway's "In Another Country"
Hemingway's "In Another Country"Hemingway's "In Another Country"
Hemingway's "In Another Country"sheehy
 
The Sun Also Rises Motifs
The Sun Also Rises MotifsThe Sun Also Rises Motifs
The Sun Also Rises Motifsjdarnell
 

Andere mochten auch (20)

Ernest Hemingway
Ernest HemingwayErnest Hemingway
Ernest Hemingway
 
Hemingway
HemingwayHemingway
Hemingway
 
Ernest Hemingway
Ernest HemingwayErnest Hemingway
Ernest Hemingway
 
Hemingway style
Hemingway styleHemingway style
Hemingway style
 
Ernest ppt
Ernest pptErnest ppt
Ernest ppt
 
A Farewell To Arms Revision Presentation
A Farewell To Arms Revision PresentationA Farewell To Arms Revision Presentation
A Farewell To Arms Revision Presentation
 
Frederic Henry in A farewell to Arms. His traits as a Hemingway Hero
Frederic Henry in A farewell to Arms. His traits as a Hemingway HeroFrederic Henry in A farewell to Arms. His traits as a Hemingway Hero
Frederic Henry in A farewell to Arms. His traits as a Hemingway Hero
 
A Farewell To Arms
A Farewell To ArmsA Farewell To Arms
A Farewell To Arms
 
Ernest Hemingway
Ernest HemingwayErnest Hemingway
Ernest Hemingway
 
The sun also rises
The sun also risesThe sun also rises
The sun also rises
 
Old Man and the Sea
Old Man and the SeaOld Man and the Sea
Old Man and the Sea
 
Ernest Hemingway
Ernest HemingwayErnest Hemingway
Ernest Hemingway
 
The Killers - Presentation
The Killers - PresentationThe Killers - Presentation
The Killers - Presentation
 
Hemingway's "In Another Country"
Hemingway's "In Another Country"Hemingway's "In Another Country"
Hemingway's "In Another Country"
 
Toni morrison
Toni morrisonToni morrison
Toni morrison
 
Old man at the bridge
Old man at the bridgeOld man at the bridge
Old man at the bridge
 
Toni morrison
Toni morrisonToni morrison
Toni morrison
 
The sun also rises
The sun also risesThe sun also rises
The sun also rises
 
The Sun Also Rises Motifs
The Sun Also Rises MotifsThe Sun Also Rises Motifs
The Sun Also Rises Motifs
 
Jazz and Blues Presentation
Jazz and Blues Presentation Jazz and Blues Presentation
Jazz and Blues Presentation
 

Ähnlich wie Ernest hemingway

Ähnlich wie Ernest hemingway (11)

Ernest miller hemingway (july 21, 1899 — july 2, 1961) ern
Ernest miller hemingway (july 21, 1899 — july 2, 1961) ernErnest miller hemingway (july 21, 1899 — july 2, 1961) ern
Ernest miller hemingway (july 21, 1899 — july 2, 1961) ern
 
07英语1班 Ernest Hemingway 陈林
07英语1班 Ernest Hemingway 陈林07英语1班 Ernest Hemingway 陈林
07英语1班 Ernest Hemingway 陈林
 
Ernest miller hemingway
Ernest miller hemingwayErnest miller hemingway
Ernest miller hemingway
 
Ernest Hemingway en Español!
Ernest Hemingway en Español!Ernest Hemingway en Español!
Ernest Hemingway en Español!
 
Cristin Hayes
Cristin HayesCristin Hayes
Cristin Hayes
 
11hemingway
11hemingway11hemingway
11hemingway
 
The old man and the sea
The old man and the seaThe old man and the sea
The old man and the sea
 
Hemingway
HemingwayHemingway
Hemingway
 
Hemingway Essays
Hemingway EssaysHemingway Essays
Hemingway Essays
 
Hemingway an adventure author
Hemingway an adventure authorHemingway an adventure author
Hemingway an adventure author
 
Amaro Villalaz
Amaro VillalazAmaro Villalaz
Amaro Villalaz
 

Mehr von ewaszolek

The vietnamwar
The vietnamwarThe vietnamwar
The vietnamwarewaszolek
 
Civil rights
Civil rightsCivil rights
Civil rightsewaszolek
 
Jfk and the cold war
Jfk and the cold warJfk and the cold war
Jfk and the cold warewaszolek
 
The circuit
The circuit The circuit
The circuit ewaszolek
 
To kill a mockingbird
To kill a mockingbirdTo kill a mockingbird
To kill a mockingbirdewaszolek
 
America wwii
America wwiiAmerica wwii
America wwiiewaszolek
 
P moder contemplit
P moder contemplitP moder contemplit
P moder contemplitewaszolek
 
Harlem renaissance
Harlem renaissanceHarlem renaissance
Harlem renaissanceewaszolek
 
Fdr new-deal
Fdr new-dealFdr new-deal
Fdr new-dealewaszolek
 
The rootsofprogressivism
The rootsofprogressivismThe rootsofprogressivism
The rootsofprogressivismewaszolek
 
F. scott fitzgerald
F. scott fitzgeraldF. scott fitzgerald
F. scott fitzgeraldewaszolek
 
Huck finnppt
Huck finnpptHuck finnppt
Huck finnpptewaszolek
 
Reconstruction
ReconstructionReconstruction
Reconstructionewaszolek
 
Adventureshuckfinn
AdventureshuckfinnAdventureshuckfinn
Adventureshuckfinnewaszolek
 
The raven edgar allan poe
The raven edgar allan poeThe raven edgar allan poe
The raven edgar allan poeewaszolek
 

Mehr von ewaszolek (20)

The vietnamwar
The vietnamwarThe vietnamwar
The vietnamwar
 
Civil rights
Civil rightsCivil rights
Civil rights
 
Jfk and the cold war
Jfk and the cold warJfk and the cold war
Jfk and the cold war
 
The circuit
The circuit The circuit
The circuit
 
To kill a mockingbird
To kill a mockingbirdTo kill a mockingbird
To kill a mockingbird
 
Cold war
Cold warCold war
Cold war
 
Pomoart
PomoartPomoart
Pomoart
 
America wwii
America wwiiAmerica wwii
America wwii
 
P moder contemplit
P moder contemplitP moder contemplit
P moder contemplit
 
Harlem renaissance
Harlem renaissanceHarlem renaissance
Harlem renaissance
 
Fdr new-deal
Fdr new-dealFdr new-deal
Fdr new-deal
 
The jazzage
The jazzageThe jazzage
The jazzage
 
The rootsofprogressivism
The rootsofprogressivismThe rootsofprogressivism
The rootsofprogressivism
 
F. scott fitzgerald
F. scott fitzgeraldF. scott fitzgerald
F. scott fitzgerald
 
Modernism
ModernismModernism
Modernism
 
Huck finnppt
Huck finnpptHuck finnppt
Huck finnppt
 
Pantoum
PantoumPantoum
Pantoum
 
Reconstruction
ReconstructionReconstruction
Reconstruction
 
Adventureshuckfinn
AdventureshuckfinnAdventureshuckfinn
Adventureshuckfinn
 
The raven edgar allan poe
The raven edgar allan poeThe raven edgar allan poe
The raven edgar allan poe
 

Kürzlich hochgeladen

ESP 4-EDITED.pdfmmcncncncmcmmnmnmncnmncmnnjvnnv
ESP 4-EDITED.pdfmmcncncncmcmmnmnmncnmncmnnjvnnvESP 4-EDITED.pdfmmcncncncmcmmnmnmncnmncmnnjvnnv
ESP 4-EDITED.pdfmmcncncncmcmmnmnmncnmncmnnjvnnvRicaMaeCastro1
 
Textual Evidence in Reading and Writing of SHS
Textual Evidence in Reading and Writing of SHSTextual Evidence in Reading and Writing of SHS
Textual Evidence in Reading and Writing of SHSMae Pangan
 
ClimART Action | eTwinning Project
ClimART Action    |    eTwinning ProjectClimART Action    |    eTwinning Project
ClimART Action | eTwinning Projectjordimapav
 
Concurrency Control in Database Management system
Concurrency Control in Database Management systemConcurrency Control in Database Management system
Concurrency Control in Database Management systemChristalin Nelson
 
Grade 9 Quarter 4 Dll Grade 9 Quarter 4 DLL.pdf
Grade 9 Quarter 4 Dll Grade 9 Quarter 4 DLL.pdfGrade 9 Quarter 4 Dll Grade 9 Quarter 4 DLL.pdf
Grade 9 Quarter 4 Dll Grade 9 Quarter 4 DLL.pdfJemuel Francisco
 
How to Fix XML SyntaxError in Odoo the 17
How to Fix XML SyntaxError in Odoo the 17How to Fix XML SyntaxError in Odoo the 17
How to Fix XML SyntaxError in Odoo the 17Celine George
 
Congestive Cardiac Failure..presentation
Congestive Cardiac Failure..presentationCongestive Cardiac Failure..presentation
Congestive Cardiac Failure..presentationdeepaannamalai16
 
Transaction Management in Database Management System
Transaction Management in Database Management SystemTransaction Management in Database Management System
Transaction Management in Database Management SystemChristalin Nelson
 
Beauty Amidst the Bytes_ Unearthing Unexpected Advantages of the Digital Wast...
Beauty Amidst the Bytes_ Unearthing Unexpected Advantages of the Digital Wast...Beauty Amidst the Bytes_ Unearthing Unexpected Advantages of the Digital Wast...
Beauty Amidst the Bytes_ Unearthing Unexpected Advantages of the Digital Wast...DhatriParmar
 
ICS2208 Lecture6 Notes for SL spaces.pdf
ICS2208 Lecture6 Notes for SL spaces.pdfICS2208 Lecture6 Notes for SL spaces.pdf
ICS2208 Lecture6 Notes for SL spaces.pdfVanessa Camilleri
 
Q-Factor HISPOL Quiz-6th April 2024, Quiz Club NITW
Q-Factor HISPOL Quiz-6th April 2024, Quiz Club NITWQ-Factor HISPOL Quiz-6th April 2024, Quiz Club NITW
Q-Factor HISPOL Quiz-6th April 2024, Quiz Club NITWQuiz Club NITW
 
4.11.24 Mass Incarceration and the New Jim Crow.pptx
4.11.24 Mass Incarceration and the New Jim Crow.pptx4.11.24 Mass Incarceration and the New Jim Crow.pptx
4.11.24 Mass Incarceration and the New Jim Crow.pptxmary850239
 
Team Lead Succeed – Helping you and your team achieve high-performance teamwo...
Team Lead Succeed – Helping you and your team achieve high-performance teamwo...Team Lead Succeed – Helping you and your team achieve high-performance teamwo...
Team Lead Succeed – Helping you and your team achieve high-performance teamwo...Association for Project Management
 
week 1 cookery 8 fourth - quarter .pptx
week 1 cookery 8  fourth  -  quarter .pptxweek 1 cookery 8  fourth  -  quarter .pptx
week 1 cookery 8 fourth - quarter .pptxJonalynLegaspi2
 
31 ĐỀ THI THỬ VÀO LỚP 10 - TIẾNG ANH - FORM MỚI 2025 - 40 CÂU HỎI - BÙI VĂN V...
31 ĐỀ THI THỬ VÀO LỚP 10 - TIẾNG ANH - FORM MỚI 2025 - 40 CÂU HỎI - BÙI VĂN V...31 ĐỀ THI THỬ VÀO LỚP 10 - TIẾNG ANH - FORM MỚI 2025 - 40 CÂU HỎI - BÙI VĂN V...
31 ĐỀ THI THỬ VÀO LỚP 10 - TIẾNG ANH - FORM MỚI 2025 - 40 CÂU HỎI - BÙI VĂN V...Nguyen Thanh Tu Collection
 
Daily Lesson Plan in Mathematics Quarter 4
Daily Lesson Plan in Mathematics Quarter 4Daily Lesson Plan in Mathematics Quarter 4
Daily Lesson Plan in Mathematics Quarter 4JOYLYNSAMANIEGO
 
Measures of Position DECILES for ungrouped data
Measures of Position DECILES for ungrouped dataMeasures of Position DECILES for ungrouped data
Measures of Position DECILES for ungrouped dataBabyAnnMotar
 

Kürzlich hochgeladen (20)

ESP 4-EDITED.pdfmmcncncncmcmmnmnmncnmncmnnjvnnv
ESP 4-EDITED.pdfmmcncncncmcmmnmnmncnmncmnnjvnnvESP 4-EDITED.pdfmmcncncncmcmmnmnmncnmncmnnjvnnv
ESP 4-EDITED.pdfmmcncncncmcmmnmnmncnmncmnnjvnnv
 
Textual Evidence in Reading and Writing of SHS
Textual Evidence in Reading and Writing of SHSTextual Evidence in Reading and Writing of SHS
Textual Evidence in Reading and Writing of SHS
 
ClimART Action | eTwinning Project
ClimART Action    |    eTwinning ProjectClimART Action    |    eTwinning Project
ClimART Action | eTwinning Project
 
INCLUSIVE EDUCATION PRACTICES FOR TEACHERS AND TRAINERS.pptx
INCLUSIVE EDUCATION PRACTICES FOR TEACHERS AND TRAINERS.pptxINCLUSIVE EDUCATION PRACTICES FOR TEACHERS AND TRAINERS.pptx
INCLUSIVE EDUCATION PRACTICES FOR TEACHERS AND TRAINERS.pptx
 
Concurrency Control in Database Management system
Concurrency Control in Database Management systemConcurrency Control in Database Management system
Concurrency Control in Database Management system
 
Grade 9 Quarter 4 Dll Grade 9 Quarter 4 DLL.pdf
Grade 9 Quarter 4 Dll Grade 9 Quarter 4 DLL.pdfGrade 9 Quarter 4 Dll Grade 9 Quarter 4 DLL.pdf
Grade 9 Quarter 4 Dll Grade 9 Quarter 4 DLL.pdf
 
How to Fix XML SyntaxError in Odoo the 17
How to Fix XML SyntaxError in Odoo the 17How to Fix XML SyntaxError in Odoo the 17
How to Fix XML SyntaxError in Odoo the 17
 
Congestive Cardiac Failure..presentation
Congestive Cardiac Failure..presentationCongestive Cardiac Failure..presentation
Congestive Cardiac Failure..presentation
 
Transaction Management in Database Management System
Transaction Management in Database Management SystemTransaction Management in Database Management System
Transaction Management in Database Management System
 
Beauty Amidst the Bytes_ Unearthing Unexpected Advantages of the Digital Wast...
Beauty Amidst the Bytes_ Unearthing Unexpected Advantages of the Digital Wast...Beauty Amidst the Bytes_ Unearthing Unexpected Advantages of the Digital Wast...
Beauty Amidst the Bytes_ Unearthing Unexpected Advantages of the Digital Wast...
 
ICS2208 Lecture6 Notes for SL spaces.pdf
ICS2208 Lecture6 Notes for SL spaces.pdfICS2208 Lecture6 Notes for SL spaces.pdf
ICS2208 Lecture6 Notes for SL spaces.pdf
 
Q-Factor HISPOL Quiz-6th April 2024, Quiz Club NITW
Q-Factor HISPOL Quiz-6th April 2024, Quiz Club NITWQ-Factor HISPOL Quiz-6th April 2024, Quiz Club NITW
Q-Factor HISPOL Quiz-6th April 2024, Quiz Club NITW
 
4.11.24 Mass Incarceration and the New Jim Crow.pptx
4.11.24 Mass Incarceration and the New Jim Crow.pptx4.11.24 Mass Incarceration and the New Jim Crow.pptx
4.11.24 Mass Incarceration and the New Jim Crow.pptx
 
Team Lead Succeed – Helping you and your team achieve high-performance teamwo...
Team Lead Succeed – Helping you and your team achieve high-performance teamwo...Team Lead Succeed – Helping you and your team achieve high-performance teamwo...
Team Lead Succeed – Helping you and your team achieve high-performance teamwo...
 
week 1 cookery 8 fourth - quarter .pptx
week 1 cookery 8  fourth  -  quarter .pptxweek 1 cookery 8  fourth  -  quarter .pptx
week 1 cookery 8 fourth - quarter .pptx
 
31 ĐỀ THI THỬ VÀO LỚP 10 - TIẾNG ANH - FORM MỚI 2025 - 40 CÂU HỎI - BÙI VĂN V...
31 ĐỀ THI THỬ VÀO LỚP 10 - TIẾNG ANH - FORM MỚI 2025 - 40 CÂU HỎI - BÙI VĂN V...31 ĐỀ THI THỬ VÀO LỚP 10 - TIẾNG ANH - FORM MỚI 2025 - 40 CÂU HỎI - BÙI VĂN V...
31 ĐỀ THI THỬ VÀO LỚP 10 - TIẾNG ANH - FORM MỚI 2025 - 40 CÂU HỎI - BÙI VĂN V...
 
prashanth updated resume 2024 for Teaching Profession
prashanth updated resume 2024 for Teaching Professionprashanth updated resume 2024 for Teaching Profession
prashanth updated resume 2024 for Teaching Profession
 
Mattingly "AI & Prompt Design: Large Language Models"
Mattingly "AI & Prompt Design: Large Language Models"Mattingly "AI & Prompt Design: Large Language Models"
Mattingly "AI & Prompt Design: Large Language Models"
 
Daily Lesson Plan in Mathematics Quarter 4
Daily Lesson Plan in Mathematics Quarter 4Daily Lesson Plan in Mathematics Quarter 4
Daily Lesson Plan in Mathematics Quarter 4
 
Measures of Position DECILES for ungrouped data
Measures of Position DECILES for ungrouped dataMeasures of Position DECILES for ungrouped data
Measures of Position DECILES for ungrouped data
 

Ernest hemingway

  • 2. EARLY YEARS  Ernest Miller Hemingway was born on July 21, 1899, in Oak Park, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago.  Hemingway’s mother earned money giving voice and music lessons.  His mother hoped that Ernest would develop an interest in music but instead, Hemingway adopted his father’s outdoorsman hobbies of hunting fishing and camping on the lakes of northern Michigan.
  • 4. EARLY YEARS  The Hemingway family owned a house called Windemere on Michigan’s Walloon Lake and often spent summers vacationing there.  Early outdoor experiences instilled in Hemingway a lifelong passion for adventure and for living in remote or isolated places.  Hemingway attended Oak Park and River Forest Park High School from September 1913 until his graduation in June 1917.  He excelled academically and athletically. He boxed, played football and displayed particular talent in English.  His first writing experience came from his submissions to the school newspaper and the literary magazine.  He did not attend college, instead he wrote for The Kansas City Star.  Although he worked at the newspaper for only six months, throughout his lifetime he used the guidance of the Star’s style guide as a foundation for his writing style. (short, direct sentences)
  • 5. World War I  Against his father’s wishes he tried to join the Army to see action in World War I.  He failed the medical exam; later he joined the Red Cross as an ambulance driver.  Soon after arriving on the Italian front, Hemingway witnessed the brutalities of war.  On his first day, an ammunition factory near Milan blew up. This first encounter with death left him shaken.
  • 6. World War I  Hemingway was wounded delivering supplies. This ended his wartime career.  He was hit by an Austrian trench mortar shell that left fragments in his leg.  Later he was awarded the Silver Medal of Military Valor from the Italian government for dragging a wounded Italian soldier to safety in spite of his own injuries.
  • 7. World War I  Hemingway worked in a Milan hospital run by the American Red Cross.  Here, he met Sister Agnes von Kurowsky of Washington D.C.  Although she was six years older than Hemingway, he fell madly in love with her; however the relationship did not survive.  Instead of following Hemingway back to the US, Agnes became romantically involved with an Italian officer.  This experience left an indelible mark. Hemingway romanticized love and war in one of his earliest novels, A Farewell To Arms.
  • 9. Early Works  After the war, Hemingway returned to Oak Park, but did not stay long. Due in part to prohibition, Hemingway relocated to Toronto and began work as a staff writer for the Toronto Star.  For a short time, Hemingway lived on the north side of Chicago working for a small newspaper.  In 1921, Hemingway married his first wife, Hadley Richardson, and moved into an apartment on the north side of Chicago.
  • 10. Early Works  The building still stands with a plaque on the front of it, calling it “the Hemingway apartment.”  In 1921, Hemingway and Hadley left Chicago to live abroad.  The couple settled in Paris.
  • 11. Early Works  Hemingway was introduced to Gertrude Stein who served as his mentor and later introduced him to the “Parisian Modern Movement”  This was the beginning of the American expatriate circle known as the Lost Generation.  His other influential mentor was Ezra Pound, the founder of imagism.  Hemingway later said, “Ezra is right half the time, and when he was wrong, you were never in any doubt about it. Gertrude was always right.”  Hemingway’s first book, Three Stories and Ten Poems (1923), was published in Paris.  Later the same year, Hemingway’s first son was born.
  • 13. Early Works In a Station of the Metro The apparition of these faces in the crowd; Petals on a wet, black bough. Ezra Pound
  • 14. Early Works  Two weeks after the publication of The Great Gatsby, Hemingway met F. Scott Fitzgerald.  At first, the two were very close. Often talking and drinking. The two even exchanged manuscripts and Fitzgerald did much to try to advance Hemingway’s career.  Later they became more competitive.  Fitzgerald’s wife Zelda disliked Hemingway from the start. She often described him as “bogus” or a “phony”.
  • 16. Early Works  These relationships and long nights provided inspiration for Hemingway’s first successful novel, The Sun Also Rises (1926).  The novel was semi-autobiographical, following a group of expatriate Americans as they traveled around Europe.  The novel was a success and met with critical acclaim.  No more than year later, Hemingway divorced Hadley and married Pauline Pfeiffer.  That year saw the publication of Men Without Women a collection of short stories containing “The Killers”. One of Hemingway’s best-known and most anthologized stories. La Closerie des Lilas restaurant
  • 17. Early Works  In 1928, Hemingway and Pauline moved to Key West to begin their life together.  Later that same year, Hemingway’s father troubled with diabetes and financial instabilities, committed suicide.  Hemingway was deeply moved by the death of his father.  Hemingway’s next success was the heavy autobiographical success, A Farewell To Arms. The book details the romance between an American soldier and a British nurse.
  • 18. Key West  Hemingway and Pauline settled in Key West where Hemingway fished the waters around the Dry Tortugas with his longtime friend Waldo Pierce, went to the famous bar Sloppy Joe’s, and occasionally traveled to Spain, gathering material for Death In The Afternoon and Winner Take Nothing.  Over the next nine years, until the end of his second marriage in 1940, Hemingway would do an estimated 70% of his lifetime’s writing in the writer’s den in the upper floor of the converted garage in Key West.
  • 23. Key West Key West, 1928 Idaho, 1939
  • 24. Key West  Death in the Afternoon, a book about bullfighting, was published in 1932 after Hemingway had become an aficionado after seeing the Pamplona fiesta of 1925.  A safari in the fall of 1933 led him to Mombasa, Nairobi and Machakos in Kenya, moving on to Tanzania where he hunted in the Serengeti.  1935 saw the publication of Green Hills of Africa, an account of his safari.  The Snows of Kilimanjaro and The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber were fictionalized results of his African experiences.  In 1937, Hemingway traveled to Spain in order to report on the Spanish Civil War for the North American Newspaper Alliance.
  • 29. Key West  Hemingway’s active life began to take a toll on his physical condition.  In 1938, Hemingway published the collection The Fifth Column and the First Forty-Nine Stories.  This collection included some of his most recognizable short fiction such as: “Hills Like White Elephants,” “The Killers,” “Old Man at the Bridge,” and “A Clean Well-Lighted Place”
  • 30. Key West  For Whom The Bell Tolls was published in 1940.  The book was written in Cuba and Key West. Later the same year, Hemingway divorced Pauline eventually losing his beloved Key West home. He then married Martha Gellhorn.  The novel was based around an American in a foreign land. And again, the novel represented the casualties of war (Spanish Civil War).  The title is taken from a paragraph from John Donne’s Meditation XVII.
  • 31. Key West John Donne 1572-1631 “Therefore never send to know for whom the bells tolls; it tolls for thee.”
  • 32. World War II/Aftermath  The U.S. entered World War II on December 8, 1941, and for the first time, Hemingway sought to participate in naval warfare.  Aboard the Pilar Hemingway searched the Atlantic for German U-boats off the coast of Cuba.  Hemingway was sent to Europe as a war correspondent for Collier’s Magazine.  There, Hemingway observed the D-Day invasion from the water.  Also, his new marriage was over after only four years.
  • 36. World War II/Aftermath  Hemingway’s first novel after the war was Across the River and into the Trees (1950).  The novel is set in post-World War II Venice and depicts a romance between a war-weary Colonel and a young woman.  Across the River and into the Trees (1950) received largely bad reviews; many accused Hemingway of tastelessness and sentimentality.  This was not shared by everyone.
  • 37. Later Years  Hemingway married his fourth wife, Mary, a war correspondent he met overseas.  After the war, Hemingway wrote about the sea. The first writings were published as The Old Man and the Sea in 1952.
  • 38. Later Years  Some believe Hemingway’s inspiration from the “Old Man” was his longtime friend and fellow-fisherman Gregorio Fuentes.  For almost thirty years, Fuentes served as the Captain of the Pilar.  Fuentes died of cancer in 2002 at the age of 104. Gregorio Fuentes
  • 39. Later Years  On a safari he was seriously injured in a plane crash. He sprained his right shoulder, arm and left leg, had a concussion, temporarily lost vision in his left eye and hearing in his left ear, suffered paralysis, a crushed vertebra, ruptured liver and kidney, and first degree burns on his face, arms and leg.  Some American newspapers mistakenly published his obituary, thinking he had been killed.  The pain was so great from this accident (as well as a separate brushfire incident) that Hemingway was unable to travel to Stockholm to accept his Nobel Prize.
  • 40. Later Years  Hemingway never fully recovered from his injuries. He left his home in Cuba (as Communist tensions were rising) and moved to Ketchum, Idaho.  He suffered from high blood pressure and liver problems.  Hemingway was also receiving Electroconvulsive therapy (ETC) for depression and paranoia.  The results of these treatments was alarming. Hemingway suffered significant memory loss.  Three weeks short of his 62nd birthday, Hemingway took his own life.