American Decades
Hemingway, Ernest 1899-1961
WRITER
Celebrity.
No literary figure during the 1950s, or any other decade in American history, achieved a degree of literary celebrity equal to that of Ernest Hemingway. Tough, experienced, independent-minded, action-seeking, hard-drinking, and photogenic, he rep-resented the full romance of authorship for readers of the time.
Fading Reputation.
To many literary critics, though, he seemed through as a writer at the beginning of the decade, and if there was any suspicion that he still might have a spark of creative genius left, his novel Across the River and Into the Trees (1950) dispelled it. He had, it seemed, entered the phase of his life given over to accepting awards for past achievements.
The Old Man and the Sea.
Then came The Old Man and the Sea (1952), Hemingway's twenty-seven-thousand-word short novel (one-third to one-half the length of the average novel)...
[The entire page is 958 words long]
1950's The Arts
- Overview
- Topics in the News
-
Headline Makers
- Bernstein, Leonard 1918-1990
- Brando, Marlon 1924-
- Dean, James 1931-1955
- De Kooning, Willem 1904
- Faulkner, William 1897-1962
- Hemingway, Ernest 1899-1961
- Kerouac, Jack 1922-1969
- Monroe, Marilyn 1926-1962
- Parker, Charlie 1920-1955
- Pollock, Jackson 1912-1956
- Presley, Elvis 1935-1977
- Salinger, J. D. 1919-
- Williams, Hank 1924-1953
- People in the News
- Awards
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in the Arts, 1950–1959
