Criticism > Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism > A Farewell to Arms, Ernest Hemingway - Margot Norris (essay date Winter 1994)


A Farewell to Arms, Ernest Hemingway - Margot Norris (essay date Winter 1994)

Margot Norris (essay date Winter 1994)

SOURCE: “The Novel as War: Lies and Truth in Hemingway's A Farewell to Arms,” in Modern Fiction Studies, Vol. 40, No. 4, Winter, 1994, pp. 689-710.

[In the following essay, Norris uses reader-response criticism to argue that Hemingway uses the love story in the novel to turn readers' attention from the brutal realities of war.]

The project of reevaluating Modernism in terms of the political interests that informed its formalistic claims has particularly questioned the aesthetics of the American moderns—Pound, Eliot, Stein, Fitzgerald, and Hemingway. Hemingway's style has suffered an especially damaging translation into its ideological determinants—for example, Walter Benn Michaels reading the signature of simplicity (“nice” “good” “true”) in Hemingway's miraculously clean prose as the transformation of racism (“breeding”) into aesthetics (196). While revisionary...

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