In Another Country

by Ernest Hemingway

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Student Question

What reason does the narrator give for receiving his medals in "In Another Country"?

Quick answer:

In "In Another Country," the narrator explains that he received his medals simply because he was an American, indicating they were awarded for being present during campaigns rather than for acts of valor. This contrasts with other soldiers whose medals were for specific acts of bravery. The narrator acknowledges that his wound was an accident and feels his achievements are less significant compared to those of his companions.

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In the short story "In Another Country," by Ernest Hemingway, the narrator describes how he and his companions all had "the same medals," except for one soldier who had not been at the front for sufficient time to receive a medal, and another who had been a lieutenant and who had three medals "of the sort we each only had one of." This suggests that the medals are campaign medals, given to soldiers for their participation in (effectively, presence during) specific campaigns. As the narrator himself explains it to the local boys, he "had been given the medals because I was an American." Other armies do not award medals in the same way that the American army does, and this confession changes the attitude of the boys toward him, as they had "done very different things to get their medals." (That is, the boys' medals were presumably for specific acts of valor.) The narrator recognizes that he was wounded in service, but says this was really "an accident." Though he is not ashamed of his own medal, he cannot imagine having done the things the others have done to receive theirs.

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