Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Ernest Hemingway English II Biotechnology High School.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Ernest Hemingway English II Biotechnology High School."— Presentation transcript:

1 Ernest Hemingway English II Biotechnology High School

2 The Man Behind the Words Born - July 21, 1899, Oak Park, Illinois Mother - Grace Hall –Opera singer before marrying Ernest’s dad –He never forgave her for dressing him in girl’s clothes, giving him a girl’s haircut, and passing him off to neighbors as her daughter Ernestine Father - Clarence Edmonds Hemingway –Taught Ernest to love outdoor life –Took own life in 1928 after losing health (diabetes) and money (Florida real estate bubble)

3

4

5 More About Young Ernest Education –Public schools in Oak Park –Published earliest stories and poems in school newspaper Graduated from hs in 1917 Worked six months as reporter for Kansas City Star

6 Interests Hunting Fishing Traveling Safari Bullfighting (watching it, not participating!) Drinking

7 Army Career World War I –Joined volunteer ambulance unit in Italy –Suffered severe leg wound (1918) Had affair with American nurse during his recovery (basis for A Farewell to Arms) –Decorated twice by the Italian government for his service

8 After the War Worked as journalist in Chicago Moved to Paris in 1921 –"If you are lucky enough to have lived in Paris as a young man, then whenever you go for the rest of your life, it stays with you, for Paris is a moveable feast.”

9 In Europe The center of the modernist movement –Modernism - a style or movement in the arts that aims to break with classical and traditional forms Associated himself with writers such as Gertrude Stein and F. Scott Fitzgerald

10 Gertrude Stein Catalyst in modern art and literature movements Supposedly coined the term “Lost Generation” for American expatriates –Expatriate - person who lives outside his/her native country

11 F. Scott Fitzgerald You know about him already, don’t you? Edited some of Hemingway’s drafts Acted as his agent Hemingway portrayed Fitzgerald in a somewhat negative light in A Moveable Feast - friendship suffered for it Fitzgerald regretted the lost friendship

12 Travels (He’s SO an Orange!) Toured with wife (Elizabeth Hadley Richardson) –Italy, France, Switzerland Traveled as reporter (1922) –Turkey, Greece (reported on the war between them) Two trips to Spain (1923) –Bullfights!

13 Major Works The Sun Also Rises (1924-1926) –First great success –Narrated by American journalist –Group of expatriates in France and Spain –Members of the Lost Generation A Farewell to Arms (1929) –Italian front in WWI –Two lovers find brief happiness For Whom the Bell Tolls (1940)

14 Nobel Prize Awarded Nobel Prize for Literature (1954) Unable to attend award ceremony –Recovering from injuries sustained when hunting in Uganda

15 A Later Success The Old Man and the Sea (1952) –Cuban fisherman named Santiago (modeled off of a fisherman who worked on Hemingway’s boat) –Catches giant marlin after weeks of disappointment –Story of his journey with the marlin - comes back with nothing but won a spiritual battle

16 A Whole Lotta Weddings Divorced Elizabeth (1927) Married Pauline Pfeiffer in the same year (suspicious!) Third wife (1940) - Martha Gellhorn - writer and war correspondent –She called Hemingway her “unwilling companion” –Bitter divorce (1945) Fourth wife - Mary Welsh - correspondent for Time magazine

17 A Warning About Alcohol Hemingway started drinking when he was a reporter –Built up tolerance Downward spiral (1940s) –Heard voices in his head –Became overweight –Had high blood pressure –Cirrhosis of the liver –Taught 12-year-old son to drink (son later became an alcoholic)

18 Tidbits Went on hunting expeditions in Africa and Wyoming Went deep-sea fishing off Cuba, Key West, and Bahamas Bought house in Cuba - a paradise for his many cats! –Lived there until Fidel Castro’s revolution in 1959 - then moved back to America Childhood nickname: Champ Nickname in his older years: Papa

19 The Later Years Depression - hospitalized at the Mayo Clinic (1960 - released in 1961) –Two months of electroshock therapy July 2, 1961 –Committed suicide with his favorite shotgun in his Idaho home Posthumous publication - True at First Light –Considered one of the worst books by a Nobel Prize winning author

20 The Iceburg Theory “If a writer of prose knows enough about what he is writing about, he may omit things that he knows and the reader... will have a feeling of those things as though the writer had stated them.” In other words, when you write, just show the tip of the iceburg

21 Writing Style Deceptively simple - straightforward Understatement and omission (see Iceberg Theory) Repetition Spare dialogue Focus on facts –“Find what gave you the emotion; what the action was that gave you the excitement. Then write it down making it clear so the reader will see it too and have the same feeling as you had.”

22 Writing Style Few adjectives or adverbs Simple sentences (let’s diagram some!) Concise, vivid He noted that, “a writer’s style should be direct and personal, his imagery rich and earthy, and his words simple and vigorous. The greatest writers have the gift of brevity, are hard workers, diligent scholars and competent stylists”

23 The Hemingway Hero Sometimes referred to as the “code hero” Easily identifiable A man’s man –Moved from one love affair to another –Participated in game hunting –Enjoyed bullfights –Drank wildly

24 The Hemingway Hero Soldiers, hunters, bullfighters, etc. –Tough, courageous, honest –Courage and honesty set against the brutal ways of modern society –Lose hope and faith because of this confrontation

25 The Six Word Story For sale: baby shoes, never worn.

26


Download ppt "Ernest Hemingway English II Biotechnology High School."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google