Hills Like White Elephants: A Literary Analysis

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In literature realism is described as life as it is, the common everyday life. Realism was romanticized by W.D Howells who was a creative writer and a literacy critic who promoted writers such as Charles Chestnut, Mark Twain, and Paul Laurence Dunbar along with many others. Realism was expressed to the readers by romanticizing what is real in literature, writers accomplished this by emphasizing the idea, transient in nature, upper class chara, and speaking in Standard English. A great piece of literature that captures the movement of Realism was written by Sarah Orne Jewett “A White Heron.” This story represents two pieces of literature Romanticism and Realism. In the story there are Romantic ideas, the importance of nature and the individual which is shown by the author’s style using details, realistic settings, and realistic people to show …show more content…

Modernism helped to increase the interest in psychology, transition to seeing the writer as special, and the reaction against war/ industrialization. Ezra Pound described Modernism as “Making it new,” meaning making the pieces new/ different, and really experimenting with the writing. Modernism is used in many works of literature from short stories, poems, to even civil rights literature. A piece of literature that captures this is Ernest Hemingway’s, “Hills like White Elephants." In this Hemingway uses dialogue, and irony to help tell this story. Hemingway uses this piece as an experiment in how a fictional story can be told, as Ezra Pound would say “Making it new.” Hemingway’s idea was to find new ways to express the new kinds of life by being knowledgeable in both World War I and in advanced technology. Hemingway's writing is journalistic and straightforward; he reports dialogue cleanly and directly throughout the story, and talks about things that were not talked about openly during this time frame which was experimental. Which made this piece a very strong example of

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