The Theme Of Consent In Ernest Hemingway's Up In Michigan

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In Ernest Hemingway’s work “Up in Michigan” the question of consent arises. The character Liz Coates has romantic feelings for a Jim Gilmore, the town blacksmith. Liz thinks her existence is unknown to Jim but, in the text it says, “He liked her face because it was so jolly but he never thought about her.” Liz goes as far as watching him wash up and thinking of him at night instead of sleeping. Liz’s feelings for him go unrequited for a time until Jim’s return from a hunting trip. The men are drinking and celebrating the hunt in the front room with four-gallons of whiskey. After supper Liz waits in the kitchen for Jim, in the text it says that she wants to take the way he looked up to bed with her. When Jim emerges from the front room he goes

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