Hills Like White Elephants Theme Essay

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Themes are central to the plot of any story. In fact, themes are the purpose to an author writing anything. By definition, a theme is the subject or topic of a work. Some themes, like that in “A Good Man is Hard to Find” are more obvious, while others, such as, “Hills Like White Elephants” are less clear and require readers to do some deep reading and critical thinking in order to identify the purpose of it, and through strong reading techniques, audiences will find valuable lessons embedded within the themes can enlighten and even revive our thinking. Ernest Hemingway 's “Hills Like White Elephants” contains at least two themes that are difficult to express directly but are thoroughly prevalent within the story as well as our own lives. We …show more content…

As stated in an essay by Donald E. Hardy and Heather K. Hardy, the setting of being caught between “brown and dry” country and luscious fields and a river with mountains behind it. The “death,” although not made completely clear upon first reading, would represent the abortion of the child that the man and woman discuss throughout the story. If the woman chooses to have the operation and the man stays with her, they would be metaphorically traveling into the dry country, thus living a monotonous, dull life together. Choosing to keep the child and stay together, the couple can live a more fruitful and beautiful life. While the woman seems to be more confident in her decision to abort, and then, later on, to keep, the baby, the man clearly struggles with both choices which can be observed by his lack of acknowledgment of the scenery beyond the train station. As the couple ultimately chooses life, love, and to live a life together with their child, the story is …show more content…

Feminism is defined as the goal of perfect equality between the sexes socially, economically, etc. Clearly, the marriage in this story is dominated by the husband, who is also the narrator 's doctor. The first the narrator mentions of her husband, John, is when he laughed at her for asking questions regarding the house (which, according to the narrator, is to be expected when married) that they would be moving to in order to cure her of her mental illness. Like many other married couples at the time, if a woman is convinced that she was ill and tried to ask her husband for assistance, she was often not believed because men, especially those that were very educated, thought of themselves as wiser and more intelligent and regarded their wives as simple-minded, inferior and almost stupid. Because of John 's social standing, he reassures friends and family members that his wife is suffering from nothing more than “temporary nervous depression.” Due to her inability to communicate with anyone other than her husband and Jennie, the narrator writes in a journal that she keeps hidden because her husband hates having her doing almost anything other than rest, which is supposed to cure her of her depression. The yellow wallpaper and the woman within the pattern add to the narrator 's anxiety, and instead of acknowledging

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