Our Time Now Essays

  • Human Nature in Bartholomae and Petrosky's Our Time, Theft, and Music of the Swamp

    3114 Words  | 7 Pages

    Human Nature in Bartholomae and Petrosky's Our Time, Theft, and Music of the Swamp Why should college students read the stories that are assigned in English courses? Other than to satisfy the professor, what is the purpose of reading these difficult writings of people we don't know or care about? Many of these students find themselves asking, "What is this writer talking about?" Confused, some quickly give up trying to understand the story and make reading something just to get through, diminishing

  • Nick Adams as Code Hero of In Our Time

    1940 Words  | 4 Pages

    Hero of In Our Time Ernest Hemingway is noted for having made many contributions to the literary world and one of his most notorious contributions is the Code Hero. The birth and growth of the Code Hero can be easily observed simply by watching the growth and development of Nick Adams throughout Hemingway's writing. In Our Time contains a various assortment of Nick Adam stories at various stages of his life and also shows the Code Hero at various stages of its development. In Our Time was the second

  • Nick's Self-Discovery in Hemingway's In Our Time

    851 Words  | 2 Pages

    Nick's Self-Discovery in Hemingway's In Our Time The focus of this essay will be to analyze Nick's transition as he moves from mental isolation, to physical isolation, to maturation and self-discovery. If Nick's life were to be chronologically ordered and analyzed, the stories Indian Camp and The Doctor and the Doctor's Wife would definitely come first. It is these two stories that give us the first insight to what kind of character that Nick really is as a child. Because Nick is only mentioned

  • Soldiers Home

    1589 Words  | 4 Pages

    exception. Our first impression, having read the title only, is that this story will be about a old soldier living out the remainder of his life in an institution where veterans go to die. We soon find out that the story has nothing to do with the elderly, or institutions; rather, it tells the story of a young man, Harold Krebs, only recently returned from World War I, who has moved back into his parents' house while he figures out what he wants to do with the rest of his life. And yet our first

  • Nick’s Psychological Development in Ernest Hemingway’s "In Our Time"

    1546 Words  | 4 Pages

    Nick’s Psychological Development in Ernest Hemingway’s "In Our Time" In Hemingway’s collection of short stories, In Our Time, we follow a character by the name of Nick Adams. We are introduced to Nick in “Indian Camp” as a young boy, and follow him to adulthood in both Parts I and II of “Big Two-Hearted River”. Through this we see Nick develop and learn about some major facts of life. Nick is a character who changes through the effects of war on many different levels. Although Hemingway hardly

  • Indian Camp and Soldiers Home Young Women as Objects

    861 Words  | 2 Pages

    Indian Camp and Soldiers Home Young Women as Objects In Ernest Hemingway's short stories "Indian Camp" and "Soldier's Home," young women are treated as objects whose purpose is either reproduction or pleasure. They do not and cannot participate to a significant degree in the masculine sphere of experience, and when they have served their purpose, they are set aside. They do not have a voice in the narrative, and they represent complications in life that must be overcome in one way or another.

  • Analysis Of Soldiers Home By Ernest Hemingway

    1624 Words  | 4 Pages

    Paola Valencia Professor Nanda English 102 13 February 2013 Literary Analysis of “Soldier’s Home” Inspired by his days of service in the Ambulance Corps during the First World War, Hemingway utilizes his experience to tell the story of a soldier’s struggle to get back home both physically and mentally in his short story “Soldier’s Home”. Hemingway captivates his readers in a tale of a soldier’s (Harold Krebs) late return home from World War I. Upon his return, Krebs discovers that the life he once

  • Writing: Analysis Of Ernest Hemingway's Writing Skills

    1390 Words  | 3 Pages

    had not left a trace. The stone was chipped and split by the fire. It was all that was left of the town of Seney. Even the surface had been burned off the ground.” (Hemingway, 177) Here, Hemingway us... ... middle of paper ... ...oppers are black now is they might be adapted to their new, blackened surroundings because of the fire of the war. Also, Nick wondered how long they will stay like that, I may infer that these grasshoppers represent Nick and other soldiers who become hardened by the war

  • Hemingway's The Unfortunate Tale of Harlod Krebs

    1791 Words  | 4 Pages

    society as a whole. No one cared anymore. That was the first reality that Harold faced when he finally returned home: By the time Krebs returned to his hometown in Oklahoma the greeting of heroes was over. He came back much too late. The men from the town who had been drafted had all been welcomed elaborately on their return. There had been a great deal of hysteria. Now the reaction had set in. People seemed to think it was rather ridiculous for Krebs to be getting back so late, years after

  • Analysis of Soldier's Home by Ernest Hemingway

    705 Words  | 2 Pages

    Krebs. He recently returned from World War 1 to find everything almost exactly the same as when he left. He moved back into his parents house, where he found the same car sitting in the same drive way. He also found the girls looking the same, except now they all had short hair. When he returned to his home town in Oklahoma the hysteria of the soldiers coming home was all over. The other soldiers had come home years before Krebs had so everyone was over the excitement. When he first returned home he

  • Society's Conformity is a "Soldier's Home"

    1170 Words  | 3 Pages

    frontlines of World War I to the mundane everyday life of a small Oklahoma town can be difficult. Ernest Hemingway’s character Harold Krebs, has a harder time adjusting to home life than most soldiers that had returned home. Krebs returned years after the war was over and was expected to conform back into societies expectations with little time to adapt back to a life not surrounded by war. Women take a prominent role in Krebs’s life and have strong influences on him. In the short story “Soldier’s

  • War And Religion In 'Soldier's Home'

    1174 Words  | 3 Pages

    did not want to hear any more stories once he became interested to share, since they heard it from the others who returned home on time. The people of his home town Oklahoma became traumatized and uninterested in what he had to say. Krebs then came to the conclusion that in order to be heard, he would have to lie, which contradicts his yen for simplicity

  • Big Two Hearted River Analysis

    775 Words  | 2 Pages

    The short story Big Two-Hearted River, written by Ernest Hemingway, is a piece that has drawn much literary attention due to its complex utilization of detail in brief simple sentences. With these factors Hemingway’s Big Two-Hearted River is able to have an abundance of critical expositions throughout the story, which shows the passion that Hemingway possesses for concise sentences. Most of the criticism for Hemingway’s River comes from the grave themes alluding to the war and the catastrophic

  • Hemingway's Achievement of Stream of Consciousness

    1381 Words  | 3 Pages

    Hemingway's Achievement of Stream of Consciousness In Hemingway's In Our Time, the author refers to clean water in the form of lakes, rivers, and streams in almost all of his short stories, while he makes direct reference to water in his chapters only when that water is stagnant or contaminated. Perhaps this collection of Hemingway's is representative of the conscious mind through his stories, and the subconscious through his chapters. Read as such, water can be seen as a central element in consciousness

  • A Hero of Our Time by Mikhail Lermontov

    993 Words  | 2 Pages

    In his novel A Hero of Our Time translated by Vladimir Nabokov, Mikhail Lermontov creates a character named, Pechorin based on his opinions to 19th century Russian society. Pechorin is cruel, selfish, and careless to the people but ironically, Pechorin’s refusal to marry either Princess Marry or Vera, reveals him to be as an honorable man. Although, Pechorin describes his life as full of boredom and his opinion to love is different, Lermontov again explains he should be represented as a respectful

  • Gregoriy Pechorin In A Hero Of Our Time

    2897 Words  | 6 Pages

    A Hero of Our Time  - Gregoriy Pechorin is No Hero Is Pechorin, the protagonist of Mikhail Lermontov's novella A Hero of Our Time an honorable man? Much of Pechorin's behavior proves him to be a cruel and insensitive man, who seems to bring only havoc and destruction to a situation. He is often aggravating, self-serving and insensitive to others. However in other instances, Pechorin proves himself to be the least reprehensible character. He shows himself to be a man with great self knowledge and

  • Grigory Pechorin: The Superfluous Man

    1016 Words  | 3 Pages

    Mikhail Lermontov's protagonist, Grigory Pechorin, belongs to that group of literary characters known individually as the 'superfluous man.'; Generally an intelligent, educated individual, the superfluous man would appear to be one who has been either unjustly treated or outcast by society in general. The superfluous man attempts to find a place for himself in the world, but perhaps due to the combination of his talents, upbringing, personality and intelligence, continually finds himself on the outs

  • An exploration of Lermontov's concept of fate in A Hero of Our Time

    1012 Words  | 3 Pages

    It is the human condition to question the nature of our existence: philosophers, musicians, artists, and writers have all sought to address these issues. However, sometimes the patterns and events of our lives do not reveal their meaning to us, they are imperceptible us and appear as fate. In Lermontov’s classic novel, though some would argue it does not fit the definition of a novel, A Hero of Our Time, the author discusses the concept of fate from the perspective of the protagonist, Pechorin. The

  • Shakespeare Compared To Today

    534 Words  | 2 Pages

    How different is our world? There are multiple ways that Shakespeare time is different from our time now. I am going to explain three of them with you today. The three I will be covering today are, Shakespeare's words, his actor respect and their acting from ours. Shakespeare's time is really different from ours although we might think that it must have been the same because of all the acting back then. Actually, some of it is the same if we are looking and comparing the acting but there are also

  • Death And Rebirth: Ostar Death And Rebirth

    1246 Words  | 3 Pages

    divine. A time of enlightenment when we are now leaving behind us the darker times and are fully gearing up and heading into the lighter days along with shorter nights, basically a time of rebirth, growth and strength. New life is either already visible now, from daffodils, crocus’s, tulips and spring lambs are now taking their first steps in the fields. The Ash trees are budding now and the hedgerows are starting to shoot and a hue of greenery can be seen everywhere. This is a very sacred time and Pagans