Love was a central theme of Ernest Hemingway’s major works. And
although his passages on sexual love and on romantic love may be
widely remembered and frequently quoted, says Robert W. Lewis in this
scholarly and detailed consideration, Hemingway’s later work
revealed his ultimate belief that brotherly love was the supreme love
of mankind. Eros, Hemingway concluded, was a neutral value, neither
good nor bad in itself, but yet capable of complementing agape in
giving man pleasure. By examining the forms and essences of the
various kinds of love, Hemingway worked out an explanation and
tentative solution to the troubles of the human condition. The
tradition of romantic love that had prevailed in Western literature
had challenged sexual love and brotherly love and had been confused
with them since the Middle Ages. Hemingway’s early work was
destructive of romantic love, says Lewis; the work of his middle
career was crucial in his exploration for the supreme love and the
means to whatever peace and happiness man may achieve. By the time he
wrote The Old Man and the Sea, his ethic was formulated and he could
write conclusively of the trial and lesson of love in Western
civilization in a way that reflected his discovery that true love must
be a reciprocal blend of eros and agape between man and woman, man and
man, and man and his world.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781477301036
Publisert
2016
Utgiver
Independent Publishers Group (Chicago Review Press)
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter