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- Title
Ernest Hemingway's 'Fathers and Sons': An Evasive Confession about Paternal Roles and Masculinity.
- Authors
Domotor, Teodora
- Abstract
The article discusses the short story "Fathers and Sons" by Ernest Hemingway from the collection "Winner Take Nothing," focusing on how paternal roles and masculinity are presented in the story. Other topics include how trauma, abjection, and coping mechanisms appear in the story, a discussion of the main character Nick Adams' relationship with his father, and the relationship between the deteriorating landscape and the father/son relationship in the story.
- Subjects
FATHERS &; Sons (Short story); HEMINGWAY, Ernest, 1899-1961; MASCULINITY in literature; FATHER-son relationship in literature; ABJECTION in literature; PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation; PSYCHOLOGY in literature; ADAMS, Nick (Fictional character); AMERICAN literature; LITERARY criticism
- Publication
49th Parallel, 2014, Issue 34, p113
- ISSN
1753-5794
- Publication type
Short Story Review