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Государственное общеобразовательное учреждение гимназия № 11
Реферат
на тему:
Ernest Miller Hemingway
Выполнил:
Самойлов Станислав Андреевич
Преподаватель:
Тоисеева Ирина Вадимовна
Санкт-Петербург
A table of contents:
1. The introduction………………………………………………… 2
2. Life of Ernest Hemingway……………………………………... 2
3. Hemingway`s social viewpoint……………………………........ 4
4. Hemingway`s ideas regarding literature and writers…………… 5
5. Hemingway`s style of writing………………………………….. 6
6. The conclusion…………………………………………………..7
Ernest Miller Hemingway (1899-1961)
The introduction
Ernest Miller Hemingway was one of America`s foremost writers, and a
classic of American and world literature of the 20th century. He
influenced the American short story, and his novels “A Farewell to Arms”, “To
Have and Have Not”, “For Whom the Bells Tolls”, “The Old Man and the Sea” are
world known. He took part in the First World War, Civil Warin
Hemingway was a man of great talent. An American critic, Carlos Baker, in his book “Ernest Hemingway A Life Story” writes that Hemingway was a perpetual[1] student, a profound[2] reader, a brilliant naturalist and a keen observer [3] of life around him. Hemingway won the hearts of his readers with his stories and novels and attracted people by his personal qualities ― his honesty and courage above all. He was much interested in fishing, hunting, boxing and the national Spanish sport corrida.
LIFE OF ERNEST HEMINGWAY
Ernest Miller Hemingway was born at eight
o'clock in the morning on July 21,
Born in the family home at 439 North Oak Park Avenue (now 339 N. Oak Park Avenue), a house built by his widowed[7] grandfather Ernest Hall, Hemingway was the second of Dr. Clarence and Grace Hall Hemingway`s six children; he had four sisters and one brother. He was named after his maternal grandfather Ernest Hall and his great uncle Miller Hall.
His father, a keen sportsman and ethnographer, was a doctor. His democratic views influenced Ernest greatly. He taught his son first and foremost to be a man, and to love and understand nature His mother was a successful opera singer. Ernest took to reading books at an early age. His nurse recalled that she had been warned not to let him read in bed but that after “I`d tuck him in, he`d say good night, as sweet as could be, then in the morning I` d find books stuffed under the mattress, in the pillow-case, everywhere. He read all the time ― and books far beyond his years”
At school Ernest was recognized as
an exceptionally good football player and boxer. Ernest took part in all school
activities. But he was adventurous and twice he ran away from home, working at
farms as a day-labourer, or as a waiter, or as a sparring partner for boxers.
He was also a good fisherman and was very fond of hunting. He used to hunt in
the woods ofnorthern
Later at school he began to show a fondness[12] for literature, started writing articles for two school periodicals, and became the editor of the school`sweekly paper.
When he left school, he took a job on the paper Kansas City Star as a cub reporter[13]. On the Star he got his first experience in writing for the press.
In 1918 the
On returning to
The Civil War in Spain was a
turning-point in the writer`s life. He was eager[19]
to help the republicans and did everything he could. He bought some ambulance
cars and took an active part in the fight against fascism as a correspondent
and writer. Hemingway wrote the film script for the movie “The Spanish Earth”
(1938), in connection with which he said: “…when men fight for the freedom of
their country against a foreign invasion, and when these men are your friends,
some new friends and some of long standing, you know how they were attacked and
how they fought at first unarmed, you learn, watching them live and fight and
die, that there are worse things than war. Cowardice is worse, treachery[20]
is worse, and simple selfishness[21]
is worse.” He raised money for
When Hemingway learned about the
invasion of the
For some months in 1942-1943 he
voluntarily patrolled the Cuban coast in his boat Pilar chasing[23]
submarines in the
While traveling in
Best of all he loved the fall
The leaves yellow on the cottonwoods[27]
Leaves floating on the trout[28] streams
And above the hills
The high blue windless skies
…Now he will be a part of them forever.
P.S. Hemingway was married four times.
HEMINGWAY`S SOCIAL VIEWPOINT
Hemingway was a democrat and humanist. All his life he fought against war and fascism and criticized the so-called “American way of life”. the First World War influenced him a great deal. He saw the horrors and tragedy suffered by both soldiers and civilians. In the preface[29] to a collection of war stories “Men at War” (1942) he wrote about the First World War thatit had been “the most colossal, murderous, mismanaged[30] butchery that has ever taken place on Earth”. He was convinced that after the First World War the world was on the way to revolution: “In those days we who believed in it, looked for it at any time, expected it, hoped for it, ― for it was the logical thing.” A series of stories on this subject make up the book “In Our Time” (1924). Hemingway said: “The only way to combat the murder that is war, is to show the dirty combinations that make it and the criminals and swine that hope for it and the idiotic way they run it when they get it so that an honest man will distrust it as he would a racket and refuse to be enslaved into it.” His participation[31] in the First World War, the Civil War in Spain, the Second World War taught him to see the real nature of war. In the preface to the novel “A Farewell to Arms”, published after the Second World War, he wrote: “I believe that all the people who stand to profit[32] by a war and who help provoke it should be shot on the first day it starts by accredited representatives of the loyal citizens of their country who will fight it. The author of this book would be very glad to take charge[33] of this shooting if legally delegated by those who will fight…”
He was one of the first to warn
against the fatal danger of fascism. Hemingway`s first feature-articles on
fascism were written at the beginning of the twenties. Having traced the
development of fascism in Italy, he wrote in his article called “Italy`s
Fascists” that first it was an organization of counter-attackers against the
communist demonstrations, then it became a political party, and now it is a
political and military party that is enlisting[34]
the workers of Italy and invading the field of the labour organizations. In his
article “Genoa Conference” he noted that the fascists “were under the tacit[35]
protection of the government, if not its active support”, that “they had a
taste of unpenalized[36]
lawlessness, unpunished murder, and the right to riot[37]
when and where they pleased”. He said that Mussolini was the biggest bluff[38]
in
HEMINGWAY`S IDEAS REGARDING LITERATURE AND WRITERS
Hemingway didn`t consider himself a
theoretician but he made some important contributions[41]
to theory. He was of the opinion that art and literature play an important role
in the world: “A work of art endures[42]
forever.” Hemingway stressed the role of the writer: “Trying to write something
of permanent value is a full-time job even though only a few hours a day are spent
on the actual writing. A writer can be compared to a well[43].
There are as many kinds of wells as there are writers. The important thing is
to have good water in the well and it is better to take a regular amount out
than to pump[44] the
well dry and wait for it to refill.” He paid much attention to a writer`s
qualifications: “First there must be talent, much talent. Talent such as
Kipling had. Then there must be discipline, the discipline of Flaubert.[45]
Then there must be…an absolute conscience[46]
as unchanging as the standard meter in
Hemingway stressed the importance of truth in fiction[50]: “A writer`s job is to tell the truth. His standard of fidelity[51] to the truth should be so high that his experience, should produce a truer account than anything factual can be.”
Hemingway made a careful study of both American and European literary and cultural traditions. He thoroughly studied the works of many writers, among them Flaubert, Stendhal[52], Turgenev, Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, Chekhov, Maupassant, Dante, Virgil and many others. Hemingway considered among his “teachers” many painters and composers as well. The writersaid he learned as much from painters about how to write as from writers, and that “what one learns from composers and from the study of harmony and counterpoint[53]” should be obvious[54]. He repeatedly stressed the importance which Russian literature had had for him.
HEMINGWAY`S STYLE OF WRITING
Hemingway`s aim to write absolute truth induced him to create a new style. He avoided conventional narration [55]in his stories. He tried to make readers understand his ideas about nature, labour, and war by sketching in vivid scenes his own experience in war, and tell his readers about the peasants and fishermen by presenting real scenes of hard toil[56]. Leaving out many unnecessary details Hemingway mastered a new short-story form. Some of these short stories he used for his novels. That`s the way all my novels got started,” he said.
The language of Hemingway`s works is of bare[57] simplicity; it is in keeping with the characters he wanted to portray[58]. It is surprising how he reveals[59] the inner[60] world of his personages in short dialogues and colloquial phrases. Plain words in simple declarative[61] sentences bring out the sensations of the central characters and at the same time make the reader participate in the events of the story. “I use the oldest words in the English language.” Hemingway said.
Hemingway was the inventor of the so-called “theory of an iceberg”: he wrote that“…if a writer of prose knows enough about what he is writing about , he may omit things that he knows, and the reader, if the writer is writing truly enough, will have a feeling of those things, as strongly as though the writer has stated them. The dignity[62] of movement of an iceberg is due to only one-eighth of it being above water.”
The conclusion
Leo Lania, Hemingway`s biographer, wrote: “Many serious and important authors have learnt from him; fromhis incorruptible objectivity, his exceptional gift of observation; from his language, as clear as the mountain stream which reveals each single pebble[63] on the bottom. He has done more than anybody else to strip American literature ofsentimentality and free American prose from bombast[64] and artificial pathos. He has shown a complete generation of authors how to write natural and unliterarydialogue with a rhythm and authenticity[65] which few other, contemporary novelists have equaled.”
The used material:
1)“English and American Literature”. A course of lectures. Л.Н. Утевская. 2004
2)«ЭрнестХемингуэй. Биографияитворчество». АртуроПаскаль. 2006
3)The internet:www.lostgeneration.com
[1] perpetual―бесконечный
[2] profound―глубокий
[3] akeenobserver―острый наблюдатель (критик)
[4] unsurpassed—бесподобно
[5] captivated―очарованный
[6] confounded―проклятый
[7] widowed―овдовевший
[8] asuburb―пригород
[9]“widelawnsandnarrowminds”―«широкие лужайки и узкие умы»
[10] aseediness―захудалость
[11] adhered―придерживаемый
[12] afondness―любовь, нежность
[13] cub reporter ― a young and inexperienced journalist, a beginner
[14] to absorb―поглощать
[15] lucid―ясный
[16] belly empty―пустойживот
[17] “ hollow hungry”― «голоднаяпустота»
[18] prominent―видный
[19] eager―нетерпеливый
[20] a treachery―предательство
[21] a selfishness―эгоизм
[22] a chauffeur―шофёр
[23] to chase―преследовать
[24] atribute―дань
[25] anarrowescape―спасение по счастливой случайности
[26] to deteriorate―ухудшаться
[27] a cottonwood―тополь
[28] a trout―форель
[29] a preface―предисловие
[30] mismanaged―неумелопроведенная
[31] a participation―участие
[32] a profit―прибыль
[33] a charge―обвинение
[34] to enlist―вербовать
[35] tacit―молчаливый
[36] unpenalized―неоштрафованный
[37] a riot―бунт
[38] a bluff―блеф
[39] to aware―знать
[40] a bully―хулиган
[41] a contribution―вклад
[42] toendure―выдерживать испытание времени
[43] awell―колодец, родник
[44] a pump―насос
[45] Flaubert Gustave (1821-1880) ― French realist writer, author of the novel “Madame Bovary”.
[46] a conscience―совесть
[47] an acquiring―приобретение
[48] to enable―позволить
[49] an implication―значение
[50] a fiction―беллетристика
[51] a fidelity ―верность
[52] Stendhal ― pen-name of Henri Beyle (1783-1842), French novelist..
[53] a counterpoint―контрапункт
[54] obvious―очевидный
[55] a conventional narration―обычноеповествование
[56] atoil―тяжелый труд
[57] bare―голый
[58] to portray―изображать
[59] to reveal―показать
[60] inner―внутренний
[61] declarative―описательный
[62] adignity―достоинство
[63] apebble―галька, камешек
[64] abombast―напыщенность
[65] anauthenticity―подлинность