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“The Real Thing–? Representing the Bullfight and Spain in Death in the Afternoon

from Reading Texts, Paratexts, and Absence

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 April 2017

Peter Messent
Affiliation:
Professor of Modern American Literature at the University of Nottingham (UK)
Nancy Bredendick
Affiliation:
Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Departamento de Filología Inglesa
Beatriz Penas Ibanez
Affiliation:
Professor in the Department of English and German, University of Zaragoza, Spain
Hilary Justice
Affiliation:
Assistant Professor of English and Literary Publishing, Illinois State University
Keneth Kinnamon
Affiliation:
Professor Emeritus of English Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences, University of Arkansas, USA
Peter Messent
Affiliation:
Professor of Modern American Literature at the University of Nottingham
Robert W. Trogdon
Affiliation:
Assistant Professor of English Kent State University, USA
Lisa Tyler
Affiliation:
Professor of English at Sinclair Community College, Dayton, Ohio, USA
Amy Vondrak
Affiliation:
Assistant Professor, EnglishMercer County Community College, New Jersey, USA
Linda Wagner-Martin
Affiliation:
Professor of English at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, USA
Miriam B. Mandel
Affiliation:
Senior Lecturer in the English Department at Tel Aviv University, Israel
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Summary

The notion of authenticity, and the capturing of it by one means or another, was an important one to Hemingway throughout his artistic career. In Death in the Afternoon, he uses the phrase “the real thing” twice to describe, in turn, the two subjects, writing and bullfighting, which are linked in symbiotic connection throughout the book. The best known of these occasions is early in the text, when he makes one of his most famous pronouncements on what he was aiming to achieve in his own writing: “the real thing, the sequence of motion and fact which made the emotion and which would be as valid in a year or in ten years or, with luck and if you stated it purely enough, always” (DIA, 2). The second is when he is writing of the “ecstasy” produced by a “brilliant faena,” the series of muleta passes made by the matador in the final third of the bullfight. Describing the “emotional and spiritual intensity and pure, classic beauty that can be produced by a man, an animal and a piece of scarlet serge draped over a stick,” he then adds, “if you should ever see the real thing you would know it” (206–7). Throughout the book, this phrase is linked to words like “true,” “pure,” “honest,” “sincere,” “simple,” “integral,” and their derivatives.

But Hemingway does not give us “the real thing” when he describes bullfighting in Death in the Afternoon. Instead, we get his version of that reality. To view bullfighting in terms of ecstasy and emotional and spiritual intensity, and to see its climax in the death of the bull and the act of “killing beautifully” (252), “death uniting the two figures [man and bull] in the emotional, aesthetic and artistic climax of the fight” (247), is clearly to give a highly subjective version of what Hemingway sees not as a sport but as “a tragedy” (16) and a “sculptural art” (13). Most non-Spaniards, after all, present bullfighting from a quite different, and morally condemnatory, perspective. Hemingway in this respect is very much an exception to the norm, his view of bullfighting and its morality — “I know only that what is moral is what you feel good after” (4) — in strong contrast with the majority of foreign critics both before and after his time of writing.

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Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2004

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