Book contents
- The New Hemingway Studies
- Twenty-First-Century Critical Revisions
- The New Hemingway Studies
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Introduction Hemingway in the New Millennium
- Part I The Textual Hemingway
- Chapter 1 Shaping the Life
- Chapter 2 Hemingway and Textual Studies
- Chapter 3 Correspondence and the Everyday Hemingway
- Chapter 4 Object Studies and Keepsakes, Artifacts, and Ephemera
- Chapter 5 Digital Hemingway
- Part II Identities
- Part III Global Engagements
- Works Cited
- Index
Chapter 1 - Shaping the Life
Hemingway Biographies since 2000
from Part I - The Textual Hemingway
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 August 2020
- The New Hemingway Studies
- Twenty-First-Century Critical Revisions
- The New Hemingway Studies
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Introduction Hemingway in the New Millennium
- Part I The Textual Hemingway
- Chapter 1 Shaping the Life
- Chapter 2 Hemingway and Textual Studies
- Chapter 3 Correspondence and the Everyday Hemingway
- Chapter 4 Object Studies and Keepsakes, Artifacts, and Ephemera
- Chapter 5 Digital Hemingway
- Part II Identities
- Part III Global Engagements
- Works Cited
- Index
Summary
In “Shaping the Life: Hemingway Biographies Since 2000,” Kirk Curnutt argues that between roughly 1999 and 2016 Hemingway biography eschewed full, cradle-to-grave accounts of the subject’s life in favor of narrower, more up-close-and-personal examinations of specific periods and specific relationships. Within these depictions are questions of subjectivity and slanted presentation, such as Stephen Koch’s rampant use of free indirect discourse, a technique associated with fiction, in his account of Hemingway’s fractured friendship with John Dos Passos over the 1937 execution of Jose Robles. Curnutt weighs Koch’s prejudicial presentation against more balanced efforts by Amanda Vaill, Steve Paul, Paul Hendrickson, James McGrath Morris, and others, including such family members as his son John Hemingway and former personal secretary Valerie Hemingway. Assessed in detail are three complete biographies by James M. Hutchisson, Verna Kale, and Mary V. Dearborn. Here Curnutt explores how each biography markets itself as a “new” life of Hemingway when sensational discoveries in the archives that marked the 1980s have long been exhausted.
Keywords
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The New Hemingway Studies , pp. 17 - 32Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020