Pictures from Google Image Search

Ernest Miller Hemingway

Encyclopedia of World Biography | 2004 | Copyright 2004 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Ernest Miller Hemingway

Ernest Miller Hemingway (1898-1961), American Nobel Prize-winning author, was one of the most celebrated and influential literary stylists of the 20th century.

Ernest Hemingway was a legend in his own life-time in a sense, a legend of his own making. He worked hard at being a composite of all the manly attributes he gave to his fictional heroesa hard drinker, big-game hunter, fearless soldier, amateur boxer, and bullfight aficionado. Because the man and his fiction often seemed indistinguishable, critics have had difficulty judging his work objectively. His protagonistsvirile and laconichave been extravagantly praised and vehemently denounced. In his obsession with violence and death, the Hemingway creation has been rivaled only by the Byronic myth of the 19th century. Despite sensational publicity and personal invective, Hemingway now ranks among America's great writers. His critical stature rests solidly upon a small body of exceptional writing, distinguished for its stylistic purity, emotional veracity, moral integrity, and dramatic intensity of vision.

Ernest Hemingway was born in Oak Park, Ill., on July 21, 1898. His father was a country physician, who taught his son hunting and fishing; his mother was a religiously puritanical woman, active in church affairs, who led her boy to play the cello and sing in the choir. Hemingway's early years were spent largely in combating the repressive feminine influence of his mother and nurturing the masculine influence of his father. He spent the summers with his family in the woods of northern Michigan, where he often accompanied his father on professional calls. The discovery of his father's apparent cowardice, later depicted in the short story "The Doctor and the Doctor's Wife," and his suicide several years later left the boy with an emotional scar.

Despite the intense pleasure Hemingway derived from outdoor life, and his popularity in high schoolwhere he distinguished himself as a scholar and athletehe ran away from home twice. However, his first real chance for escape came in 1917, when the United States entered World War I. He volunteered for active service in the infantry but was rejected because of eye trouble.

After spending several months as a reporter for the Kansas City Star, Hemingway enlisted in the Red Cross medical service, driving an ambulance on the Italian front. He was badly wounded in the knee at Fossalta di Piave; yet, still under heavy mortar fire, he carried a wounded man on his back a considerable distance to the aid station. After having over 200 shell fragments removed from his legs and body, Hemingway next enlisted in the Italian infantry, served on the Austrian front until the armistice, and was decorated for bravery by the Italian government.

Learning His Trade

Shortly after the war Hemingway worked as a foreign correspondent in the Near East for the Toronto Star. When he returned to Michigan, he had already decided to commit himself to fiction writing. His excellent journalism and the publication in magazines of several experimental short stories had impressed the well-known author Sherwood Anderson, who, when Hemingway decided to return to Europe, gave him letters of introduction to expatriates Gertrude Stein and Ezra Pound. Hemingway and his bride, Hadley Richardson, journeyed to Paris, where he served his literary apprenticeship under these two prominent authors. Despite the abject poverty in which he and his wife lived, these were the happiest years of Hemingway's life, as well as the most artistically fruitful.

In 1923 Hemingway published his first book, Three Stories and Ten Poems. The poems are insignificant, but the stories give strong indication of his emerging genius. "Out of Season" already contains the psychological tension and moral ambivalence characteristic of his mature work. With In Our Time (1925) Hemingway's years of apprenticeship ended. In this collection of stories, he drew on his experiences while summering in Michigan to depict the initiation into the world of pain and violence of young Nick Adams, a prototype for later Hemingway heroes. The atrocities he had witnessed as a journalist in the Near East became the brief vignettes about intense suffering that formed inter chapters for the collection. One story, "Indian Camp," which sets the tone for the entire volume, has Nick accompanying his father, Dr. Adams, on a call during which the physician performs a caesarean operation with no anesthetic. They discover afterward that the squaw's husband, unable to bear his wife's screams, has killed himself by nearly severing his head with a razor. The story is written in Hemingway's characteristically terse, economic prose. "The End of Something" and "The Three Day Blow" deal with Nick's disturbed reaction to the end of a love affair. "The Big Two hearted River" describes a young man just returned from war and his desperate attempt to prevent mental breakdown.

Major Novels

Hemingway returned to the United States in 1926 with the manuscripts of two novels and several short stories. The Torrents of Spring (1926), a parody of Sherwood Anderson, was written very quickly, largely for the purpose of breaking his contract with Boni and Liveright, who was also Anderson's publisher. That May, Scribner's issued Hemingway's second novel, The Sun Also Rises. This novel, the major statement of the "lost generation," describes a group of expatriate Americans and Englishmen, all of whom have suffered physically and emotionally during the war; their aimless existence vividly expresses the spiritual bankruptcy and moral atrophy of an entire generation. Hemingway's second volume of short stories, Men without Women (1927), contains "The Killers," about a man who refuses to run from gangsters determined to kill him; "The Light of the World," dealing with Nick Adams's premature introduction to the sickening world of prostitution and homosexuality; and "The Undefeated," concerning an aging bullfighter whose courage and dedication constitute a moral victory in the face of physical defeat and death.

In December 1929 A Farewell to Arms was published. This novel tells the story of a tragically terminated love affair between an American soldier and an English nurse, starkly silhouetted against the bleakness of war and a collapsing world order. It contains a philosophical expression of the Hemingway code of stoical endurance in a violent age: "The world breaks everyone," reflects the protagonist, "and afterward many are strong in the broken places. But those that it will not break it kills. It kills the very good and the very gentle and the very brave impartially. If you are none of those you can be sure that it will kill you too, but there will be no special hurry."

Hemingway revealed his passionate interest in bull-fighting in Death in the Afternoon (1932), a humorous and inventive nonfiction study. In 1933 Scribner's published his final collection of short stories, Winner Take Nothing. This volume, containing his most bitter and disillusioned writing, deals almost exclusively with emotional breakdown, impotence, and homosexuality.

Hemingway's African safari in 1934 provided the material for another nonfiction work, The Green Hills of Africa (1935), as well as two of his finest short stories, "The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber" and "The Snows of Kilimanjaro." Both stories concern attainment of self-realization and moral integrity through contact with fear and death.

Hemingway wrote To Have and Have Not (1937) in response to the 1930s depression. The novel, inadequately conceived and poorly executed, deals with a Florida smuggler whose illegal activities and frequent brutalities mask his sense of ethics and strength of character. Mortally wounded by the gangsters with whom he has been dealing, the individualistic hero comes to the startling realization that "One man alone ain't got nochance."

The chief political catalyst in Hemingway's life was the Spanish Civil War. In 1936 he had returned to Spain as a newspaper reporter and participated in raising funds for the Spanish Republic until the war's end in 1939. In 1937 he collaborated on the documentary film The Spanish Earth. Hemingway's only writing during this period was a play, The Fifth Column (1936; produced in New York in 1940), a sincere but dramatically ineffective attempt to portray the conditions prevailing during the siege of Madrid.

Seventeen months after that war ended, Hemingway completed For Whom the Bell Tolls (1940). His most ambitious novel, it describes an American professor's involvement with a loyalist guerrilla band and his brief, idyllic love affair with a Spanish girl. A vivid, intelligently conceived narrative, it is written in less lyrical and more dramatic prose than his earlier work. Hemingway deliberately avoided having the book used as propaganda, despite its strained attempt at an affirmative resolution, by carefully balancing fascist atrocities with a heartless massacre by a peasant mob.

World War II

Following the critical and popular success of For Whom the Bell Tolls, Hemingway lapsed into a literary silence that lasted a full decade and was largely the result of his strenuous, frequently reckless, activities during World War II. In 1942 as a Collier's correspondent with the 3d Army, he witnessed some of the bloodiest battles in Europe. Although he served in no official capacity, he commanded a personal battalion of over 200 troops and was granted the respect and privileges normally accorded a general. At this time he received the affectionate appellation of "Papa" from his admirers, both military and literary.

In 1944 while in London, Hemingway met and soon married Mary Welsh, a Time reporter. His three previous marriagesto Hadley Richardson, mother of one son; to Pauline Pfeiffer, mother of his second and third sons; and to Martha Gelhornhad all ended in divorce. Following the war, Hemingway and his wife purchased a home, Finca Vigia, near Havana, Cuba. Hemingway's only literary work was some anecdotal articles for Esquire; the remainder of his time was spent fishing, hunting, battling critics, and providing copy for gossip columnists. In 1950 he ended his literary silence with Across the River and into the Trees, a narrative, flawed by maudlin self-pity, about a retired Army colonel dying of a heart condition in Venice and his dreamy love affair with a pubescent girl.

Last Works

Hemingway's remarkable gift for recovery once again asserted itself in 1952 with the appearance of a novella about an extraordinary battle between a tired old Cuban fisherman and a giant marlin. The Old Man and the Sea, immediately hailed a masterpiece, was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1953. Although lacking the emotional tensions of his longer works, this novella possesses a generosity of spirit and reverence for life which make it an appropriate conclusion for Hemingway's career. In 1954 Hemingway won the Nobel Prize for literature.

Hemingway's rapidly deteriorating physical condition and an increasingly severe psychological disturbance drastically curtailed his literary capabilities in the last years of his life. A nostalgic journey to Africa planned by the author and his wife in 1954 ended in their plane crash over the Belgian Congo. Hemingway suffered severe burns and internal injuries from which he never fully recovered. Additional strain occurred when the revolutionary Cuban government of Fidel Castro forced the Hemingways to leave Finca Vigía. After only a few months in their new home in Ketchum, Idaho, Hemingway was admitted to the Mayo Clinic to be treated for hypertension and emotional depression and was later treated by electroshock therapy. Scornful of an illness which humiliated him physically and impaired his writing, he killed himself with a shotgun on July 2, 1961.

Shortly after Hemingway's death, literary critic Malcolm Cowley and scholar Carlos Baker were entrusted with the task of going through the writer's remaining manuscripts to decide what material might be publishable. The first posthumous work, A Moveable Feast (1964), is an elegiac reminiscence of Hemingway's early years in Paris, containing some fine writing as well as brilliant vignettes of his famous contemporaries. A year later the Atlantic Monthly published a few insignificant short stories and two long, rambling poems. In 1967 William White edited a collection of Hemingway's best journalism under the title By-Line Ernest Hemingway.

Further Reading

The authorized biography of Hemingway is Carlos Baker, Ernest Hemingway: A Life Story (1969). A controversial portrait is A. E. Hotchner, Papa Hemingway: A Personal Memoir (1966). Among the major full-length critical studies are Carlos Baker, Ernest Hemingway: The Writer as Artist (1952; 3d rev. ed. 1963), a textual study with emphasis on structure and symbolism; Philip Young, Ernest Hemingway (1952; rev. ed. 1966); Earl Rovit, Ernest Hemingway (1963); Richard B. Hovey, Hemingway: The Inward Terrain (1968); and Leo Gurko's more general Ernest Hemingway and the Pursuit of Heroism (1968).

The most valuable early critical essays on Hemingway are Edmund Wilson, "Hemingway: Gauge of Morale," in Wound and the Bow (1941); Robert Penn Warren, "Ernest Hemingway," in Selected Essays (1958); and Malcolm Cowley, "Nightmare and Ritual in Hemingway," reprinted in Robert Percy Weeks, ed., Hemingway: A Collection of Critical Essays (1962). The two major critical collections are John K. McCaffery, ed., Ernest Hemingway: The Man and His Work (1950), and Carlos Baker, ed., Hemingway and His Critics: An International Anthology (1961). See also the relevant sections in Joseph Warren Beach, American Fiction, 1920-1940 (1941); Edwin Berry Burgum, The Novel and the World's Dilemma (1947); Wilbur M. Frohock, The Novel of Violence in America, 1920-1950 (1950; 2d rev. ed. 1958); Frederick J. Hoffman, The Modern Novel in America, 1900-1950 (1951); and Ray B. West, The Short Story in America, 1900-1950 (1952).

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

"Ernest Miller Hemingway." Encyclopedia of World Biography. Thomson Gale. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. 29 Nov. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

"Ernest Miller Hemingway." Encyclopedia of World Biography. Thomson Gale. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. (November 29, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3404702898.html

"Ernest Miller Hemingway." Encyclopedia of World Biography. Thomson Gale. 2004. Retrieved November 29, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3404702898.html

Learn more about citation styles

Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research

(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)

Eton Park Acquires R6, Makes Distressed Push
Newspaper article from: Daily News; 11/19/2007; ; 700+ words ; NEW YORK (HedgeWorld.com) - Eton Park Capital Management LP, the $10 billion...under management. The letter, signed "Eton Park Capital Management" was obtained...and his team will join New York-based Eton Park on Jan. 1. Mr. Rosenberg will also...
The Eton Collection Selects FastBooking(R) Solutions to Achieve On Line Sales Ambitions.(Company overview)
Business Wire; 5/9/2008; 700+ words ; ...announced that boutique hotel group, The Eton Collection, is to implement FastBooking...agreement FastBooking will provide all The Eton Collection hotels (Threadneedles, The...permanent e-consulting services to assist The Eton Collection in the optimisation of their...
Eton Receives Three CES Innovation Awards; E1 XM, ego 4000 Plus, and Ovation Radios Honored for Design and Engineering.
PR Newswire; 12/15/2003; 700+ words ; ...Calif., Dec. 15 /PRNewswire/ -- Eton Corporation, a leading designer and manufacturer...International CES. The selected products are the Eton E1 XM, ego 4000 Plus, and Ovation. A...the personal electronics category, the Eton E1 XM is the first product to combine four...
ETON COLLEGE SELECTS EXTREME NETWORKS FOR NETWORK UPGRADE.(Company overview)
Newspaper article from: LAN Product News; 3/1/2007; 700+ words ; ...Internationally renowned UK boarding school Eton College, has selected Extreme Networks...Integration. Founded in 1440 by King Henry VI, Eton College is a school that pursues excellence...teaching and support staff of more than 400. Eton College has maintained a forward-thinking...
Eton Institute & MBS Announce a Partnership which Enables MBS to Accredit their English Language Training Programme in the UAE.
News Wire article from: Albawaba.com; 2/2/2009; 700+ words ; Summary: Eton Institute, Dubai's leading institute...regional provider of training services. Eton Institute & MBS Announce a Partnership...Language Training Programme in the UAE: Eton Institute, Dubai's leading institute...
Toff factory: British institutions: Eton. (Eton College)
Magazine article from: The Economist (US); 3/6/1993; 700+ words ; ...quintessential public (ie, private) school, Eton College N INFURIATING thing about the English...at least England boasts schools such as Eton. All you need is Pounds11,610 ($16...door to dreary Slough). Everything about Eton, from the elegant buildings to its extraordinary...
Stark's Woodmere buy invites Eton speculation.(Robert Stark)(Brainard Office LLC)(Eton Chagrin Boulevard )
Magazine article from: Crain's Cleveland Business; 11/6/2006; ; 700+ words ; ...Chagrin Brainard Building just east of his Eton Chagrin Boulevard lifestyle center in Woodmere...tax bills to Mr. Stark's offices at Eton. Real estate investor Michael Munsell...apartment complex on Maryland Avenue that abuts Eton. He said Mr. Stark's company has not...
THE ETON TRIFLES; EXCLUSIVE 'Man of the people' picks public school pals to fill Cabinet.(News)
Newspaper article from: The Mirror (London, England); 3/2/2007; 700+ words ; ...Stephen Hepburn said: Not only is Cameron an Eton boy who has never known a day's hardship...Cabinet and 13 other shadow ministers went to Eton - where he was ticked off for smoking pot...attended Trinity College, Cambridge, after Eton. BA in history and PhD in philosophy...
Eton Institute & MBS Announce a Partnership which Enables MBS to Accredit their English Language Training Programme in the UAE
Newspaper article from: Al Bawaba; 2/2/2009; 495 words ; Eton Institute & MBS Announce a Partnership which...English Language Training Programme in the UAE: Eton Institute, Dubai's leading institute of...from the experience and accreditation that Eton Institute offers in its English language training...
Breaking the Sound Barrier With Eton's New Sound Radio.
PR Newswire; 1/4/2006; 553 words ; Introducing the Eton Sound Radio: the Retro-Styled 'Mini...attention to detail, and exceptional sound, Eton Corporation, a design-driven leader...products, today announced the release of the Eton Sound Radio. This innovatively designed...

Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses

Eton
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Eton , town (1991 pop. 3,559), Windsor and...the Thames River. It is known chiefly for Eton College, largest and most famous of the English...cloisters) date back to the 15th cent. Eton is unlike other English public schools in...
Eton College Manuscript
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Music Eton College Manuscript ( Eton Choir Book ). A book of choral mus. at Eton College, dating from between 1490 and 1504.
Eton College
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to British History Eton College. Founded by Henry VI with the title ‘The College of the Blessed Mary of Eton beside Windsor’ in 1440, it was modelled on Winchester and New College, Oxford, set up by William of Wykeham. In the original foundation...
William Oughtred
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography ...Academic Environment Oughtred was born in Eton, Buckinghamshire, England, on March...Oughtred, was a scholar who taught writing at Eton School, and through Benjamin's connections...Oughtred was educated as a king's scholar at Eton. At age 15 he entered King's College...
Moseley, Henry Gwyn Jeffreys
Dictionary entry from: Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography ...s Scholars, winners of scholarships to Eton. He and six of his fellow students won...available for 1901. Although Edwardian Eton tended to produce over cocky, undereducated...exactly to his taste. Before leaving Eton he had begun quantitative analysis, had...

For students and teachers!

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including:

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including: