A Study of Community Writing in For Whom the Bell Tolls
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.54691/7g26cx77Keywords:
Ernest Hemingway, For Whom the Bell Tolls, community.Abstract
As one of Ernest Hemingway's masterpieces, For Whom the Bell Tolls is set at the time of Spanish people's anti-fascist war. Although the Spanish people are faced with the crisis of community by blood, community of place and community of spirit under the devastation of the war, they do not give up their pursuit of life and actively build close relationships with their comrades and people around them, revealing Hemingway's criticism and reflection on the war and his humanitarian concern
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References
Allen, Michael J. B.: The Unspanish War in ‘For Whom the Bell tolls’, Contemporary Literature, Vol. 13 (1972) No.2, p. 204-212.
Eby, Cecil D.: The Real Robert Jordan, American Literature, Vol. 38 (1996) No.3, p.380-386.
Sanders, David: Ernest Hemingway’s Spanish Civil War Experience, American Quarterly, Vol. 12 (1960) No.2, p. 133-143.
Tönnies, Ferdinand: Community and Civil Society (Cambridge University Press, Britain 2001).
Hemingway, Ernest: For Whom the Bell Tolls (Penguin Random House, UK 2022).
Caruth, Cathy: Unclaimed experience: Trauma, Narrative, and History (The Johns Hopkins University Press, Britain 1996).
Moynihan, William T.: The Martyrdom of Robert Jordan, College English, Vol. 21 (1959) No.3, p. 127-132.
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