Overview
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Explore a thought-provoking lecture on Ernest Hemingway's "For Whom the Bell Tolls" as part of Yale University's course on Hemingway, Fitzgerald, and Faulkner. Delve into Professor Wai Chee Dimock's analysis of the novel as a narrative of dispossession and repossession. Examine the rape of Maria as a form of disempowerment and Robert Jordan's life ending as another, with potential for redemption. Investigate Jordan's fluctuation between being a "have" and a "have not" through Maria's question "What hast thou?" Uncover insights on the symmetry of brutality and narration in Hemingway's work, the removal of narrative from Robert Jordan, and his ultimate repossession. Gain a deeper understanding of this classic novel through seven comprehensive chapters, from exploring the concept of a women's war to analyzing Robert Jordan's final moments.
Syllabus
- Chapter 1. A Women's War
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- Chapter 2. Symmetry of Brutality and Narration in Hemingway
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- Chapter 3. The Dispossession of Rape
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- Chapter 4. Dispossession for Robert
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- Chapter 5. Robert as a "Have Not"
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- Chapter 6. The Removal of Narrative from Robert Jordan
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- Chapter 7. Robert Jordan's Repossession
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