
Wounded Bodies and Lost Voices in Hemingway’s War Stories of Italy
Author(s) -
Gabriela Tucan
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
romanian journal of english studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2286-0428
pISSN - 1584-3734
DOI - 10.1515/rjes-2018-0005
Subject(s) - silence , objectification , literature , history , world war ii , first world war , psychoanalysis , aesthetics , art , psychology , philosophy , ancient history , epistemology , archaeology
This article dwells on three of Hemingway’s canonical short stories, set in Italy. While not entirely autobiographical, they deal with Hemingway’s inner turmoil caused by his experience during World War I. From its inarticulate nature, pain half emerges into conversations between patients and physicians in A Very Short Story and In Another Country, but disappears into silence in A Way You’ll Never Be. The paper argues that the nature of physical and mental wounds, whether visible or concealed, fails objectification.