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You might be hearing a chorus of farewells if you recommend A Farewell to Arms as the next read for your Fabulously Feisty Feminist Book Club.
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A Farewell to Arms 20538 Views
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Description:
You might be hearing a chorus of farewells if you recommend A Farewell to Arms as the next read for your Fabulously Feisty Feminist Book Club.
Transcript
- 00:04
A Farewell to Arms, a la Shmoop. While many people bit the big one during World
- 00:10
War One…
- 00:12
…Ernest Hemingway managed to survive and use his experiences to pen one of his best-known
- 00:18
works, A Farewell to Arms.
- 00:21
It’s certainly a tear-jerker, but… some argue that it may be flawed. Is Hemingway’s
Full Transcript
- 00:28
depiction of Catherine a bit… sexist? Let’s start with a quick summary of the
- 00:38
plot…
- 00:40
Frederic Henry is doing his part to help the Italians during the war when he meets Catherine
- 00:44
Barkley.
- 00:48
It's lust at first sight. After Frederic catches a mortar shell in the knee, he's sent to recuperate
- 00:53
in Milan... and by recuperate, we mean continue his pursuit of Catherine.
- 00:59
By the time Frederic is healed enough to be cannon fodder again, he's in love with Catherine
- 01:05
and… oops! She's caught a severe case of… pregnancy.
- 01:11
Frederic and Catherine end up having to flee to Switzerland so the Italians don't kill
- 01:15
him, and while you think it'd be all sipping hot cocoa and yodeling…
- 01:20
…Catherine goes into labor and dies, and the baby dies, and Frederic is left with nothing
- 01:27
but a bum knee. Many critics think Hemingway was something
- 01:32
of a misogynist, both in real life and in his writing.
- 01:39
Catherine isn't the only female character created by Hemingway who, while central to
- 01:43
the plot of a story…
- 01:45
…never gets to share her viewpoint and never seems to do anything other than act as a device
- 01:53
to spur the male protagonist to action.
- 01:56
And let's face it: Catherine's death is awful. She undergoes the terrible pain of labor…
- 02:02
with no epidural!... only to lose her baby and then die herself.
- 02:09
Perhaps this was Hemingway's way of saying she…and all of his female characters…
- 02:15
were expendable. They enter the story, affect change in the lives of their men, and then
- 02:23
get booted off the stage. And then there's the dialogue. Oy.
- 02:31
Gentlemen, try getting your girlfriends to read some of Catherine's lines and see if
- 02:35
you don't get a slap in the face.
- 02:38
She pretty much says, on multiple occasions, that Frederic is the be-all and end-all of
- 02:44
her existence and she is nada without him. Of course, to Hemingway's credit, Catherine
- 02:54
is a more complicated character than he needed to make her.
- 02:59
Not only does she demonstrate that she's extraordinarily brave by traveling to a war zone in order
- 03:06
to care for the injured, but she is also independent and capable of taking care of herself.
- 03:15
Also, her views on marriage are pretty complex, and while she may tell Frederic that he's…
- 03:22
her religion and all she's got, she doesn't exist just to do her man’s bidding.
- 03:31
What do you think?
- 03:35
Was Hemingway super-duper-sexist?
- 03:38
Or does Catherine's independence make up for her abrupt exit?
- 03:43
Shmoop amongst yourselves.
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