Nearly every aspect of life, for Jews and non-Jews alike, was altered by German occupation. There are the obvious changes - increased military presence, secret police, conspiracy, bribery… the list goes on. In tandem with the more ‘concrete’ parts of being occupied, there is also the way that interpersonal relations were shaped and impacted. Thomas Blatt’s From the Ashes of Sobibor provides the reader with an understanding of just how severely the daily lives of individuals were altered, interpersonally but also intrapersonally.…
Ethics are principles or rules geared to help in the decision making process. It often governs a person’s reactions and behaviors. The essay is riddled with evidence of ethical practices both by the author and persons in her narrative. She establishes herself as law-abiding when she and a friend forgo the illegal Mace while camping and again while she obtains the proper qualifications for carrying a gun. Establishing an ethical appeal helps readers to trust her and not feel threatened by her actions.…
Alex Keller Hills Like a Pregnant Woman's Belly Pd 6. In the story “Hills Like White Elephants”, the author, Ernest Hemingway uses the imagery of the hill to depict the meaning behind a man and womans argument. The woman talks about the hills appearing a certain way when you look at them i.e. white elephants. Jig, the woman, comes across as an intelligent and creative person because of the way she describes the hills.…
In this essay I will analyze cover identify the author’s deeper meaning of the “Hills like white Elephants” and how this can easily portray the aspect human behavior in today’s society. Hall 2 The first significant topic in the story while reading the “Hills like White Elephants” was the point of view. I found that this story is told in a third person point of view.…
Hills like white elephants is a story of a couple waiting at a train station in Spain. The couple is facing a big decision, to get an abortion or keep the child. As they talk, the conversation remains very vague and unreassuring. The couple never goes into detail of the abortion. Making the theme of this story: Clear communication is significant to make life decisions without a doubt.…
The two stories I chose in this comparison are “Hills Like White Elephants” by Ernest Hemingway and “The Yellow Wallpaper” by Charlotte Perkins Gilman. In both stories the female characters are pressured to listen to their significant other, triggering the end of their relationship by the end of the stories. In “Hills Like White Elephants”, the American man pretends to care for her (Jig) and is trying to manipulate her into having an abortion by sweet talking her, but Jig is still on the fence about it. The narrator in “The Yellow Wallpaper” however lets her significant other make the decisions for her like forbidding her from doing any kind of activities like writing, all because she is suffering from a nervous disorder. In the following paragraphs,…
The Unspoken Power Struggle Earnest Hemingway’s “Hills Like White Elephants” if read as written is a simple conversation about a couple drinking and taking in the scenery around a train station, but when broken down is actually a conversation about abortion. Many critics have analyzed the story from a descriptive and conversational stand point. From a descriptive stance they look at how Hemingway described the setting around the train station, and what the couple has with them. Whereas looking from a conversation stand point they analyze what’s said, how it’s said, and the characters body language. The reason for the analysis is to figure out if Jig will follow through with the abortion and the relationship, if she will keep the child and the American, or if the American will leave her abortion or not.…
In “Hills Like White Elephants,” the readers follow a couple’s conversation as they wait for the train. While following this conversation the reader will see the barriers and deterioration the couple goes through. There are stages in a relationship that are based off of communication, which is called interpersonal relationship. Throughout this story, the readers will get to witness the couple pass through a few of these stages. Communication is key to building a strong relationship and comes to show that it is a vital part in human life.…
Ernest Hemingway’s short story, ''Hills like White Elephants'', is about a couple traveling throughout Spain. The couple known as Jig, the woman and The American man, are set in a train station waiting upon the next train to Madrid. The story then transitions settings as they enter a bar where they drink beer and small talk while they wait. In this story, there is a form of communication being utilized by the couple, virtually through the use of codes, endeavoring not to speak on a certain subject. They continue this ongoing discussion about some sort of operation, as a reader discovers by analyzing the story, this operation is an abortion.…
Ernest Hemingway’s “Hills Like White Elephants” is a short story that only uses barbed dialogue to characterize a extremely tense conversation between a American man and his girlfriend, a young women named Jig. The story opens in a untraditional manner with no background, no indication of the characters emotions, and substantially seems to have no purpose. Hemingway himself gives the impression of utter detachment from the characters. He places the reader in a position as if they are listening into another conversation. The reader is left to perceive the topic at hand by picking up key points to evaluate what is transpiring, which is the calculated discussion of abortion.…
In Timothy D. O’Brien’s criticism of Ernest Hemmingway’s “Hills Like White Elephants,” he concentrates mainly on how allusion and word play contribute to the central conflict of the short story. The story mainly consists of the dialogue between the American and Jig. The choice of the nickname Jig, along with the repetition of certain words such as “know” and “fine” stood out to me while reading the story. In addition to the word choice, the train never comes at the end of the story, leaving it open for interpretation. The O’Brian discusses these word choices in “Allusion, Word-Play, and the Central Conflict in Hemingway’s ‘Hills Like White Elephants’” used by Hemingway in “Hills Like White Elephants” play a huge part in the overall conflict…
The short story “Hills like White Elephants” by Ernest Hemmingway is about a couple that is sitting at a train station between Madrid and Barcalona struggling with a critical decision they are faced with. Hemmingway uses dialogue to tell the story and forces the reader to interpret what will happen next. The setting and symbolism gives the readers clues to understand the couple’s dilemma they are faced with. Hemmingway chose a public place for the setting for this story. This public place was a train station somewhere near Ebro, which is a river in northern Spain, between Barcelona and Madrid.…
Morality, which is widely known as the principles that have lead lifestyle in not only America, but the entire world, have developed and adapted alongside the progression of time and society over past centuries. Societal morals are shadowed for the most part, and are entirely separate from personal morals. However, personal morals are often corrupted due to a number of reasons. Money is one of the most prominent causes of personal morals and ethics to be abandoned. For instance, in No Country For Old Men by Cormac McCarthy, the protagonist of the novel, countryman Llewelyn Moss, compromises moral boundaries by disregarding a bloody crime scene involving multiple homicides, even leaving a man with his life on a thread, in order to track down…
“Hills like White Elephants,” by Ernest Hemmingway and, “The Story of an Hour,” by Kate Chopin are both short stories that take place in short periods of time and focus on the relationship of a couple. Though the stories differ greatly, they are similar in that they both include the use of a train as a symbol and in their focus of the women in the relationships introduced. The trains in both stories are the most significant similarity because they represent the different futures that Jig and Mrs. Mallard could have. While Hemmingway leaves his short story with an open ending regarding Jig’s future, Chopin reveals the outcome of Mrs. Mallard’s future. Hemmingway’s short story takes place at a train station.…
What would you do if tomorrow never arrives? In the movie Groundhog Day, weatherman Phil Connors dealt with this question. He was forced to relive the same day over and over again, and he needed to decide on what to do with this repeating day. If there is no tomorrow, it is true that “we could do whatever we wanted” since “there would be no consequences”, as said by the two drunken men in the movie. However, we should also ask ourselves what aspects should we based our choices of actions on.…