The Theme Of Disillusionment In Hemingway's A Farewell To Arms

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As it happened in Hemingway’s earlier works such as In Our Time and The Sun Also Rises, A Farewell to Arms has also revealed the author’s resentment of war and politicians and before Frederic’s full disillusionment of this occurs, this resentment and political disillusionment has been revealed by many of the author’s characters; Pissani once points out that ‘There is nothing as bad as war. We in the auto-ambulance cannot even realize at all how bad it is” (47). Soon thereafter Pissani adds “There is a class that controls a country that is stupid and does not realize anything and never can. That is why we have this war . . . Also they make money out of it” (48). The author’s own view through Pissani has been asserted again through the priest …show more content…
Before the confrontation with police battle, Frederic is still having the sense that the war has to be ended with a victory and still doing his duty as an officer, when the two sergeants refuse to execute his orders he shots one of them and watches Bonello finishes the other. Margot Norris describes the shooting scene as “Hemingway contrives it [the shooting] to resemble as much as possible a civilian traffic jam . . . In which the sergeant is ungrateful hitchhiker who refuses, in a stressful road emergency, to help the people who gave him a ride” (Norris, 1944, …show more content…
A Farewell to Arms contains fictional and factual elements and these elements together serve to detail events of joining war, irrational fabric of the world, fall in love, hospitalizing, physical and psychological suffering, and a tragic

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