Saved Papers

Save papers so you can find them more easily!

Join Now

Get instant access to over 100,000 papers.

Join Now!

Hills Like White Elephants, Ernest Hemmingway

Ernest Hemmingway tells the story "Hills like White Elephants" nearly through pure dialog about two lovers conflicted over a serious decision. As the story progresses and through their tight conversation he reveals to us a great deal about their personalities, but leaves the details of the relationship between the two hidden.

He gives his audience just enough information to find out the details of his story through detective work instead of coming outright by writing "Their relationship has suffered a great deal because of this decisionÂ…" etc. He leaves it up to his readers to basically solve the mysteries of his literature, which in return grasps our interest to his work even more. Perhaps this intentional way of writing is the reason for his name being so well known in the literate world.

The first thing I thought of while reading the title of this short story was the symbolism of the White Elephant. As many would know, they do not exist unless they were born with an albino......


View the rest of this paper...

Approximate Word Count: 693
Approximate Pages: 3 (250 words per double-spaced page)

Why should you join Frat Files?

  • - It's safe, secure, and private.
  • - Instant access to over 100,000 papers. New papers are added hourly.
  • - Fast and reliable customer support.

Credit Card

PayPal

Bank Account

Similar Essays

  1. Hills Like White Elephants, Ernest Hemmingway

    Hills Like white Elephants, Ernest Hemmingway Ernest Hemmingway tells the story "Hills like White Elephants" nearly through pure dialog about two lovers conflicted over a serious

  2. Hills Like White Elephants

    Hills Like White Elephants "Hills like White Elephants" The most remarkable aspect of the short story "Hills Like White Elephants," written by Ernest Hemingway, is it's rich use

  3. Hemmingway-Hills Like White El

    Hemmingway-hills Like White El Writing styles changed drastically from the nineteenth to twentieth centuries. The nineteenth century had authorial intervention and authors wrote

  4. Power Exists Mostly In Shades Of Black And White

    Power exists mostly in shades of black and white Though "Hills like White Elephants" by Ernest Hemmingway did not have much of a beginning or an end, the short story sparked many

  5. Role Of Women In Literature

    of time in a fictitious form, yet often truthful in many ways. Ernest Hemmingway's "Hills like White Elephants", D.H. Lawrence's "The Horse Dealers Daughter" and William