Ernest Hemingway’s stories often draw from his experiences, and The Old Man and the Sea reflect various aspects of his life.
Category: Literature (Page 6 of 9)
In Sapiens, Yuval Noah Harari argues that all ethical and social or moral codes, including the contemporary concept of human rights, are merely imaginative constructs.
No Longer Human explores the battle against grief, alienation, and loss of identity.
Blood Meridian explores the brutal realities of Manifest Destiny, war, and morality through the violent journey of the Kid and the sinister Judge Holden.
I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream specifically examines what occurs when people produce machines.
Trumbo builds on the Johnny Got His Gun dialectics on the works of György Lukács and Mikhail Bakhtin, expressing what we can best describe as a body of grotesque, reified, and phenomenal.
What is significant, however, is that the issues in Pride and Prejudice are much more localized and abstract than we sometimes suggest.