
Title
Hemingway’s In Our Time: Cubism, Conservation, and the Suspension of Identification
Document Type
Article
Annotation
Refutes criticism comparing the structure of In Our Time to radical modernist cubism. Points to distances and mediation within the collection as proof that Hemingway rejected cubist values of immediacy, accessibility, and domination. Focuses on “Indian Camp” and “Big Two-Hearted River” as examples of Hemingway returning to a human scale, appreciating the limits of the body and mind regarding the assimilation of reality.
Published in
Hemingway Review
Volume
25
Issue
2
Date
Spring 2006
Pages
9-28
Citation
Narbeshuber, Lisa. “Hemingway’s In Our Time: Cubism, Conservation, and the Suspension of Identification.” Hemingway Review 25, no. 2 (Spring 2006): 9-28.