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Character Analysis : A Farewell To Arms By Ernest Hemingway

Decent Essays

Catherine Barkley is a name that, to most that have read Ernest Hemingway’s classic novel A Farewell to Arms, may not hold a positive connotation. Hemingway’s portrayal of Catherine in the novel lead many to believe that she is nothing more than an obsessive and weak-willed woman whose existence serves only as a means to push a misogynistic agenda. To others, however, Catherine represents the Hemingway code, a term used to describe Hemingway’s ideal hero, which is outlined as someone who is physically fearless, even when facing death. One such individual to see Catherine in this light is Sandra Whipple Spanier, author of “Hemingway’s Unknown Soldier: Catherine Barkley, the Critics, and the Great War”, an essay that appears in New Essays on A Farewell to Arms. In her essay, Spanier sets out to “[restore] the portrait of [Hemingway’s] complex and underestimated heroine” (Spanier 75). She does so successfully, and when viewing the time period Catherine is living in, understanding her previous knowledge, and realizing the interpretations of Catherine’s character from when she is introduced to her tragic death, it is easy to see why Catherine should be regarded as a hero. To fully understand why Catherine performs the actions that she does, one must understand the time period that she lives in. She is a young woman who is “functioning in the environment of a brutal and irrational war” (Spanier 76). However, she remains stoic and emotionless about the state of the world, even

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