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Critical Analysis Of Hills Like White Elephants

Decent Essays

Hemingway keeps the inner and outer details of both the girl and the American to a seemingly bare minimum, but he is still able to communicate the underlying tension between the two through the short and snarky (and emotionally-driven) remarks that are made. For instance, when it is first mentioned that the girl stares off into the hills, she states that the hills look like white elephants, to which the man replies, almost indifferently, “I’ve never seen one,” to which the girl replies, “No, you wouldn’t have.” (804) The man then replies that what she says about him never (seeing a hill that looks like white elephants) doesn’t prove anything. This exchange is only three relatively short lines; through this, however, one can detect the …show more content…

There are many lines like this in the story and some are purposefully ambiguous. However, Hemingway does provide some indication on the status and state of mind between the girl and the American. After the brief fuss about the drink, the girls says, “I wanted to try this new drink. That’s all we do, isn’t it -- look at things and try new drinks?” (804) In this, one can detect a hint of frustration in the girl’s voice, which can possibly show that both the girl and American are going no longer; they may live freely, but they have little to look forward to, and they have virtually nothing to aim for. It is also implied later in the story that the two travel rather extensively, which means that they have been to many different places and have likely meet many different people, but it is still only the two of them, and the possibility of there being a third member--a child--has utterly changed the dynamic between the girl and the American. This is shown when the latter says, “It’s the only thing that’s made us unhappy.” (805) Though ‘it’ is never explicitly stated, Hemingway uses subtle euphemisms to communicate exactly what the girl and the American are arguing about. The word ‘Abortion,’ or getting an abortion, is never directly stated by either character in the story, but how one is able to detect that this is about a girl getting an abortion is through the subtle word: “Operation.” Roughly in the

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