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Ernest Hemingway Lost Generation Analysis

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“Ernest Hemingway in The Sun Also Rises had provided a vivid picture of the deranged lives of young English and American expatriates crowding the bars in Paris, engaged in aimless merry-making and labeled as the “lost generation” by Stein.” (Toker,24). The years following World War I, the younger generation, after seeing the horrors of war, had the mindset of living fast and doing what they wanted since we were all damned to die. Ernest Hemingway’s, The Sun Also Rises, manifests Stein’s “Lost Generation” by incorporating the up-roaring lifestyle of the 20s through the characters personalities. Hemingway pursues this by focusing on the actions of the main characters: Brett Ashley, Jacob Barnes, and Robert Cohn. Through Jacob’s perception, the reader learns about the excessive drinking, partying, promiscuity, traveling, and self-alienation that the characters of the story took part in. Among these other things, excessive drinking is a constant theme throughout the novel, supporting Stein’s perception of this generation (Dubose, 2). No matter where any of the main characters where or whom ever they were with, they always had a drink in their hands, almost always in a constant state of drunkenness. The novel portrays an agonizing and distressing picture of the post-war generation, displaying two of Hemingway’s most remarkable characters: Jacob Barnes and Lady Brett Ashley (Toker, 26). Jake Barnes felt his disconnection from society because of his experiences in the war and his inability to indulge himself and love Lady Brett the way he wanted to. Pape 2

“I lay awake thinking and my mind jumping around. Then I couldn’t keep away from it, And I started to think about Brett and all the rest of it went away.”(Hemingway, 39). After a long night of bar hopping, drinking with Brett, Robert, and among other friends, Jake comes home and lays down; then he starts having flash backs from the war. However, Jacob’s love for Brett assuaged him into a calmer state of mind. Jake Barnes’ alienation results from his physical injury and sexual impotence, this cut him off from other men not just physically and sexually but also emotionally and socially (Toker, 27). His inability to preform sexually, causes a

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