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Hills Like White Elephants Feminist Analysis

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Today, the legal parameters of abortion storms through the halls of American society with both political debate and social activism. Almost ninety years ago – when the women’s rights movement was only just gaining momentum – a story by Ernest Hemingway, “Hills like White Elephants”, met the print. It centered on the issue of abortion, and perhaps went even further to give voice to a feminist perspective concurrent with the times.
The story transpires in a bar at a train station in Spain, sitting on a landscape that, if metaphorically, represents a polarity between life and death. Jig, a carrying mother contemplating abortion, is on some level aware of the symbolism in the landscape. The scenery adjacent to her and her partner is barren, “brown …show more content…

He more like is oblivious to the message it holds, and turns his attention to everything but the landscape – the table, the luggage, Jig, the bar. He understands that Jig is both naïve and submissive. “It’s really an awfully simple operation, Jig,” he tells her. In saying this, he plays down the seriousness of the operation, and it is clear that he shows no concern for Jig’s health, mental or physical, as a consequence of the abortion. He makes frequent use of the words “we” and “us” when, in reality, he is only speaking for himself. He is not ready to settle down, nor does he want to be a father. Their constant travelling, exemplified by their luggage with labels “from all the hotels where they had spent nights”, represents the instability of their relationship. He states that he does not want anyone other than Jig. Unlike Jig, he does not see how their lives are going to be altered from hereon, whether they keep the baby or not. All he knows is that the baby is a problem – and logically, he sees a solution: abortion. He understands what power he has over Jig, and uses it to manipulate

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