English, asked by ChetanSingh7191, 1 year ago

What was the literary ideology of ernest hemingway?

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Answered by Alicia43
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The question of the importance of the individual is, of course, one of the more serious points in the argument between the liberal and conservative philosophies. And it is a question with which Hemingway has dealt before. Many of the heroes of his early stories and novels were go-it-alone individualists, and he had been claimed by the conservatives as their spokesman. But when, at the end of To have and Have Not, the dying protagonist, Harry Morgan, said, "A man alone ain't got no chance," the liberals rejoiced. They claimed that a new period of social consciousness had developed in Hemingway's writing, and they quickly adopted him as the spokesman for their cause!..

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