Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-8bhkd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-05T07:52:11.094Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Hemingway's Naturalism

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 April 2024

Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Extract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

In this article I shall attempt to place Ernest Hemingway in an intellectual tradition that continues to exert enormous influence on our civilization. The paradox of placing Hemingway, of all people, in an intellectual tradition will be dealt with in passing. What I wish to do straightaway is to say what I mean by an intellectual tradition; I shall then sketch the particular tradition I have in mind; the body of the article will be devoted to substantiating the thesis that Hemingway belongs to this tradition. By way of conclusion I shall say why I believe this kind of thesis, the establishment of which requires a combination of philosophical and literary analysis, is important.

It is not all that easy to say what is meant by an intellectual tradition in the present context. It does not refer to a single, unified philosophical system but rather to a set or series of philosophical systems that hang together naturally because of certain assumptions or methodological principles common to all of them. It is a fairly loose mesh of ideas the various strands of which represent distinct lines of development but nevertheless interconnect and sustain each other in certain important respects. The three main strands of the tradition to which I shall assign Hemingway are empiricism, behaviourism and naturalism. It will be necessary to say briefly what each is or stands for and why they can be considered as amounting jointly to a distinctive pattern of ideas.

Traditional British empiricism received its classical statement from David Hume and it is to Hume that I shall refer in outlining this philosophical option. The importance empiricism places on the senses and on sensations — what Hume calls ‘impressions’ — is vital. The contents of the mind are divided into ‘impressions’ and ‘ideas’, and ideas are said to derive from impressions.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1980 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

References

1 Fiesta (The Sun also Rises), Pan, pp 76-77

2 A Farewell to Arms, Penguin, p 144

3 For Whom the Bell Tolls, Pan p 54

4 A Farewell to Arms, p 14

5 For Whom the Bell Tolls, Penguin, p 149f

6 Treatise of Human Nature, Oxford, pp 499-500

7 Fiesta, p 121

8 A Farewell to Arms, p 25

9 Ibid. p 251

10 See the fine article on Hemingway in The Reign of Wonder by Tony Tanner on this and related aspects.

11 Fiesta, p 139

12 The Snort Happy Life of Francis Macomber, Penguin, p 39

13 Death in the Afternoon, Penguin, p 8

14 For whom the Bell Tolls, p 304

15 “The Undefeated” in Men Without Women, Penguin p 36

16 A Farewell to Arms, p 176 (Penguin)

17 For Whom the Bell Tolls, p 313

18 “A Clean Well-lighted Place” in The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber, p 72

19 Fiesta, p 10

20 This is the contention of Chomsky , for example, on the question of language acquisition.

21 In an interview printed in Writers at Work, Penguin, Hemingway appears to subscribe to the notion of inherited skills, a notion anathema to strict behaviourists. See p 194.

22 Ibid. p 193

23 The Old Man and the Sea, p 46

24 Review of The Old Man and the Sea by P. Toynbee, reprinted in Twentieth Century Interpretations, Prentice Hall, p 112

25 In an effort to achieve a unitary scheme for measuring the behaviour of men and animals Behaviourism accepts no essential difference but only one of complexity between man and animals.