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Contents
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Contents Introduction Lawrence R. Broer and Gloria Holland ix Abbreviations xv PART 1: HEROINES AND HEROES, THE FEMALE PRESENCE 1. In Love with Papa Linda Patterson Miller 3 2. Re-Reading Women II: The Example of Brett, Hadley, Duff, and Women’s Scholarship Jamie Barlowe 23 3. The Sun Hasn’t Set Yet: Brett Ashley and the Code Hero Debate Kathy G. Willingham 33 4. The Romance of Desire in Hemingway’s Fiction Linda Wagner-Martin 54 5. “I’d Rather Not Hear”: Women and Men in Conversation in “Cat in the Rain” and “The Sea Change” Lisa Tyler 70 6. To Have and Hold Not: Marie Morgan, Helen Gordon, and Dorothy Hollis Kim Moreland 81 7. Revisiting the Code: Female Foundations and “The Undiscovered Country” in For Whom the Bell Tolls Gail D. Sinclair 93 8. On De¤ling Eden: The Search for Eve in the Garden of Sorrows Ann Putnam 109 9. Santiago and the Eternal Feminine: Gendering La Mar in The Old Man and the Sea Susan F. Beegel 131 10. West of Everything: The High Cost of Making Men in Islands in the Stream Rose Marie Burwell 157 11. Queer Families in Hemingway’s Fiction Debra A. Moddelmog 173 12. “Go to sleep, Devil”: The Awakening of Catherine’s Feminism in The Garden of Eden Amy Lovell Strong 190 13. The Light from Hemingway’s Garden: Regendering Papa Nancy R. Comley 204 PART 2: MOTHERS, WIVES, SISTERS 14. Alias Grace: Music and the Feminine Aesthetic in Hemingway’s Early Style Hilary K. Justice 221 15. A Lifetime of Flower Narratives: Letting the Silenced Voice Speak Miriam B. Mandel 239 16. Rivalry, Romance, and War Reporters: Martha Gellhorn’s Love Goes to Press and the Collier’s Files Sandra Whipple Spanier 256 17. Hemingway’s Literary Sisters: The Author through the Eyes of Women Writers Rena Sanderson 276 Notes 295 Works Cited 319 Contributors 341 Index 345 viii Contents ...