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Ernest Hemingway is a writer we often associate with particular places and animals; Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, Spain’s countryside, East Africa’s game reserves, Cuba’s blue water, and Idaho’s sagebrush all come to mind. We can easily visualize the iconic images of Hemingway with fly rod bent by hefty trout, with bulls charging matadors, or of the famous author proudly posing with trophy lions, marlin, and a menagerie of Western American game animals.

As Robert E. Fleming once put it—updating Gertrude Stein’s famous quip that Hemingway looked like a modern and smelled of museums—Hemingway “was also a hunter, fisherman, and naturalist who smelled of libraries.” Hemingway indeed read widely in natural history and science, as well as the literature of field sports. This lifelong interest in the natural world and its inhabitants manifests itself in Hemingway’s writing in myriad ways. From the trout Nick Adams carefully releases to Santiago’s marlin and Robert Jordan’s “heart beating against the pine needle floor of the forest” to Colonel Cantwell’s beloved Italian duck marshes, and from African savannahs to the Gulf Stream, animals and environments are central to Hemingway’s work and life.

While these representations often served as background for broader human-centered matters in early scholarship, contemporary critics have opted to treat animals and environments directly. Teaching Hemingway and the Natural World marks a key entry in Hemingway studies, bringing the questions from the rapidly evolving field of environmental literary studies to bear on Hemingway’s places, animals, and life. It not only advances scholarship on Hemingway’s relationship to the natural world, but it also facilitates bringing this understanding to the classroom.

This latest volume in the Teaching Hemingway series explores how his writing sheds light on broader questions of the human relationship to the nonhuman world. Organized geographically, the 16 essays by leading scholars are divided into five sections about Hemingway’s favorite places. Each essay includes specific classroom advice as well as theoretically sophisticated close readings.

Table of Contents

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  1. Cover
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  1. Title Page, Series Page, Copyright
  2. pp. i-iv
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  1. Contents
  2. pp. v-vi
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  1. Foreword
  2. Mark P. Ott
  3. pp. vii-viii
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  1. Introduction
  2. Kevin Maier
  3. pp. 9-16
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  1. Part One. Michigan
  1. “Nick trailed his hand in the water”: Understanding the Importance of Landscape in In Our Time
  2. Ellen Andrews Knodt
  3. pp. 19-27
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  1. On Familiar Ground: Intimate Geographies and Assumptions of Place in Hemingway’s Nick Adams Stories
  2. Laura Gruber Godfrey
  3. pp. 28-42
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  1. “Summer People, Some are not”: Seasonal Visitors, Cottage-ing, and the Exoticism of Hemingway’s Michigan
  2. Jeffrey Herlihy-Mera
  3. pp. 43-52
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  1. Organic Space and Time: Using Henri Bergson to Explain Nick Adams’s Intuition of the World in “Big Two-Hearted River”
  2. Scott Ortolano
  3. pp. 53-64
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  1. A Darwinian Reading of “Big Two-Hearted River”: The Re-enchantment of Nick Adams?
  2. Michael Kim Roos
  3. pp. 65-79
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  1. It’s All About a Perfect Drift: Reading the Fishing Metaphor in “Big Two-Hearted River”
  2. Larry Grimes
  3. pp. 80-94
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  1. Part Two: Gulf Stream
  1. Not Against Nature: Hemingway, Fishing, and the Cramp of an Environmental Ethic
  2. Rick Van Noy and Dan Woods
  3. pp. 97-109
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  1. Man or Fish? An Ecocritical Reading of The Old Man and the Sea
  2. Allen C. Jones
  3. pp. 110-121
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  1. The Sea has Many Voices: A Maritime Studies Experience of The Old Man and the Sea
  2. Susan F. Beegel
  3. pp. 122-134
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  1. Part Three: Africa
  1. “Shootism” Versus “Sport” in Hemingway’s “Macomber”
  2. Gary Harrington
  3. pp. 137-148
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  1. Pity and the Beasts: Teaching Hemingway’s Stories via Sympathy for Animals
  2. Ryan Hediger
  3. pp. 149-159
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  1. Teaching the Conflicts in “The Snows of Kilimanjaro”
  2. Sean Milligan
  3. pp. 160-168
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  1. Part Four: Europe
  1. “I Hated to Leave France”: The Geography and Terrain of Hemingway’s The Sun Also Rises
  2. Donald A. Daiker
  3. pp. 171-185
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  1. A Few Practical Things: Death in the Afternoon and Hemingway’s Natural Pedagogy
  2. Ross K. Tangedal
  3. pp. 186-200
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  1. Part Five: The Transatlantic Hemingway Text
  1. Flashbacks and the Trials of Hemingway’s War Veterans: Healing in the Natural World
  2. Robert McParland
  3. pp. 203-213
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  1. Skiing with Papa: Teaching Hemingway in the Backcountry Snow
  2. Scott Knickerbocker
  3. pp. 214-220
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  1. Appendix: Teaching Materials
  2. pp. 221-227
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  1. Works Cited
  2. pp. 228-238
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  1. Selected Bibliography
  2. pp. 239-240
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  1. Contributors
  2. pp. 241-244
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  1. Index
  2. pp. 245-256
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