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- The Hemingway Review
- The Hemingway Foundation and Society
- Article
- “Is It Unmaidenly?”: Courtly and Carnal Language in Hemingway’s Across the River and into the Trees Volume 33, Number 1, Fall 2013, pp. 44-60
To further meet your research needs, the complete digital issue from this journal is also available for purchase for $39.00 USD.
This issue contains 19 articles in total
- Introduction
- Dedication: Robert W. Lewis (1930–2013)
- Errata
- News from the Hemingway Collection
- Current Bibliography
- Hemingway’s Trail of the Novel A Farewell to Arms by Branko Drekonja and Aleksander Jankovič Potočnik, trans. by Aleksander Jankovič Potočnik (review)
- Hemingway and the Black Renaissance ed. by Gary Edward Holcomb and Charles Scruggs (review)
- Vonnegut and Hemingway: Writers at War by Lawrence R. Broer (review)
- Ernest Hemingway in Context ed. by Debra Moddelmog and Suzanne del Gizzo (review)
- Reinterpreting “Papa(á) in Cuba: On the Social Dimensions of Hemingway’s Translingual Nickname
- At Hemingway’s Table: Food for the Five Senses
- “I Was Made to Eat”: Food and Brillat-Savarin’s Genesiac Sense in A Farewell to Arms
- “Watch Out How that Egg Runs”: Hemingway and the Rhetoric of American Road Food
- Hemingway’s Hospitality in A Moveable Feast
- “In the Breaking of the Bread”: Holy and Secular Communion in “Big Two-Hearted River”
- “Is It Unmaidenly?”: Courtly and Carnal Language in Hemingway’s Across the River and into the Trees
- “I Knew That Underneath Mr. H and I Were Really a Lot Alike”: Reading Hemingway’s The Old Man and the Sea with Elizabeth Bishop’s “The Fish”
- Analogues of the Deserter-in-the-Gauertal Incident: Philoxenia in "The Snows of Kilimanjaro"
- PEN Hemingway Keynote Address: Delivered at the John F. Kennedy Library, 24 March 2013
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