¶ … Ernest Hemingway's - Hills Like White Elephants, write essay supports
Final Act
It is quite possible that Ernest Hemingway was being deliberately deceptive when he wrote "Hills Like White Elephants," which first appeared in 1927 in the collection of short stories entitled Men Without Women. Regardless of his intention, when the story is read outside of the social and cultural context in which it was written -- as is the case when a contemporary reader peruses this manuscript -- the text has a certain aura of duplicity in which undiscerning readers may be lulled into misinterpreting its meaning: or possibly even thinking that there is no meaning. Close analysis of literary criticism, as well as an examination of biographical information in Hemingway's life, however, informs readers that there is a crucial debate occurring between the two main characters regarding whether or not a young woman, named Jig, will have an abortion (which was certainly taboo, shocking, and largely illegal during the time the story was written) (Anderson, 2009). Hemingway deliberately ends the short story without climax or without an answer to the conundrum that has absorbed the interest of the characters for the duration of the tale. Yet a close reading of the dialogue, characterization, and symbolism that figure prominently in the story reveal that by its conclusion, Jig has decided to not get an abortion and keep the child she is pregnant with.
One of Hemingway's primary tools of communicating to the reader that Jig has been swayed to keep the baby she is pregnant with is through the dialogue. Fairly early on in the story, as well as in a number of separate instances within the text, it is abundantly clear that when Jig and her lover, who is only referred to as an "American" in the story, are speaking to one another, they are actually talking about different things. The effect of these differences is quite significant, as the following quotation, in which Jig is looking at and seemingly speaking about the surrounding scenery, readily demonstrates. "And we could have all this,' she said. 'And we can have everything and every day we make it more impossible.'
'What did you say?'
'I said we could have everything.'
'We can have everything.'
'No, we can't.'
'We can have the whole world.'
'No, we can't.'
'We can go everywhere.'
'No, we can't. It isn't ours any more.'
'No, it isn't. And once they take it away, you never get it back.'
'But they haven't taken it away'.
'We'll wait and see'."
In this quotation, Jig is actually talking about the fact that her having a baby would significantly alter her life (and conceivably that of her lover, if he chooses to stay with her). In her initial statement in this quotation, she is referring to the scenery when she says we could have "this." Yet in her ensuing sentence, what the American misses is the fact that she acknowledges that despite all of the things she and her lover could have, that it would be "impossible" to have those things once the child was born. Such an impossibility would increase with "everyday," due to the fact that the child would be growing and getting bigger and requiring more attention. Jig's implicit reference to her child is why she repeatedly tells her lover that they cannot have everything, which is why she says that the world is no longer for her and her lover -- because it has been replaced by the life within her body. It becomes more explicit that Jig is talking about her baby, while her lover continues to talk about the surroundings and the life that he and Jig could have, when one analyzes her usage of pronouns in her second-to-last sentence in this quotation. The "they" she is referring to is actually the doctors and hospital staff who would conduct the abortion that her lover is proposing (despite the fact that he continually refers to it as an "operation") while the "it" which can never be returned after the doctors take it away is of course the child.
Additionally, Hemingway utilizes various aspects of characterization to emphasize the fact that Jig is growing increasingly disenchanted with not only her lover, but also with his position...
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