The Mailer Review/Volume 5, 2011/Hemingway and Women at the Front: Blowing Bridges in The Fifth Column, For Whom the Bell Tolls, and Other Works: Difference between revisions

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  | notes    = publication or editor's notes (if applicable)
  | notes    = publication or editor's notes (if applicable)
  | url      = http://prmlr.us/mr05mor}}
  | url      = http://prmlr.us/mr05mor}}
{{dc|dc=O|ne of the central issues on which critics}} of ''A Farewell to Arms'' focus is the vexed relationship between love and war, a response Hemingway invites with his punningly ambiguous title. Certainly Frederic Henry rejects the arms of war in his “separate peace” (243), an act of desertion validated by the confused and murderous actions of the Italian officers in the army he serves. Yet Frederic is also pulled from the arms of war by the arms of love in the person of Catherine Barkley. The two flee the war arena—she abandoning her post as nurse in the American Red Cross Hospital in Milan—for a safe retreat in neutral Switzerland, an idyllic haven that protects them from wartime reality. That Frederic must ultimately say farewell to the arms of love when Catherine dies in childbirth is tragedy of a different order from his first farewell—existential or perhaps ontological tragedy, the tragedy of life itself, not the sociopolitical tragedy of war.
{{dc|dc=O|ne of the central issues on which critics}} of ''A Farewell to Arms'' focus is the vexed relationship between love and war, a response Hemingway invites with his punningly ambiguous title. Certainly Frederic Henry rejects the arms of war in his “separate peace”(243), an act of desertion validated by the confused and murderous actions of the Italian officers in the army he serves. Yet Frederic is also pulled from the arms of war by the arms of love in the person of Catherine Barkley. The two flee the war arena—she abandoning her post as nurse in the American Red Cross Hospital in Milan—for a safe retreat in neutral Switzerland, an idyllic haven that protects them from wartime reality. That Frederic must ultimately say farewell to the arms of love when Catherine dies in childbirth is tragedy of a different order from his first farewell—existential or perhaps ontological tragedy, the tragedy of life itself, not the sociopolitical tragedy of war.


Some nine years later Hemingway revisits this same vexed relationship in his 1938 play ''The Fifth Column'', whose setting is the Spanish Civil War. Whereas Frederic Henry ultimately chooses love over war, Philip Rawlings chooses war over love, declaring, “We’re in for fifty years of undeclared wars and I’ve signed up for the duration” (80). He rejects his lover Dorothy Bridges, along with her fantasy of sharing “a long, happy, quiet life at some  {{pg|370|371}} place like Saint-Tropez or, you know, some place like Saint-Tropez ''was''” (23)—that is, an idyllic haven outside of time. Instead, he embraces the wartime reality, declaiming, “Where I go now, I go alone, or with others who go there for the same reason I go” (83). Loyalty to his comrades in arms supersedes loyalty to his lover, whom he pointedly stops calling “comrade” in a politically and emotionally significant act. Not a separate peace but voluntary enlistment “for the duration” is the fate Philip Rawlings chooses.
Some nine years later Hemingway revisits this same vexed relationship in his 1938 play ''The Fifth Column'', whose setting is the Spanish Civil War. Whereas Frederic Henry ultimately chooses love over war, Philip Rawlings chooses war over love, declaring, “We’re in for fifty years of undeclared wars and I’ve signed up for the duration” (80). He rejects his lover Dorothy Bridges, along with her fantasy of sharing “a long, happy, quiet life at some  {{pg|370|371}} place like Saint-Tropez or, you know, some place like Saint-Tropez ''was''” (23)—that is, an idyllic haven outside of time. Instead, he embraces the wartime reality, declaiming, “Where I go now, I go alone, or with others who go there for the same reason I go” (83). Loyalty to his comrades in arms supersedes loyalty to his lover, whom he pointedly stops calling “comrade” in a politically and emotionally significant act. Not a separate peace but voluntary enlistment “for the duration” is the fate Philip Rawlings chooses.
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==Works Cited==
==Works Cited==
{{Refbegin|indent=1|20em}}
{{Refbegin|indent=1|20em}}
* {{cite book |last=Baker |first=Carlos |date= |title=Ernest Hemingway: A Life Story |url= |location=New York |publisher=Avon, 1969 |pages= |ref=harv }}
* {{cite book|last=Baker|first=Carlos |date= |title=Ernest Hemingway: A Life Story|url= |location=New York |publisher=Avon, 1969 |pages= |ref=harv}}
* {{cite book |last=Beevor |first=Antony |date= |title=The Spanish Civil War |url= |location=New York |publisher=Peter Bedrick Books, 1983 |pages= |ref=harv }}
* {{cite book|last=Beevor|first=Antony |date= |title=The Spanish Civil War |url= |location=New York |publisher=Peter Bedrick Books, 1983 |pages= |ref=harv}}
* {{cite book |last=Brome |first=Vincent |date= |title=The International Brigades: Spain 1936-1939 |url= |location=New York |publisher=William Morrow, 1966 |pages= |ref=harv }}
* {{cite book |last=Brome|first=Vincent |date= |title=The International Brigades: Spain 1936-1939|url= |location=New York|publisher=William Morrow, 1966 |pages= |ref=harv}}
* {{cite book |last=Bullard |first=F. Lauriston |date= |title=Famous War Correspondents |url= |location=Boston |publisher=Little, Brown, 1914 |pages= |ref=harv }}
* {{cite book |last=Bullard |first=F. Lauriston |date= |title=Famous War Correspondents|url= |location=Boston |publisher=Little, Brown, 1914|pages= |ref=harv}}
* {{cite book |last=Coleman |first=Catherine |date= |chapter=Women in the Civil War |title=Heart of Spain: Robert Capa's Photographs of the Spanish Civil War |url= |location=New York |publisher=Aperture, 1999 |pages=43-51 |ref=harv }}
* {{cite book |last=Coleman |first=Catherine |date= |chapter=Women in the Civil War |title=Heart of Spain: Robert Capa's Photographs of the Spanish Civil War |url= |location=New York |publisher=Aperture, 1999 |pages=43-51 |ref=harv }}
* {{cite book |last=Fellner |first=Harriet |date= |title=Hemingway as Playwright: ''The Fifth Column'' |url= |location=Ann Arbor |publisher=UMI Research P, 1986 |pages= |ref=harv }}
* {{cite book |last=Fellner |first=Harriet |date= |title=Hemingway as Playwright: ''The Fifth Column'' |url= |location=Ann Arbor |publisher=UMI Research P, 1986 |pages= |ref=harv }}