A handbook to Hemingway's famous collection of short stories that
emphasizes its status as a modernist masterwork.
The volume of collected short stories and vignettes In Our Time was
Ernest Hemingway's first commercial publication. Its appearance in 1925
launched the full-fledged literary career of this century's most famous
American fiction writer. And while other later works of Hemingway have
eclipsed In Our Time's fame, none of Hemingway's subsequent works would
again carry the degree of experimentation found in this distinctly
modernist masterwork. Modernism and Tradition in Ernest Hemingway's In
Our Time: A Guide for Students and Readers is a well-paced, lucidly
written handbook intended to guide university students and teaching
faculty towards a better understanding of this complex work. It provides
a reading of each story and vignette, while simultaneously stressing the
status of In Our Time as a discrete volume. Included are discussions of
the book's biographical and historical background, and considerations of
Hemingway's prose style, theories of writing, formal achievements, his
literary mentors and influences, and the relation between In Our Time
and his later works.
Matthew C. Stewart isAssociate Professor of Humanities and Rhetoric at
Boston University.