Preview

Hemingway's Literary Best: A Clean Well-Lighted Place

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
329 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Hemingway's Literary Best: A Clean Well-Lighted Place
Many of the 1933 short stories which make up the collection Winner Take Nothing were published just before the book. ¡°A Clean, Well-Lighted Place¡± is one of these. Its publication in collected form only succeeded by months its initial publication in Scribner¡¯s Magazine, a magazine, not uncoincidently, belonging to the titular publisher who first printed most of Ernest Hemingway¡¯s major fiction (including this collection).

By 1933, Hemingway was an established writer, and this exceptional minimalist short story was seized upon for its presentation of major authorial concerns in an unprecedentedly concentrated form. These major authorial preoccupations include good conduct and solidarity. The younger waiter must be judged for his refusal to play by (unspoken) rules that say he must be polite and courteous to the old man. The older waiter, in contrast, upholds these standards by being willing to stay as late as the old man wants him to. The exceptionality of the piece made it an obvious choice for critics. Critics used the story either to laud or condemn Hemingway on the basis of their judgment of these minimalist aesthetics and these ethical concerns.

For supporters of Hemingway¡¯s talent, the story¡¯s emotional and philosophical austerity and bleakness amounts to profound and true tragedy. For detractors of Hemingway, it is Hemingway as a parody of himself, in which a purported thematics of stoic endurance only poorly covers an underlying self-indulgent masochism. This masochism, his detractors argue, blinds Hemingway to the variety and complexity of life. Stories in which little happens but extremes of simplicity interrupted by the highest drama do not resemble life, these critics insist. In defense of Hemingway, admirers argue that his stories are not meant to compete with fiction that presents life just as it is lived. The story¡¯s admirers argue that ¡®¡®A Clean, Well-Lighted Place¡¯¡¯ is Hemingway at his most pure because he captures in both form and

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    While Hemingway's short story "A Clean, Well-Lighted Place" is usually interpreted as a representation of the conflict between man and aging, it is also a fruitful example of negatively-used social categorization. In the story, the young waiter’s use of person perception is completely offensive to the old man who falls victim. Due to the young waiter’s inability to sympathize with the old man, the waiter grows increasing more rude and cruel as the story continues. In Ernest Hemingway’s “A Clean Well-Lighted Place”, the young waiter designates the old man as undeserving of freedom and life based on the man being elderly, deaf, and alone in the café.…

    • 1070 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Even though to be in conflict with society and especially its values and beliefs isn’t easy for many authors to do, Ernest Hemingway breaks out this idea in order to give the reader a deep and provoking novel, mixed with unusual themes for that time in the way they were depicted, like alcoholism and expatriation.…

    • 617 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    This literature was confusing however, conceptually understandable that even though this short story was written somewhere between the life-time of Ernest Hemingway. People can relate to it in someway and the style of how it is written is something it could be said to be artistic and educational that people can learn from. As this textbook was dedicated for the purpose of learning literature, it was appropriate for using this literature in the book; So that people could debate, discuss the very meaning of the contents and…

    • 466 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    "What is powerful is when what you say is just the tip of the iceberg of what you know" (Jim Rohn). Ernest Hemingway, author of "A Farewell to Arms", "A Clean, Well-Lighted place", and "The End of Something", indites in regards to his life in different settings and themes. In these three stories, Hemingway begins with his stories as a young, confident, and masculine man who is in control of his life, eventually meets a young lady, causing circumstances to innovate. Debating between having a family, and past gratifying recollections he hesitates; only to end up losing his loved one, faith and his virility. Prominent to the other stories, "A Clean, Well-Lighted place resembles Hemingway's life best.…

    • 117 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Fear is a human instinct, causing anxiety, wonder and paranoia. Controlling our every move, fear eats away from humanity, and is heightened by the events surrounding our lives. A clean, well lighted place highlights these themes by addressing major events that occurred at the time. At the time of the story’s publication, Hemingway was surrounded by an uncertain world, one without war or peace, only with fear. During this time, Adolf Hitler seized power in Germany, withdrawing from the league of nations and emplacing increasingly harsher laws against Jewish citizens that eventually lead to cruel concentration camps.The rise of industrialisation and technology was also growing, leaving many in angst of it’s effect on society. This period of uncertainty…

    • 528 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    What is the most fearful emotion? That is emotionless. What is the most troubled thing? That is nothing. What will you feel after experiencing so much crazy murder and facing unreasonable death? In Hemingway’s “A Clean, Well-lighted Place”, he shows us the loneliness, isolation, meaningless, death and futility of modern life those poor survivors of the world war one are facing through the description on the three main characters. Using his unique writing skills, Hemingway describes the character with short, plain and clean language, giving us a deep impression.…

    • 2193 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    Cited: Benson, Jackson J. Critical Reviews of "A Clean, Well Lighted Place". Short Story Criticism 1 (1998) 236-238.…

    • 850 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    The story is told from a total omniscience narrator, allowing the reader to gain better knowledge of the three main characters; the two waiters who work at the café, and the deaf old man who enjoys looking out upon the empty street, as well as their lives outside of the café. “In the day time the street was dusty, but at night the dew settled the dust and the old man liked to sit late because he was deaf and now at night it was quiet and he felt the difference” (152 Hemingway). This quote comes from the second line of the story, creating a sense of theme on the idea of “nothingness”. The dust from the daytime pedestrians has settled. The dew from the late night has appeared, and here he sits in the trees shadow, sipping on his Brandy. For a lonely, old man, this clean, well-lighted café is a chance to escape the darkness himself. He continues to drink Brandy, hoping that sleep will come soon, allowing him a momentary get away from the empty and silent despair that has already caused him to attempt suicide once.…

    • 828 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    “A Clean, Well-Lighted Place,” was written in 1933, by Ernest Hemingway. The main characters in the story are two waiters, one old, one young and an older man who is their customer in the café on the evening the story takes place. There are three main elements of style portrayed in the short story, “A Clean, Well-Lighted Place.” The elements of imagery, symbolism and irony, are illustrated throughout the short story, in turn leading to the theme of despair.…

    • 635 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Hemingway concludes his story by once again resorting to the 'Third Person Omniscient Author' method of narration which begins with 'he disliked bars and bodegas' till the end 'many must have it.'…

    • 463 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    parents were no exception. In fact he spent much of his life trying to escape…

    • 1531 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Bibliography: Scribner Paperback Fiction. The Complete Short Stories of Earnest Hemingway: The Finca Vigia Edition. Simon and Schuster Inc., 1987, New York. [127-132]…

    • 769 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In Another Country

    • 14146 Words
    • 57 Pages

    Ernest Hemingway is a legendary figure in twentieth-century American literature. His reputation stems not only from his body of written work, but from his adventurous and amorous lifestyle. His crisp, almost journalistic prose style, free of the long, sometimes flowery language common to much of the literature that appeared before him, has won him great acclaim and some of the highest literary honors: The Pulitzer Prize, In Another Country 1…

    • 14146 Words
    • 57 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    In China, much research word on Hemingway has been focusing on his anti-war attitude which is shown through his works and the manhood. However, not much attention has been paid to the tragic vision that Hemingway tries to show in A Farewell to Arms. In this thesis, I’m going to explore the tragic vision from the aspects of its contents and the techniques that Hemingway employs in A Farewell to Arms. Through careful investigation and sufficient illustration and analysis, I will conclude that Hemingway’s tragic vision pervades the whole novel both thematically and technically. Therefore, I shall illustrate this point of view from the following three aspects: the world tragic vision, the thematically unfolded tragic vision and the technically achieved tragic vision.…

    • 1003 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    28 years prior to his own death by committing suicide Ernest Hemingway wrote a short story named A Clean, Well-Lighted Place posing as an excerpt from the life of a presumably middle-aged waiter, who has to deal with an elder customer and the reactions to this man from a younger colleague.…

    • 1408 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays