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Sun Also Rises, The - Book Summary

  • The Sun Also Rises
    Selflessness In Hemingways The Sun Also Rises, we are taken back to the 1920s, accompanied by the Lost Generation. During this time, prohibition was occurring...
  • Sun Also Rises
    around the world know this statement to be true. However in Ernest Hemingways The Sun Also Rises, the relationship between Lady Brett Ashley and Robert Cohn proves...
  • The Sun Also Rises: A Review
    taking this class. I am thoroughly enjoying Hemingway. The Sun Also Rises is one of the best books I've read in quite a long time. For a while there, I was, for God...
  • The Sun Also Rises: Liberal Use Of Dialogue By Hemingway
    The remarkable thing about the book was its liberal use of dialogue and how Hemingway used it to carry the...
  • Ernest Hemingway: Allegorical Figures In The Sun Also Rises
    and then live up to them. VI. Summary. A. Hemingway purposely shaped the main characters in The Sun Also Rises as allegorical figures. B...

Sun Also Rises, The - Book Summary

In the novel The Sun Also Rises,   Ernest Hemingway describes
a couple who share a very strange and distant kind of love
for each other. This story takes place immediately after
World War I, a time of great hardship. This hardship results
in a digression of values both   morally and socially. The
love that Brett and Jake share is symbolic of the general
decline in values in that they tolerate behaviors in one
another that would have been previously considered  
unacceptable.
        It is clear that Lady Brett Ashley is anything but a
lady. She is kind and sweet but extremely vulnerable to the
charm that various men in her life seem to smother her with.
Brett is not happy with her life or her surroundings and
seeks escape and refuge in the arms of these men. But her
actions seem always to end up hurting her, and she runs back
to Jake. Jake knows that he will never be able to have her
for his own, and he accepts this as fact. This is clear when
the Count asks them why dont you get married, you two?
(68)   To this question, they give a lame half hearted
awnser which implies that it will never happen. He is
tolerant of her behavior because he loves her
unconditionally and is willing to overlook everything she
does. Jakes willingness to endure and forgive Bretts
promiscuity and infidelity is an indication of the skewed
values of the age. It was an anything goes era right after
the first war, and Jakes message to Brett seems to be the
same: anything goes as long as you eventually come back to
me.
        Jake is forced to accept living in this seemingly
terrible way for more than one reason.   He a weak person
socially, but he is also physically disabled because of an
injury that he suffered during the war. He suffered an
injury that caused him to be castrated. The first
hint of this is when he says to Georgeette I was hurt in
the war (24) in refrence to why they can not have physical
realtions....