Modernist Heroes and Commodification of Heroines in Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms and Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby
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Department of English
Abstract
The Study aims at investigating the hero’s treatment with women in two
American modernist narratives, Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby and Ernest
Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms. These modernist novels embody cultural
embodiment of young people’s pursuit of American dream. Gatsby in love with Daisy
in the Fitzgerald narrative and Henry in love with Catherine in the Hemingway fiction
commodify the heroines that lead both of the heroes to a tragic end. The Fitzgerald
hero dies of a gunshot of Wilson whereas the Hemingway hero is ultimately left after
Catherine’s death at childbirth. The American dream, an individual’s pursuit of
happiness through freedom and material prosperity leads them to nightmarish
experience with death and violence. The researcher, taking insights and methods
comprised of Luce Irigary’s theory of women as commodities and Victor Brombert’s
concept of antiheroes, examines the differential relationships between the Hemingway
hero and the Fitzgerald hero in their treatments with their heroines in their
relationships with the heroines.
