in another country ernest hemmingway

38

Upload: ryo

Post on 07-Jan-2016

36 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

DESCRIPTION

In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway. Discussion Questions. #1. How does the first sentence in the story make you feel? “In the fall the war was always there, but we did not go to it anymore.” (Pg 580). Answer # 1. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway
Page 2: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

Discussion Questions

Page 3: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

#1 How does the first sentence in the story

make you feel?

“In the fall the war was always there, but we did not go to it anymore.” (Pg 580)

Page 4: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

Answer # 1

This sentence is setting the tone, making the reader feel that the coldness and constant war was

unavoidable.

Page 5: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

#2

Which of the story characters, if any, do you admire?

Page 6: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

Answer # 2The Major. He lost his wife, his hand

is crippled, yet he’s still driving on through it all.

“..Carrying himself, straight and soldierly, with tears on both his cheeks and biting his lips.” (pg 584)

Page 7: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

#3 Why does the narrator go to

the hospital every afternoon?

Page 8: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

Answer #3The narrator goes to the

hospital every afternoon to get his knee re-bent after his injury.

“My knee did not bend and the leg dropped straight from the knee to the ankle without a calf.” (Pg 580)

Page 9: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

#4A. How did the narrator acquire his medals?

Page 10: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

Answer # 4The narrator was given his

medal simply because he was American. Not because of some act of bravery.

““I had been given the medals I had been given the medals because I was an American” because I was an American” (Pg 582)(Pg 582)

Page 11: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

#4

B. How does the attitude of the three boys change when they find out what he had done to get them?

Page 12: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

Answer # 4They became less welcoming and held less respect for his medals.

““I was a friend, but I was never really I was a friend, but I was never really one of them.” (Pg 582)one of them.” (Pg 582)

Page 13: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

#5 A. What advice did the

major give the narrator toward the end of the story? ?

Page 14: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

Answer #5He tells the narrator never to

marry, that he’d be putting himself up to lose everything.

“A man must not marry.” (pg 583)

Page 15: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

# 5

B. What happened to the Major’s wife?

Page 16: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

Answer #5

His wife had died of pneumonia.

“The major’s wife, who was very young and whom he had not married until he was definitely invalidated out of the war, had died of pneumonia. She had been sick only a few days. No one expected her to die.” (Pg 584)

Page 17: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

# 6

A. What pictures are hanging on the wall when the major returns?

Page 18: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

Answer #6

There are pictures of injuries and their outcome after using the machines.

“When he came back there were large framed photographs, before and after.” (Pg 584)

Page 19: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

#6

B. Why does the narrator think the pictures are deceptive?

Page 20: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

Answer #6

They were deceptive because the pictures were of cured, fixed injuries that had used the machines. Yet, they were the only ones that had used them so far.

“I had always understood that we were the first to use the machines.” (pg 584)

Page 21: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

#7

What mood to the details of the setting convey?

Page 22: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

Answer #7

It gave an image of cold, solemn. The mood is not lively, it’s rather glum and dismal.

“In the fall, the war was always there but we didn’t go to it anymore. It was cold in Milan, and the dark came very early.” (pg 580)

Page 23: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

#8

A. How is the narrator’s attitude toward the war different from the three boys?

Page 24: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

Answer # 8

He felt that the war was glory. He couldn’t be brave like the other three and war was of just that, bravery.

“..I was very much afraid to die, and often I would lay in bed at night by myself, afraid to die and wondering how I would be when I went back to the front.” (Pg. 583)

“Being wounded, after all, was an accident.” (Pg 582)

Page 25: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

# 8

B. How might these differences be related to their nationalities?

Page 26: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

Answer #8The war for the Europeans was a duty, not a glorified

action. They fought on their own turf rather than the Americans who left for war in a grand exit of bravery.

“I had been given the medals because I was an American. It had been different for them because they had done very different things to get their medals.” (pg 582)

“The major, who had been a great fencer, did not believe in bravery.” (pg 583)

Page 27: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

#9

What do you think is the significance in the major’s interest in grammar?

Page 28: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

Answer #9

-The major was Italian, and for him this war was for his country. It showed his pride of his home he had to protect it. In correcting his grammar while he spoke in Italian, it showed that he wanted to fully respect his culture.

“One day I had said that Italian seemed a very easy language to me that I could not take a great interest in it; erything was

easy to say. ‘Ah yes,’ the major said, ‘Why not take up the use of grammar?’ So we took up grammar and soon Italian was such a difficult language that I was afraid to talk to him until I

had my grammar right in my mind.” (Pg 583)

-It was also the connection between the two men. They came together under a common language, and it was simply bonding.

Page 29: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

# 10

In this story the machines symbolize the false hopes and promises of modern age. What details convey the symbolic meaning of the machines.

Page 30: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

Answer # 10It promised the narrator to be

able to be able to play football again, the major to have an uncrippled hand, and in it all they were still the first ones to use it. They were promised that the new technology would help them, make them better once again.

“The doctor came up to the machine where I was

sitting and said:

' What did you like best to do before the war? Did

you practice a sport?’

I said:' Yes, football.’

‘Good,’ He said, ‘You will be able to play better

than ever.’”(pg 580)

Page 31: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

#11

Considering that the major waiting until he was invalided out of the war to marry his wife, what is ironic about her death?

Page 32: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

Answer #11The irony is that he went to war, to

fight, where it’s possible for him to die, yet she died from pneumonia at a young age not expecting to die. It was that he was the one in known danger, she wasn’t.

“She had been sick only a few days. No one expected her to die.” (Pg 584)

Page 33: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

#12

Gertrude Stein wrote, “You are all a lost generation.” This epigraph has come to stand for young people of Hemingway’s time. In what way are the young men in this story “lost” ?

Page 34: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

Answer #12The lost generation was the youth

of the time. These men were lost because they fought without morals, without the old dignity that the people had in the old days. They’ve strayed from the old fashioned structured way to fight and judge.

“The three with the medals were like hunting-hawks.” (pg 583)

Page 35: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

#13

Explain the two meanings of the title of the story.

Page 36: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

Answer # 13The title is “In Another Country” It could simply mean, that this American soldier was in

another country, Milan, Italy.

It could also mean that it was a change in culture. He was sent there to fight, he was given a medal for simply being American and he was being coached on his Italian. He wasn’t quite accepted by the three boys who had fought for their country, and he had a complete different look on the war. He was in another country, both physically and culturally.

Page 37: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

#14World War 1 left many people feeling disillusioned

because it caused the death of thousands of people, though it seemed to have no purpose. How does this story reflect this sense of disillusionment?

Disillusionment (n); a freeing or a being freed from illusion or conviction; disenchantment.

[dictionary.reference.com]

Page 38: In Another Country Ernest Hemmingway

Answer #14This story reflects

disillusionment in a way that, people from America were being sent off to a war not on our own turf and dying for a war we didn’t see. Life went on, yet people died across sees.