Saturday, November 30, 2019
Lost Generation Essays - English-language Films, The Sun Also Rises
  Lost Generation    Lost Generation    Ernest Hemingway is a renowned American  author of the Twentieth century who centers his novels around personal  experiences and affections. He is one of the authors named "The Lost Generation."    He could not cope with post-war America, and therefore he introduced a  new type of character in writing called the "code hero". Hemingway is known  to focus his novels around code heroes who struggle with the mixture of  their tragic faults and the surrounding environment. Traits of a typical    Hemingway Code Hero are a love of good times, stimulating surroundings,  and strict moral rules, including honesty. The Code Hero always exhibits  some form of a physical wound that serves as his tragic flaw and the weakness  of his character. In Ernest Hemingway's The Sun Also Rises Jake Barnes  is the character who maintains the typical Code Hero qualities; while Robert    Cohn provides the antithesis of a Code Hero.    Jake Barnes, the narrator and main character  of The Sun Also Rises, is left impotent by an ambiguous accident during    World War I. Jake's wound is the first of many code hero traits that he  features. This physical wound, however, transcends into an emotional one  by preventing Jake from ever consummating his love with Lady Brett Ashley.    Emotional suffering can take its toll on the Code Hero as it did with Jake    Barnes. Despite the deep love between Jake and Lady Brett, Jake is forced  to keep the relationship strictly platonic and stand watch as different  men float in and out of Lady Ashley's life and bed. No one other than Jake  and Brett themselves ever learn the complexity of their relationship because    Jake's hopeless love for Brett and the agony it entails are restricted  to scenes known to themselves alone. Therefore, Jake suffers in silence  because he has learned to trust and rely only upon himself, which is conducive  to the Hemingway Code as well.    Jake is an American who travels to Europe  to satiate his appetite for exotic landscapes and to escape his pain. Jake  tries to live his life to the fullest with drinking, partying, and sporting  with friends. With these pastimes, Jake hopes to hide from his fault and  get on with the life he has been made to suffer. Watching and participating  in sports help accentuate the Code Hero's masculinity and provide the sense  of pride Jake has lost. This gain of pride is essential in the Hemingway    Code. Jake attends fishing trips with friends, he visits Pamplona, Spain  to witness the running of the bulls, and he acts as a mediator between  arguing friends. These characteristics reveal his strong character built  of courage and grace. Jake, as with any Code Hero, is a man of action who  spends more time achieving goals than talking about them.    Jake's friend, Robert Cohn violates everything  a Hemingway Code Hero represents. He is rich, gifted, and skillful and  is ready to discuss his emotions in detail. Robert refuses to admit defeat  when Brett rejects him repeatedly. Unlike Jake, when Cohn is hurt, he insists  on complaining to everyone instead of suffering in silence. Cohn does nothing  to assert his masculinity, either. He allows people, especially women to  ridicule him and knock down his self esteem. Cohn obviously can not stand  up for himself and does not take action when he should. Consequently, Robert  has no self control. When a matador sleeps with Brett, whom Cohn is in  love with, he takes out his jealousy by beating him repeatedly. Although  a man of action, Jake, the quintessential Hemingway Hero, knows when to  control himself, Robert Cohn does not.    On the whole, Jake Barnes strictly adheres  to the qualities of the typical Hemingway Code Hero. He relies solely on  himself, utilizes his assets, enjoys bullfights and other honorable activities.    He is an individual of action and speaks not of what he believes; rather  he just does what he believes to be right subtlety without any fanfare.    Jake has lived with disappointment and frustration all his life, yet he  overcomes it and uses the lesson to his advantage. On the other hand, Robert    Cohn, who has had the easy life is the perpetual loser. He allows people  to walk all over him and continually feels sorry for himself. Robert Cohn  is the false knight, who, in theory should be the victorious protagonist  but will always turn out to be a shallow person who lives on the fringes  of life. In the end, the person who does not possess the Code Hero qualities  can never discover himself, and therefore never truly be happy.    
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