ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
Foreignness and 'The Other' Videos 20 videos
We were so moved by Angelina Jolie's overseas adoptions that we created a proposal to bring foreign-born children over by the thousands! Think abou...
You might be hearing a chorus of farewells if you recommend A Farewell to Arms as the next read for your Fabulously Feisty Feminist Book Club.
What is Dracula really about? Just Count Dracula? Or is there more to it than vampires? This video addresses some major ideas in Bram Stoker’s cl...
A Farewell to Arms 20538 Views
Share It!
Description:
You might be hearing a chorus of farewells if you recommend A Farewell to Arms as the next read for your Fabulously Feisty Feminist Book Club.
Transcript
- 00:04
A Farewell to Arms, a la Shmoop. While many people bit the big one during World
- 00:10
War One…
- 00:12
…Ernest Hemingway managed to survive and use his experiences to pen one of his best-known
- 00:18
works, A Farewell to Arms.
- 00:21
It’s certainly a tear-jerker, but… some argue that it may be flawed. Is Hemingway’s
Full Transcript
- 00:28
depiction of Catherine a bit… sexist? Let’s start with a quick summary of the
- 00:38
plot…
- 00:40
Frederic Henry is doing his part to help the Italians during the war when he meets Catherine
- 00:44
Barkley.
- 00:48
It's lust at first sight. After Frederic catches a mortar shell in the knee, he's sent to recuperate
- 00:53
in Milan... and by recuperate, we mean continue his pursuit of Catherine.
- 00:59
By the time Frederic is healed enough to be cannon fodder again, he's in love with Catherine
- 01:05
and… oops! She's caught a severe case of… pregnancy.
- 01:11
Frederic and Catherine end up having to flee to Switzerland so the Italians don't kill
- 01:15
him, and while you think it'd be all sipping hot cocoa and yodeling…
- 01:20
…Catherine goes into labor and dies, and the baby dies, and Frederic is left with nothing
- 01:27
but a bum knee. Many critics think Hemingway was something
- 01:32
of a misogynist, both in real life and in his writing.
- 01:39
Catherine isn't the only female character created by Hemingway who, while central to
- 01:43
the plot of a story…
- 01:45
…never gets to share her viewpoint and never seems to do anything other than act as a device
- 01:53
to spur the male protagonist to action.
- 01:56
And let's face it: Catherine's death is awful. She undergoes the terrible pain of labor…
- 02:02
with no epidural!... only to lose her baby and then die herself.
- 02:09
Perhaps this was Hemingway's way of saying she…and all of his female characters…
- 02:15
were expendable. They enter the story, affect change in the lives of their men, and then
- 02:23
get booted off the stage. And then there's the dialogue. Oy.
- 02:31
Gentlemen, try getting your girlfriends to read some of Catherine's lines and see if
- 02:35
you don't get a slap in the face.
- 02:38
She pretty much says, on multiple occasions, that Frederic is the be-all and end-all of
- 02:44
her existence and she is nada without him. Of course, to Hemingway's credit, Catherine
- 02:54
is a more complicated character than he needed to make her.
- 02:59
Not only does she demonstrate that she's extraordinarily brave by traveling to a war zone in order
- 03:06
to care for the injured, but she is also independent and capable of taking care of herself.
- 03:15
Also, her views on marriage are pretty complex, and while she may tell Frederic that he's…
- 03:22
her religion and all she's got, she doesn't exist just to do her man’s bidding.
- 03:31
What do you think?
- 03:35
Was Hemingway super-duper-sexist?
- 03:38
Or does Catherine's independence make up for her abrupt exit?
- 03:43
Shmoop amongst yourselves.
Related Videos
This video defines utopias and dystopias, and investigates how a utopia might become a dystopia. Can a seemingly perfect world actually be a dystop...
They say that honesty is the best policy, but Jack lies about his identity and still gets the girl. Does that mean we should all lie to get what we...
Ever wish you could remember everything that you ever studied? How about everything that everyone has ever studied? Yeah, pretty sure our brains ju...
Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man is an American classic. Hope you're not expecting any exciting shower scenes though. It's not that kind of book.
Do not go gentle into that good night. In fact, if it's past your curfew, don't go at all into that good night. You just stay in your good bed and...