Acknowledgements | 第1-6页 |
Abstract(in English) | 第6-7页 |
Abstract(in Chinese) | 第7-8页 |
Introduction | 第8-10页 |
Chapter One The Lost and Perplexed Hemingway | 第10-24页 |
1.1 The Historical Background in the 1920s | 第10-11页 |
1.2 Hemingway's Experience in the 1920s | 第11-13页 |
1.3 Hemingway's Lost and Perplexed Thoughts in The Sun Also Rises and For Whom the Bell Tolls | 第13-24页 |
1.3.1 Hemingway's Passivity | 第14-17页 |
1.3.2 Hemingway's Self-division | 第17-19页 |
1.3.3 Hemingway's Impotence | 第19-22页 |
1.3.4 Jake Barnes,Frederic Henry and Hemingway | 第22-24页 |
Chapter Two The Striving and Enterprising Hemingway | 第24-34页 |
2.1 The Historical Background in the 1930s and the Early 1940s | 第24-25页 |
2.2 Hemingway's Struggling Experience in the 1930s and the Early 1940s | 第25-27页 |
2.3 Hemingway's Rigidity and Loyalty to the Just Cause | 第27-30页 |
2.4 Hemingway's Striving and Enterprising Spirit in For Whom the Bell Tolls | 第30-32页 |
2.5 Robert Jordan and Hemingway | 第32-34页 |
Chapter Three The Rational Hemingway | 第34-45页 |
3.1 The Historical Background in the 1950s | 第34-36页 |
3.2 Hemingway's Experience in the Late 1940s and the 1950s | 第36-37页 |
3.3 Hemingway's Rational Spirit in The Old Man and the Sea | 第37-45页 |
3.3.1 Hemingway's Love for Nature and Life | 第38-41页 |
3.3.2 Hemingway's Rational Views on Success,Failure and Life | 第41-43页 |
3.3.3 Santiago and Hemingway | 第43-45页 |
Conclusion | 第45-47页 |
Bibliography | 第47-48页 |