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Ernest Hemingway View On Abortion

Decent Essays

There have always been many heated discussions about women’s positions in society. Many believe that males are the dominant species and that women must obey their commands, this can be also referred to as the notion of patriarchy. It is morally wrong when one has to think of taking the life of a baby to make a man happy. The short story introduces, a girl named Jig and her older American lover that sit at a train station in a Spanish valley, varying from different emotions throughout their conversation to whether or not they should continue to Barcelona in order to abort their unborn baby. The American, views this operation as a resolution to their hardships, and attempts to persuade Jig that it is the correct thing to do. In a society where …show more content…

To begin, Hemingway represents the first landscape characteristic used in the setting, which is referred to as the actual train station. The train station portrays the valley with hills on each side that symbolize the opposing perspectives concerning abortion. The rails going in the opposite direction may illustrate the two different paths the couple may take as well as the location of the couple in the train station. Therefore when the author states, “On this side there was no shade or trees” and varies to another symbol, “between two lines of rails in the sun” (Hemmingway 539). It is clear that the lack of light and two separate tracks represents the couples quandary; the choices or pathways they can take, and two tracks means two choices. Since the two spend most of their time drinking away and not communicating or reaching a set conclusion about aborting their baby, the train arrives, which shows a lack of communication that the couple had. When the train arrives, it also shows a sense of transition, of being between worlds and between experiences. Hemingway uses environment and setting as the most significant symbol in the short story. Hemingway uses “white elephants” as a symbol of their lives, of their relationship, and of the choices that must be made. The white elephant is something that is both rare and sacred, as it is also essentially useless. When Jig states, “The girl was looking off at the lines of hills. They were white in the sun and the country was brown and dry” (missing citation). Jig states, “They look like white elephants” (Hemingway 539). They are those hills like white elephants and prove to mean a lot to Jig. When one wants to embrace it, and the other does not, the situation turns into sadness. The couple could not even bring themselves to discuss this issue completely since they kept ordering drinks and pressured

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