A Clean, Well-Lighted Place Essay

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    emotional difficulties within a depressive short story expressing his thoughts of existentialism. His troubled background gave him a pessimistic view on life, leading to writings drawn from his real-life experiences. In the short story “A Clean Well-Lighted Place” Ernest Hemingway uses diction, syntax, and tone to support the theme of existentialism. Hemingway uses diction, word choice, to support the theme of existentialism. Diction helps the readers better understand what is happening inside the

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    In the story “A Clean, Well- Lighted Place” by Earnest Hemingway begins with the main character and his co-worker in a café. The two are analyzing, and discussing a deaf, drunk Oldman, who is their last customer of the day. As the deaf old man insists on having more whiskey, the main character informs the young waiter as to why and how the old man tried to commit suicide. They began to converse about the Oldman’s depressed life. The younger waiter is in a rush to go home to his wife, while the older

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    In the story “A Clean, Well-Lighted Place”, Hemingway uses very simple dialogue to express the deeper meaning of the story which is how he sets the mood. The relationship between an old man and both the waiters shows the author’s attitude he is striving to show. Tone, style and diction is what resembles how the author feels. He shows this through the structure of the characters and what they do or how they feel. In the beginning of the story, the deaf old man is sitting in cafe minding his own business

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    The short story "A Clean, Well-Lighted Place" was first published by Ernest Hemingway in 1926, in which it illustrates the concept of nothingness through its three unnamed characters in a Spanish cafe: two waiters - one young and one older - and a deaf old man that visits the cafe nightly. This nothingness (referred to as nada within the story) that the two older men experience represents darkness, isolation, and chaos that causes the turmoil that the men are faced with nightly. The older waiter

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    may be thought of as content, rich, or happy to see such a long life. This is true in some instances, but money does not bring happiness to one’s life. The joy of family friends and love is what brings true smiles to someone’s face. In “A Clean, Well-Lighted Place” by Ernest Hemingway the older gentleman is depressed about life and likes to drink his sorrows away, although he is wealthy it does not make him happy. Throughout this story the narrator depicts characterization the most in many instances

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    “ A Clean, Well-Lighted Place” by Ernest Hemingway is a simplistic short story in which he narrates a scene in a Cafe, where the main characters are two waiters and an old man. In the story, Hemingway hardly created a background for his characters, but this was part of his minimalist writing style. He wanted to create a story that was straightforward to the reader, and in which the reader could easily understand his attitude. His purpose for writing the story was to expose his feelings on society

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    Mallory Cox Period 3 12/17/2015 Comp 1 Despair, Loneliness, and Nothingness In Ernest Hemingway's A Clean, Well-Lighted Place he uses the struggle of dealing with despair to show the hardships that the characters are facing. The old man that the waiter's guess is about 80 years old has attempted in many ways to deal with despair. He had a wife, but he does not anymore. He has money, but the money is enough to deal with what he is feeling. The older waiter also knows that the old man has attempted

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    In Ernest Hemingway’s short story “A Clean, Well Lighted Place”, Hemingway uses a disillusioning environment to show the loss of happiness, and the fear of suffering. Two men are sitting in a cafe waiting for the closing, while another is alone drinking his Brandy. The two waiters discuss their lives as they compare them to the customers. He uses the text to show the different kinds of lives amongst the three men. The younger man is impatient to get home; that waiter has a family. The older man sitting

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    Hemingway's short, rhythmic sentences set a scene without obstruction or judgement of character. Lacking a cushion of language in his literature, the reader is forced to see the bare bones of the world as an outsider would observe them. In his, A Clean, Well-Lighted Place, Hemingway's opening paragraph is void of emotion-evoking adjectives and filled with choppy independent clauses. The descriptions he does employ, “dusty”, “old”, and “electric”, are weary, but blunt. He leaves it up to the reader to consider

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    The Pursuit of Peace and Comfort in a Clean, Well-Lighted Place Despair is an emotion that can rob one’s joy, inner peace, and eventually, life. The desire for serenity is usually sought after by a person whose life is futile and is at his or her wit’s end. That individual is usually left with no other alternative but to come to the realization that if he or she fails at his or her attempts (such as suicide) to alleviate despair, then the opportunity of finding peace and comfort is an alternative

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