A Farewell to Arms
Ernest Hemingway
A STEP BEYOND
TERM PAPER IDEAS
- To what extent are the characters in A Farewell to Arms
in control of their lives, and to what extent are they controlled by outside
forces?
- Trace the development of Frederic Henry as a character
who changes his outlook and ideas as a result of his experiences.
- Discuss the plot structure in A Farewell to Arms. How
does Hemingway keep you interested in reading on?
- Comment on Hemingway's use of setting to enhance his themes.
In what kinds of places, for example, are the characters happy and fulfilled?
discontented and frustrated?
- Discuss the thematic importance of Hemingway's minor characters-
the various nurses, ambulance drivers, friends of Henry, and so on.
- Contrast and compare the characters of Rinaldi and the
priest. Include their respective relationships to the developing character
of Henry.
- Discuss plausibility in A Farewell to Arms. Is it believable?
How does Hemingway make it so?
- Show how Henry's developing character is used to present
a theme in A Farewell to Arms.
- Is A Farewell to Arms a tragedy in the literary sense
or merely a love story with a sad outcome?
- Comment on the dramatic elements in the structure and
narrative methods of A Farewell to Arms.
- Compare the landscapes of the Abruzzi and the Swiss mountains,
and comment on their significance in the novel.
- Discuss the effectiveness of Hemingway's use of the first-person
limited point of view.
- What is the role of rain in A Farewell to Arms? Is Hemingway
trying to tell "how the weather was"? Or is it symbolic?
- Comment on the various attitudes of the Italians toward
the war. Use specific characters and specific times to illustrate your findings.
- What in your opinion is the significance of the Count
Greffi scene? Does it have any bearing on plot, theme, or characterization?
- Discuss Hemingway's stylistic techniques in his dream-sequence
passages and in his stream of consciousness passages.
- Compare and contrast the atmosphere of the officers' mess
before Henry's wounding with the atmosphere afterward. Of what significance
are the changes, if any?
- Analyze and evaluate Hemingway's descriptive techniques.
How effective is it to let the unadorned details speak for themselves?
- Evaluate Catherine as a character. Is she believable?
Why, or why not?
- Discuss the function of sport in A Farewell to Arms.
- Comment on Henry's plunge into the river to escape the
carabinieri. What is its function in plot, character, and theme presentation?
- The retreat from Caporetto has been called one of the
great pieces of war writing of all time. Do you agree or disagree with this
evaluation?
- How satisfactory is the ending of the novel? Does it enhance
Hemingway's fictional purposes?
- There is an astonishing amount of drinking in A Farewell
to Arms. Comment on the possible reasons Hemingway might have had for including
it.
- Imagine yourself a passenger in Tenente Henry's ambulance
during the retreat. Keep a journal recording of your impressions.
- Has reading this novel changed or intensified your feelings
toward war? Discuss.
- A Farewell to Arms was written in 1929 about events occurring
in 1917
- Is it modern, old-fashioned, or a combination of both?
- Dialogue is an important part of A Farewell to Arms. Evaluate
Hemingway's use of dialogue to advance plot, present character, and illustrate
theme.
- Comment on Hemingway's use of irony and understatement
in A Farewell to Arms.
- Compare and contrast the scene involving Henry and his
ambulance drivers before his wounding to the sequence with Henry and his
drivers during the retreat.
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