Expatriates in France, led by Gertrude Stein
2006-12-19 03:13:01
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answer #1
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answered by saehli 6
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Hemingway lived among a group of what has been called 'expatriot' writers that are today key to literature as we know it. The group included James Joyce, Ezra Pound, Gertrude Stein, and F. Scott Fitzgerald, to name a few. It was during Hemingway's life in Paris that he wrote The Sun Also Rises.
The misconception that Hemingway founded a 'lost generation' is a myth that persists to this day. In truth, Hemingway never professed to believe in or belong to a 'lost generation.' He made this clear in A Moveable Feast when he wrote: Please see link below
2006-12-19 05:16:23
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answer #2
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answered by atantatlantis 3
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They are all right. Hemingway wrote in the Modernist style, he was part of the Expatriate group in Europe and Africa following WWI, who Gertrude Stein labeled "The Lost Generation."
2006-12-19 04:38:25
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answer #3
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answered by amymame 3
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Oh come on! it quite is like asking if a cheese sandwich is greater suitable than a chalk sandwich. you will no longer be able to earnings those authors through fact their works are completely diverse. I enjoyed 'The admired 5' and all that, probable through fact it pondered the 'bigger center type' society wherein i replaced into nurtured. 'Oh, I say George, do you think of it quite is unquestionably spiffing, or what?' yet then I grew up. Hemingway gave me a various slant on existence and that i'm forever grateful to him. as though it concerns, Enid Blyton's books did no longer inspire me to pass on examining; Hemingway's books did and that i've got not stopped examining because.
2016-10-15 05:55:36
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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That would be The Lost Generation
2006-12-19 03:13:23
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answer #5
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answered by kiowarose777 6
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Modernist.
2006-12-19 03:11:16
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answer #6
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answered by beeeemoe 1
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