
Reading Hemingway's To Have and Have Not
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Published in 1937, Ernest Hemingway's To Have and Have Not is that rare example of a novel whose cultural impact far outweighs its critical reputation. Long criticized for its fragmented form, its ham-fisted approach to politics, and its hard-boiled obsession with cojones, this blistering tale of a Florida Straits boat captain named Harry Morgan desperately trying to survive the economic ravages of the Great Depression by running rum and revolutionaries to Havana has fueled tourist industries in Key West and Cuba and has inspired at least three movie adaptations (including a classic cowritten by William Faulkner and starring Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall).
In Reading Hemingway's To Have and Have Not, Kirk Curnutt explicates dozens of topics that arise from this controversial novel's dense, tropical swelter of references and allusions. From Cuban politics to multifarious New Deal "alphabet agencies," from rum running to human smuggling to byways, bars, and brothels, Curnutt delves deeply into the plot's rich textural back- drop. Most important, he reminds us what a very different novel To Have and Have Not would have been had Hemingway not undergone a political change of heart while covering the Spanish Civil War and revised a narrative originally feral in its suspicion of partisans and ideologues at odds with the newfound ideals of activism and intervention that Hemingway felt essential to halting the global rise of fascism.
More than any study of the only novel Ernest Hemingway set on American soil, this book reads To Have and Have Not in the peculiar juxtaposition of literary innovation and popular appeal that made Hemingway the world's most famous writer. While valorizing Hemingway's artistry, Curnutt never lets readers forget the visceral thrills of what one movie adaptation called "Hemingway-Hot Adventure."
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Person
Kirk Curnutt is the author of fourteen books of fiction and criticism, including Ernest Hemingway and the Expatriate Modernist Movement (2000), Coffee with Hemingway (2007), and Key West Hemingway (2009, coedited with Gail D. Sinclair). A longtime board member of the Ernest Hemingway Foundation and Society, he is professor of English at Troy University in Montgomery, Alabama.
Content
- Cover
- Copyright
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface and Acknowledgments
- An Introduction to To Have and Have Not
- Abbreviations for the Works of Ernest Hemingway used in this Book
- Series Note
- Reading To Have and Have Not
- Front Matter
- Part One: Harry Morgan (Spring)
- Chapter One
- Chapter Two
- Chapter Three
- Chapter Four
- Chapter Five
- Part Two: Harry Morgan (Fall)
- Chapter Six
- Chapter Seven
- Chapter Eight
- Part Three: Harry Morgan (Winter)
- Chapter Nine
- Chapter Ten
- Chapter Eleven
- Chapter Twelve
- Chapter Thirteen
- Chapter Fourteen
- Chapter Fifteen
- Chapter Sixteen
- Chapter Seventeen
- Chapter Eighteen
- Chapter Nineteen
- Chapter Twenty
- Chapter Twenty-One
- Chapter Twenty-Two
- Chapter Twenty-Three
- Chapter Twenty-Four
- Chapter Twenty-Five
- Chapter Twenty-Six
- Appendix A: Manuscripts
- Appendix B: A Comparison of the Original Draft of To Have and Have Not and the Published Version
- Appendix C: Focalization and Technique: The Narratology of To Have and Have Not
- Appendix D: Tense Shifts
- Appendix E: Adaptations of To Have and Have Not
- Appendix F: Correspondence Regarding the 1938 "Banning" of To Have and Have Not in Detroit, Michigan
- Works Cited
- Index
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