Hemingway and ‘Nada ” In ‘The light of the world’ written by Ernest Hemingway Steve Ketchel, a boxer symbolizes a Jesus figure for a woman called Alice. Alice, a 350 pound, unpleasant prostitute struggles with her current life. Her central being focuses at the belief that she had a sexual relationship with Steve Ketchel. This wishful illusion arises from a complex she has because of her ugly and unpleasant appearance. Nick Adams, the main Hemingway character, believes that Alice, although she has really given up her life, still has the chance to change and live a happy life. Steven K.
Hoffman would call this belief Alice has ‘nad a’. Nada is a term used in Hemingway story ‘A clean well lighted place’. Steven. Hoffman interpreted the word in an Essay he wrote. The word nad a translated to English, basically means ‘nothing’.
But further it means much more than the simple word nothing. Nada from the point of Alice’s view means that there is nothing behind of her belief. That means that her life is not based on a concrete belief. She does not believe in any religion; her religion is Ketchel. That arises from her place in society. In society she is ranked very low.
A prostitute has nothing to say in our society. And since she is that low she cant set her goals higher. Her goals could be the goals Jesus talks about. Her goal in life was and still is to sleep with more and more guys. Back to nad a it means that she has nothing; nothing to believe in and nothing to live for.
The Essay on Ernest Hemingway Life Santiago Goal
"The Old Man and The Sea" Essay Ernest Hemingway, in The Old Man and The Sea, wrote a book about a man with little wealth and little friends, but this man has a very high goal, which he wants to accomplish even if it means he might die in the process. In this story Ernest Hemingway describes struggles between life and death. Those struggles still exist in life today, and people from all over the ...
Alice lives in an illusion. It seems that she suppresses the fact that she is a fat prostitute. How much lower can you get? She suppresses her problems with her dreams and illusions. The most important belief is that she had asexual relationship with Ketchel.
That is her main belief. For a normal American, Jesus would the most important belief. Ketchel gives her the strength to withstand her complexes. Ketchel in other words symbolizes Jesus. That is of course very sad. When comparing Jesus with Ketchel, you will not find any connecting.
Ketchel is just a popular boxer among her friends and she knows nothing more of him. For her Ketchel is more than just a man to have sex with. As said, for her Ketchel is Jesus. ‘There was never a man like that.’ , said Alice. Alice did not succeed in her life. Not that it is over, but till now she did not make herself happy.
She is unhappy, she is a prostitute and the most important; she has no belief. Her belief is as stated above Ketchel. As it seems she does not want to change. ‘Leave me with my memories… With my true, wonderful memories.’ Notice how she insist that her memories are true. She is living a lie.
The only person who seems to see Alice in a different way is Nick Adams. Nick Adams is found in most of the Hemingway stories. What I conclude then is that Nick represents Hemingway in each story. Further this could mean that Hemingway himself found that a person like Alice still has the potential to change. Nick saw Alice as a nice person of her own. Not like the others see her.
They see her as a fat whore. They don’t see the good sides, but stop looking when they see her appearance. Nick on the other hand sees Alice as a attractive girl, not in the sense of having sex. That is probably what Alice wanted from Steve. She wants somebody who respects her. Ketchel is a illusion, but Nick is not.
He is real and could be a real memory. This way she could change and therefor change her belief. In conclusion I see that Hemingway offers a solution to Alice. Nick Adams is the embodiment of Hemingway.
If Alice would join a real Ketchel, such as Nicks he would rehabilitate and become a happy human being. Then she could believe in something more intelligent, such as the real Jesus figure. Since a boxer is not the kind of person to take as a belief.
The Essay on Anderson and Hemingway’s use of the First Person
At one point in his short story, “Big Two-Hearted River: Part II”, Hemingway’s character Nick speaks in the first person. Why he adopts, for one line only, the first person voice is an interesting question, without an easy answer. Sherwood Anderson does the same thing in the introduction to his work, Winesburg, Ohio. The first piece, called “The Book of the Grotesque”, is told from the first ...