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Debra Moddelmog on the Wound Theory

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Manage episode 495024583 series 2801603
Content provided by Mark Cirino and Michael Von Cannon, Mark Cirino, and Michael Von Cannon. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Mark Cirino and Michael Von Cannon, Mark Cirino, and Michael Von Cannon or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

About seventy-five years ago, scholar Philip Young’s “wound theory” revolutionized Hemingway studies with a thesis that argued that Hemingway’s entire body of work was a series of responses to the injury he suffered in 1918 during World War One.

Young’s audacious theory invited a slew of biographical and psychological readings of Hemingway’s work. Scholars incorporated trauma theory, ecology, history, and gender. Young inspired generations of scholars and also generated harsh responses, including Hemingway’s own vitriolic reaction.

Debra Moddelmog, the great Hemingway scholar who studied with Young at Penn State, unpacks the wound theory for us and sheds light on the man who developed it. She describes different applications of the theory, its limitations, the texts it illuminates, and its relevance to 21st-century readings.

Join us as we discuss the single most important theoretical model in the history of Hemingway studies and its iconic creator.

  continue reading

162 episodes

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Debra Moddelmog on the Wound Theory

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Manage episode 495024583 series 2801603
Content provided by Mark Cirino and Michael Von Cannon, Mark Cirino, and Michael Von Cannon. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Mark Cirino and Michael Von Cannon, Mark Cirino, and Michael Von Cannon or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

About seventy-five years ago, scholar Philip Young’s “wound theory” revolutionized Hemingway studies with a thesis that argued that Hemingway’s entire body of work was a series of responses to the injury he suffered in 1918 during World War One.

Young’s audacious theory invited a slew of biographical and psychological readings of Hemingway’s work. Scholars incorporated trauma theory, ecology, history, and gender. Young inspired generations of scholars and also generated harsh responses, including Hemingway’s own vitriolic reaction.

Debra Moddelmog, the great Hemingway scholar who studied with Young at Penn State, unpacks the wound theory for us and sheds light on the man who developed it. She describes different applications of the theory, its limitations, the texts it illuminates, and its relevance to 21st-century readings.

Join us as we discuss the single most important theoretical model in the history of Hemingway studies and its iconic creator.

  continue reading

162 episodes

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