Tuesday, September 3, 2019
Soldiers Home :: essays papers
Soldiers Home    Critical Analysis of "Soldier's Home": Before, During, and After the  War (with bibliography)    Many of the titles of Ernest Hemingway's stories are ironic, and can be  read on a number of levels; Soldier's Home is no exception. Our first  impression, having read the title only, is that this story will be  about a old soldier living out the remainder of his life in an  institution where veterans go to die. We soon find out that the story  has nothing to do with the elderly, or institutions; rather, it tells  the story of a young man, Harold Krebs, only recently returned from  World War I, who has moved back into his parents' house while he  figures out what he wants to do with the rest of his life. And yet our  first impression lingers, and with good reason; despite the fact that  his parents' comfortable, middle-class lifestyle used to feel like home  to Harold Krebs, it no longer does. Harold is not home; he has no home  at all.  This is actually not an uncommon scenario among young people  (such as college students) returning into the womb of their childhood  again. But with Harold, the situation is more dramatic because he has  not only lived on his own, but has dealt with -- and been traumatized  by -- life-and-death situations his parents could not possibly  understand.  Hemingway does not divulge why Krebs was the last person  in his home town to return home from the war; according to the Kansas  City Star, Hemingway himself "left Kansas City in the spring of 1918  and did not return for 10 years, [becoming] 'the first of 132 former  Star employees to be wounded in World War I,' according to a Star  article at the time of his death" (Kansas City Star, hem6.htm).    Wherever he was in the intervening time, by the time Harold gets home,  the novelty of the returning soldier has long since worn off. All the  other former soldiers have found a niche for themselves in the  community, but Harold needs a while longer to get his bearings; he  plays pool, "practiced on his clarinet, strolled down town, read, and  went to bed" (Hemingway, 146). What he is doing, of course, is killing  time.  The problem, of course, has to do with Harold's definition of  who he has become. He recognizes he has changed, and this change is  played out dramatically against the backdrop of a town where nothing  else has changed since he was in high school. His father parks his car  in the same place; it's still the same car; the girls walking down the    					    
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