Tuesday 13 April 2021

For Whom the Bell Tolls by Ernest Hemingway

 For Whom the Bell Tolls is a novel by Ernest Hemingway published in 1940. It tells the story of Robert Jordan, a young American volunteer attached to a Republican guerrilla unit during the Spanish Civil War. As a dynamiter, he is assigned to blow up a bridge during an attack on the city of Segovia.




It was published just after the end of the Spanish Civil War (1936–1939)


Key Facts about For Whom the Bell Tolls

  • Full Title: For Whom the Bell Tolls
  • When Written: Late 1930s
  • Where Written: Idaho, Cuba, Wyoming
  • When Published: 1940
  • Literary Period: Late Modernism
  • Genre: War novel
  • Setting: Sierra de Guadarrama Mountains, Segovia, and Madrid, Spain
  • Climax: Robert Jordan, Anselmo, and the guerillas detonate the explosives to blow up the bridge.
  • Antagonist: Francoist Fascists
  • Point of View: Third-person omniscient

Genre Tragedy; historical novel; war novel; love story


Language:-   English sprinkled with Spanish words and phrases. Many sections, especially dialogue and interior monologue, are written as though they have been translated word-for-word from Spanish to English and retain the structure and cadence of the Spanish language.


Time And Place:-   Written March 1939–August 1940; Cuba, Key West, Wyoming, and Idaho

Date Of First Publication:- October 21, 1940

Publisher:- Scribner’s

Narrator:- Anonymous third-person


Point Of View:-  The narrative is written in a detached, journalistic style that focuses on what the characters can see, hear, or smell. This description is often restricted to what Robert Jordan can see or hear. On a few occasions, most notably when introducing Pablo confiding to his horse and introducing Karkov’s rescue of Andrés and Gomez in prison, the narrator comments on the unfolding action.


Tone:-   The tone is detached, solemn, and world-weary, especially when the narrative focuses on the perspective of Robert Jordan. There are recurring elements of dramatic irony (resulting from a discrepancy between what the characters know and what we as readers know) as characters fighting for the Republican side express optimism about the outcome of the war.


Tense:- Immediate past


Setting (Time) :- Three days during the last week of May 1937, from Saturday afternoon to Tuesday midday; along with lengthy flashbacks to earlier episodes in the lives of different characters


Setting (Place):-  The Guadarrama mountain range in Spain; several flashbacks are set in a variety of places in Montana and throughout Spain


Protagonist:- Robert Jordan


Major Conflict :-  As Robert Jordan and a small band of guerrilla fighters prepare to blow up a bridge with their limited resources and manpower, Robert Jordan and Pablo struggle for authority over the small band of guerrillas. Meanwhile, Robert Jordan and Maria cope with the pitfalls of falling in love during wartime.


Rising Action :-  Robert Jordan arrives at Pablo’s camp, convinces the band members to help him fulfill his mission, and falls in love with Maria. He enlists the aid of nearby guerrilla leader El Sordo and clashes with Pablo. Snow falls. A band of Fascists attacks and slaughters El Sordo’s men. Robert Jordan sends a dispatch to General Golz recommending that the Republican offensive be canceled. Pablo leaves the group and steals some of Robert Jordan’s explosives.


Climax Pablo returns. Andrés delivers the dispatch too late, and the Republican offensive is not canceled. Robert Jordan and the guerrilla band blow up the bridge.


Falling Action Four people, including Robert Jordan, die or are fatally wounded. Pablo leads the others away, presumably to safety into the mountains.


Themes :-

The loss of innocence in war;

 the value of human life;

 romantic love as salvation


Motifs:-

Rabbits and hares;

 the forest floor;

signs and omens;

 suicide


Symbols:-

Planes,

 tanks, and mortars;

absinthe



Characters :-



  1. Robert Jordan – American university instructor of the Spanish language and a specialist in demolitions and explosives.
  2. Anselmo – Elderly guide to Robert Jordan.
  3. Golz – Soviet officer who ordered the bridge's demolition.
  4. Pablo – Leader of a group of anti-fascist guerrillas.
  5. Rafael – Well-intentioned yet incompetent and lazy guerrilla, and a gypsy.
  6. María – Robert Jordan's young lover.
  7. Pilar – Pablo's wife. An aged but strong woman, she is the de facto leader of the guerrilla band.
  8. Karkov – Soviet agent and journalist in Madrid, and a friend of Jordan's.
  9. Agustín – Foul-mouthed, middle-aged guerrilla.
  10. El Sordo – Leader of a fellow band of guerrillas.
  11. Fernando – Middle-aged guerrilla.
  12. Andrés and Eladio – Brothers and members of Pablo's band.
  13. Primitivo – Old guerrilla in Pablo's band.
  14. Joaquín – Enthusiastic teenaged communist, a member of Sordo's band.

Videos of "For Whom the Bell Tolls"

















Reading Material sites:-

Spark Note's


Britannica


Lit Chart


For Whom the Bell Tolls (film)material.










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