Indian Camp/Annotated Bibliography

< Indian Camp
Revision as of 09:05, 12 September 2021 by Jhary (talk | contribs) (Fixed formatting, order, and a couple of details in templates. Left annotations as-is.)
  • Daiker, Donald A (Spring 2016). "In Defence of Hemingway's Doctor Adams: The Case for 'Indian Camp'". The Hemingway Review. 35 (2): 55–69. The story gives impression of Dr. Adam's as a man who cannot care for the women and just do his job. This journal article proves that Dr. Adam's save the life of Indian women and her baby by performing the operation as there is no other medical help available at that time, if he cannot do the operation the women and her baby die. Some readers blame Dr. Adam's for performing the operation as he didn't have any medical instrument's but at the end both mother and baby is fine and in noon a nurse arrives with all medical supplies. Dr. Adam's said, "her screams are not important" is a form of self-discipline which establish emotional distance between doctor and patient.
  • Hays, Peter (2013). "Teaching 'Indian Camp'". In Hays, Peter (ed.). Fifty Years of Hemingway Criticism. Scarecrow Press. pp. 207–211. The book is composed of a couple of Hemingway's stories. The author uses these stories to give you insight on details you might've missed when reading Hemingway's stories. In the book the author has a chapter on "Indian Camp" were he explains that it is a story about lessons being learned and how a character has a growth experience. The author also explores how the Indians were being treated during this time by the Americans and just the state in which they were living. He walks you through the characters actions and explains the true meaning behind the story, giving you details that can help you better understand the reading.
  • Tyler, Lisa (January 1, 2006). "Dangerous Families and Intimate Harm in Hemingway's 'Indian Camp'". Texas Studies in Literature and Language. 48 (1): 18. “Indian Camp,” described as one of the best in the collection, dramatizes what appears to be Adams' first confrontation with profound personal suffering. In Our Time, Hemingway explores men's responses. Human and animal suffering, and especially women's suffering, affect their characters. The child who cannot separate cannot see another suffering and replaces attentive love with fantasy. Nick never has the chance to learn how to reciprocate, to see his mother’s suffering in a way that would have made her feel compassion for him.