IJELC |
International
Journal of English Literature and Culture |
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International Journal of English Literature and Culture Vol. 4(2), pp. 12-18, February, 2016 ISSN: 2360-7831 DOI: 10.14662/IJELC2015.101
Review paper
The Cognitive Insight and Jungian philosophy after the post colonial Era in American Writer Ernest Hemingway writings
G.Sankar
Assistant Professor, Department of English, SVS College of Engineering Ciombatore-Tamilnadu, India. Email: vijaya.sankar028@gmail.com
Accepted 14 March 2016
This paper
has focused the demonstrate of experience with his own health problems,
influence on their life and writing. Hemingway’s weakening physical
condition and increasing severe mental problems that were bipolar
disorder, alcohol dependence, traumatic brain injury, and probable
borderline and narcissistic personality traits considerably reduced his
fictional creation in the final years of his lifetime. He spent more
than a decade of his later career, writing about illness while he
struggled with tuberculosis, insomnia, alcoholism and heart disease as
well as the mental illness of his wife Zelda with studying of
Fitzgerald's analysis of his own life, from his stories, we are able to
bring together the ineffaceable connection between personal suffering
and the need for expression, between illness and identity, between
writing and healing. As a result, he donations to the canon of illness
literature are noteworthy and – as is characteristic of his career –
credit for these contributions is overdue. Cite This Article As: Sankar G (2016). The Cognitive Insight and Jungian philosophy after the post colonial Era in American Writer Ernest Hemingway writings. Inter. J. Eng. Lit. Cult. 4(2): 12-18
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