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Hills like White Elephants

By:   •  Book/Movie Report  •  406 Words  •  March 26, 2010  •  970 Views

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Hills like White Elephants

Hills Like White Elephants

Jig's Choice of Progress

In writing "Hills like White Elephants" Ernest Hemingway expresses that having a child is better seen as a progressive life change rather than an obstruction. This short story begins with a man and girl bickering and having drinks at a train junction between Barcelona and Madrid. The tone becomes serious as the two discuss the future of their unborn child. Hemingway skillfully uses the elements of fiction to create a subtle statement concerning life and the decisions it sometimes forces us to make.

The girl, Jig, first demonstrates her tiring of the couple's lifestyle with her comment: "That's all we do isn't it-look at things and try new drinks?" (463) Hemingway shows the reader that she is ready for the next step in life, now that it has been presented to her. On one side of the setting, lies the sun baked, barren hills. Jig contemplates their future and observes "the other side" (465) where the country is fertile and there are "fields of grain and trees" (465). In the images of water and drought, or more simply, of life and death, the author emphasizes Jig's choices. One choice is to abort the baby and wonder about the future of her relationship to the. The other choice is to make the jump into the river of life, which seems, to Jig, to have some promise. This promise is demonstrated in her suggesting to the man: "We could get along." (465)

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