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Lit Med ; 33(1): 52-69, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26095840

ABSTRACT

While critics recently have found The Sun Also Rises a fruitful text for reexamining issues of gender and sexuality in Hemingway's work, a significant aspect of Jake Barnes's genital wounding has been overlooked. At least from the time of the American Civil War, a diverse body of medical literature has documented the psychosomatic reality of phantom genitalia in traumatically injured men. Revisiting the novel from this perspective-imagining that Jake Barnes is haunted by a penile ghost-allows us to see this character as something more than a victim of disability. Instead, we might think of Jake's material self as figuratively masculine but accidentally transgendered: a body that others can desire and that still can choose, or not, to reciprocate sexual feeling.


Subject(s)
Literature, Modern/history , Medicine in Literature , Phantom Limb/history , Amputation, Surgical/history , History, 20th Century , Humans , Male , Warfare
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