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Yoon, Dong-gon. “A Reading on Hemingway’s Woman in The Garden of Eden.” Studies on English Language and Literature. 33.3(2007): 71-88. Catherine Hill in The Garden of Eden causes pain to her partners since she only seeks sexual freedom and doesn’t pay proper attention to her partner’s expectations of traditional sex roles. The Garden of Eden adds to the canon not merely another volume but a new reading of Hemingway’s sensibility. The Garden of Eden confronts sexual intimacy, marriage, and human androgyny with a wary but searching tenderness that amounts, for a man so wrapped up in masculine values and public gestures, to courage. Though The Garden of Eden, like the other Hemingway remnants, has its psychopathological aspect, the pathology is caught up into a successful artistic design. Hemingway’s heartfelt sense of women as the root of evil enforces and energizes the allegory. (Chosun University)


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sensibility, androgyny, tenderness, masculine, Catherine Hill