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They go through life aimlessly spending time in bars drinking and having casual sex. They also form superficial friendship that is based on making merry. Although the group seems happy as they party all the time, they express their dissatisfaction and emptiness of the kind of life that they lead (Hemingway & Alexander, 24). This paper looks at the attitude the characters have about America and how they behave like Americans. Jake Barnes is the key character in this story. Jake is viewed to behave like the lost generation which is typical to Americans.
He does not believe in true and pure love and continues to be friends with the woman he loves Brett who left him because he could not get involved with her sexually. He says that she is looking for what she couldn’t have. He is superficial and does not take time to analyze his situation. For instance, if though deeply about his relationship with Brett and the fact that he had to see her having casual sexual encounters with other men around him, he would have even committed suicide. He condones prostitution saying that these women are working hard to make money and this displays the American virtue of hard work and seeking for money.
His impotence has made him loose his masculinity and justice. He now lives aimlessly drinking copious amounts of alcohol and his friendships that he makes with people he meet are superficial. His lack of morality is seen when e hooks Brett with Pedro Romero to get back at Cohn who was dating Brett ((Hemingway & Alexander, 243). He feels that Cohn did not deserve to be with Brett as he was not man enough as he had not been involved in the world war. Is t of American where with the increase in sexual freedom, there is a lot of jealousy between men and this result in people taking actions meant to hurt other people.
Despite Jake displaying the American behavior, he says that he was unhappy with his life. He expresses his views on the uselessness of the lost generation lifestyle. In chapter 2, he tells Cohn that it is not possible for one to run away from them by moving from one place to another. He also distinguishes the cruelty of the action that he and his acquaintances engage in. he also admits that his unfailing love for Brett and the injuries from the war have caused him pain (Hemingway & Alexander, 23).
Despite the fact that Jake recognizes that the lifestyle of the lost generation is wrong, he is trapped in it and does not make any efforts to make amends. Brett is an example of the modern American woman who is independent, strong but at the same time vulnerable. She is divorced twice and although she is in love with Jake, she gets involved in casual sexual encounters with other men to attend to her sexual needs. Traditionally a woman would only engage in sex for love. She is bent on being independent as most American women are today and expresses her sexual freedom by not getting committed to any single man.
However, she expresses her unhappiness from being an independent woman. This is shown in the last chapter where she is having a conversation with Jake as they talk about who they could have become. She tells Jake how unfulfilling her life was. Moving from one man to another is similar to Jake and his friend’s lifestyle of moving from one bar to another without getting any satisfaction in life. Despite the fact that she was not willing to be committed to a single man, Jake says that she never liked being alone.
Brett first love is
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