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Three doctoral students presenting in front of their research posters.

English doctoral students (from left) Lidiana Rios Barreto, Nicole Musselman, and Benjamin Brothers attending the 2024 Hemingway Society Conference in Spain. (Photo courtesy of Lidiana Rios Barreto) 

English doctoral students travel to Spain to lead panel discussion on Hemingway

Nicole Musselman, Benjamin Brothers, and Lidiana Rios Barreto, three doctoral students in the Department of English, presented their research at the 2024 Hemingway Society Conference in San Sebastian and Bilbao, Spain in July.  

Musselman, who also serves as the editorial assistant for the “Mailer Review” published by the English department, organized the panel ‘Carving Out Sanctuaries in Hemingway's Wartime Literature’ at the conference.  

The Ernest Hemingway Foundation—which hosts the conference—was established in 1965 by Mary Hemingway, Ernest’s widow, “for the purposes of awakening, sustaining an interest in, promoting, fostering, stimulating, supporting, improving, and developing literature and all forms of literary composition and expression.”  

The foundation’s activities have emphasized “the promotion, assistance and coordination of scholarship and studies relating to the works and life of the late Ernest Hemingway.” 

“I am still amazed that not only did our panel get approved for the conference, but that the Hemingway Society awarded all three of us the Jim & Nancy Hinkle Travel Grant, which aims to help offset the costs of traveling to the conference in Spain,” Musselman said.

The focus of their panel explored Hemingway’s common attempts at creating “sanctuaries” of existence that represent desires to live away from war.  

“Privileging the human experience, rather than journalistic or political, emphasizes the human incapability to inhabit states of war. Such a perspective invites considerations regarding representations of otherness, isolation, and other forms of dehumanization often associated with war, along with how Hemingway chooses to present these ‘sanctuaries’ - perhaps as idealized instances of lives free of conflict and more overtly possessed of emotions, like love, that come to imbue the human experience with purpose,” Musselman added.  

Musselman also presented her research connecting Hemingway with motherhood studies in his work, “Farewell to Arms.” 

“I first establish Catherine Barkley as an active participant in war through her work as a British nurse on the Italian front and compare her characterization to that of the American propaganda art campaign of the Red Cross’s image of ‘The Greatest Mother in the World.’ Catherine and Frederic’s psychological game, in which they pretend to be in love to escape the violence and uncertainty during World War I, eventually comes crashing down with Catherine’s pregnancy and impending motherhood. The baby creates an inevitable end for Catherine and Henry’s created sanctuary as the narrative of motherhood during the war was complicated by anti and pro-war women’s movements in the United States,” she explained.  

This was Musselman’s second time attending this conference and first time moderating a panel discussion.  

“What I find interesting about this conference is that not only are participants scholars from universities around the world, but there are also high school educators, independent scholars, and non-academics attending and presenting new approaches and research on Hemingway’s life and work,” she adds. “This wide range of perspectives is immensely valuable to my approach to research and writing about Hemingway. In addition, this was my first international conference and my first time traveling to Europe. Walking along the beaches and old town of San Sebastian, which Hemingway wrote about and often admired in his writings, allowed me to form connections between his characters and about how I felt experiencing the beauty of the Basque country for the first time.”  

Musselman and Rios Barreto holding two certifcates.

(From left) Nicole Musselman and Lidiana Rios Barreto post-awards ceremony. (Photo courtesy of Nicole Musselman) 

Rios Barreto’s research focused on Hemingway’s portrayal of bullfighting as a trope of war in “The Sun Also Rises.” 

“I explored how Hemingway relates the culture of bullfighting to war by analyzing literary devices such as imagery, symbolism, and language, with particular emphasis on the motifs of violence and death,” she explained.  

She added that meeting people from around the world with similar interests as hers and building her networking opportunities added to her overall experience.  

“Meeting people from around the world who share a passion for Hemingway’s literature was truly an amazing opportunity,” Rios Barreto said. “The beauty of the Basque Country further enriched this already invaluable experience.” 

For Brothers, the conference was a unique first-time experience. He shared how scenes in “For Whom the Bell Tolls” framed from Anselmo’s perspective “feature traces of Freudian concepts like the Heimlich and the unheimlich, as well as a doppelgĂ€nger encounter” and, when taken together, offer insight into Heminway’s awareness of the psychologically destructive potential of war. 

“While I’ve presented works at regional and national conferences, this was my first time participating in an international conference,” he said. “It was nice to gain this experience and interact with some established figures in the world of Hemingway scholarship and celebrate a successful panel at a prestigious conference with my USF colleagues.” 

Learn more about doctoral programs available in the Department of English.

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CAS Chronicles is the monthly newsletter for the University of South Florida's College of Arts and Sciences, your source for the latest news, research, and events at CAS.