Hooking Off the Jab
Norman Mailer, Ernest Hemingway and Boxing
Keywords:
Ernest Hemingway, boxing and literature, literary masculinity, sports writing, New Journalism, authorial persona, boxing cultureAbstract
Boxing was an essential element of the identity of both Norman Mailer and Ernest Hemingway, although writing about boxing comprised only a fraction of their immense bodies of work. Given Mailer’s penchant for mixing it up both in and out of the ring, in physical as well as literary scraps, hooking off the jab seems an apt point of departure for a brief commentary on his best-known written pieces on the sport. Boxing also played a central role in Ernest Hemingway’s persona. He, too, wrote about it, socialized with boxers and—to a much greater degree than Mailer—fancied himself as an accomplished fighter. Part II of this essay provides commentary on Hemingway as a boxer and Part III offers a fantasy ring match between the two would-be heavyweight literary champions, based on a passage from Mailer’s book, The Fight.