Harlot’s Ghost, Bildungsroman, Masculinity and Hemingway
Keywords:
Ernest Hemingway, Harlot’s Ghost, masculinity in literature, male identity and development, CIA fiction and espionage narrative, American literary influenceAbstract
Harlot’s Ghost is the Bildungsroman of the education of Harry Hubbard. It is a novel of protagonist Harry Hubbard’s psychological, moral and social shaping in the course of his journey from youth—adolescence in Harry’s case—to a degree of consolidation of adulthood. Harlot also is a picaresque of that same education. Harry’s development as a man is marked mainly by his armoring himself against dangers, not by Harry initiating or escalating aggression. To draw on Hemingway, Harry’s "manly development” brings more of the grace under pressure of early Hemingway characters like Nick Adams and Jack Barnes than of the occasional public belligerence of the late Papa, or of the middle-aged Mailer.