July 21, 1899: Ernest Hemingway is Born

July 21, 1899: Ernest Hemingway is Born

July 21, 1899: Ernest Hemingway is Born

“No American writer since Walt Whitman has assumed such risks in forging a style.”

Copy Link
Facebook
X (Twitter)
Bluesky
Pocket
Email

Ernest Hemingway was born outside Chicago on this day in 1899. Just shy of 62 years later, and about 1,500 miles to the west, he pointed a double-barreled shotgun at his head and pulled the trigger. A few months after his death the novelist Nelson Algren wrote an appreciation of Hemingway for The Nation:

No American writer since Walt Whitman has assumed such risks in forging a style, and the success of these risks was not accidental. For they were risks assumed in living, and thereby derived a tension that no merely literary risk could have achieved. They were not amateur’s chances, such as that proposed by one of the beatnik saints in assuming that writing resembles driving with headlights out and a noseful of pot. The chances Hemingway took were professional, being measured, and were then governed by an iron control. They were the kind of chances by which, should they fail, the taker fails alone; yet should they succeed, succeed for everyone. They succeeded because within the iron, passion lived. And a singular tension was derived by his control of this passion. A tension which fixed his scenes. In them life—or death—was arrested as in a still photograph wherein the same scene went on forever.

July 21, 1899

To mark The Nation’s 150th anniversary, every morning this year The Almanac will highlight something that happened that day in history and how The Nation covered it. Get The Almanac every day (or every week) by signing up to the e-mail newsletter.

Support The Nation’s June Fundraising Campaign

With the midterm elections now firmly upon us, the question is whether Democratic candidates will do more than merely occupy ballot lines as mild alternatives to the red-hot crisis that is Donald Trump.

As Trump spends over $1 billion a day on a globally destabilizing war on Iran and admits that he doesn’t “think about Americans’ financial situation,” millions across the country are struggling with the surging costs of essentials. Democrats must seize this moment and advance bold, small-“d” populist ideas—not settle for cynical caution that once again snatches defeat from the jaws of victory.

The Nation elevates progressive ideas, movements, and elected officials achieving real change across the country into the national conversation. At the same time, our journalists are exposing how crypto and AI-funded super PACs are spending hundreds of millions of dollars to knock out candidates they oppose, reporting on the devastating impact of the Supreme Court’s evisceration of the Voting Rights Act, and sounding the alarm on attempts by red states to quickly redraw electoral maps, disenfranchising Southern Black voters.

We can play this critical role because of support from readers like you. This June, we’re raising $20,000 to power The Nation’s independent journalism in the run-up to November’s immensely consequential elections.

It’s in our power to build a more just society, and your support at this critical moment brings us closer to that bold vision. I hope you’ll donate today.

Onward,

Katrina vanden Heuvel
Editor and Publisher, The Nation

Ad Policy
x