The Old Man and the Sea

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By Patty Inglish, MS

Fishermen at Sea (1796) by J.M.W. Turner
Fishermen at Sea (1796) by J.M.W. Turner

Moby Dick in Cuba

Ernest Hemingway's The Old Man and the Sea

The Old Man and the Sea was written in 1951's Cuba, the last major successful work by Ernest Hemingway. It is about pre-Castro Cuba and an old failure of a Cuban angler, struggling with a great marlin in open water. It is rather like Moby Dick in Cuba. The subject of widely ranging criticism following a decade of critical derision of Hemingway, it energized his reputation by earning many important awards.

The 1950's were an era of progress and a time of Cold War intrigue, deceit, and paranoia, ala Spy vs. Spy. The United States became more capitalistic than before WWII, entered the Space Race with the Soviets and initiated espionage and multi-layered agendas against the USSR, the Eastern Bloc, and Cuba. Joseph McCarthy operated the communist witch-hunts that were designed to make him famous as well as catch "commies." New inventions proliferated in America. There was the housing boom and the Baby Boom. The "discount store" sprouted. Project Blue Book studied UFOs and Rock and Roll dominated music. The Beat Generation was running up on the heels of The Greatest Generation. Times were changing. The old ways had to step aside for progress and Ernest Hemingway and his work were "Old."


Marine and Human Sharks

Having been a war correspondent in WWI, he produced literary classics and post-WWII, he failed to repeat his success. After his last great work, For Whom the Bell Tolls in 1940, his writing was panned until he published The Old Man and the Sea. He was nicknamed "Papa Hemingway" as a putdown. The Greatest Generation was called the same type of names by The Beat Generation, but Beat writers had been influenced by Ernest Hemingway himself. Ironically, Hemingway created his own demise by aging after teaching the new generation, in a way, to deride the old and move forward. The Old Man and the Sea was praised, however, and won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and the American Medal of Merit, resulting in the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1954.

In the story, the Old Man is a poor Santiago, who went to sea for 84 days to fish, mostly unsuccessfully. A neighborhood boy, Mandolin had helped Santiago with his meager fishing near the port city, despite his parents deciding that this was not a good idea. After many weeks of struggle, Santiago tells the boy he is going far out to sea to catch a particular Big Fish trophy, a giant marlin. He goes to sea, meets the fish, and struggles mightily in catching it for several days. It is two feet longer than his boat, pulls him to open water, and nearly kills the old man. Eighty-four days make 3 months of 28 days, or a full season. September is the time setting for this fishing story, the season of struggle for Santiago.

The fall offers literary notions of death, because September is the month in which the autumn equinox initiates the final season of the dying year. However, Santiago captures his Big Fish, the giant marlin. Even so, sharks come after the marlin tied to Santiago's boat until there is nothing left but bone.

This is the way Hemingway felt about his critics picking apart his work.


Political Carton - LBJ and Viet Nam, Post-Kennedy

Hemingway and tuna.
Hemingway and tuna.

Prophecy and Redemption

Autumn in Hemingway's story represents a final struggle for redemption by Santiago, by Hemingway, and even by the USA.

The 1950s were a dark ride in US history.

TV reporters sometimes lied to the public about the Cold War. The events preceding the Bay of Pigs incident snafu in 1961 left America looking like a political fool instead of a world savior. McCarthyism also backfired - the famous List of Communists dwindled down to nothing, but ended the lives of many artists, writers, and actors with the ensuing blacklisting from employment. UFO studies and NASA distracted Americans and the globe from these witch-hunts. In the same way, Hemingway's writings from 1941 - 50 backfired and were rejected as sentimental. Then ­The Old Man and the Seacame as redemption, just as the Space Race won redemption for America. The "Old Man" was Hemingway's Space Race type of redeemer. The marlin was Santiago's redemption.

At the end of the book, Santiago returned to port and was exhausted, stumbling home to sleep and leaving his marlin skeleton to his boat at the edge of the water. While he slept, Mandolin gathered coffee and clean clothes for while people gathered outside to measure the skeleton - 18 feet long. They speak highly of this accomplishment while Santiago sleeps, unaware. Tourists look and admire it. This was all prophetic in that, after Hemmingway died, many people continued to read and praise The Old Man and the Sea, even the critics.

I recommend this story to anyone that would like to know more about Ernest Hemingway's struggle to succeed at the end of his career. The parallels with America itself are fascinating.


Music of Cuba

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Comments

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vreccc profile image

vreccc  says:
5 months ago

Yes!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

What a pleasure to be the first commentor on this hub. I love this book. I remember going to a bookstore one afternoon when I was in grad school, not having any real plan, I pulled it off the shelf, sat on the floor and read it in its entirety. I think that was the second time I read it. This is a magical book.

"The Dogders of Brooklyn and Sox of Boston". Something like that.

Jonathan

Patty Inglish, MS profile image

Patty Inglish, MS  says:
5 months ago

Thanks Jonathan, I read it all at once as well!

stephhicks68 profile image

stephhicks68  says:
5 months ago

Patty -excellent. I read this on the bus between Issaquah and Seattle, WA a few years ago. I can't believe I made it all the way through grad school without it as an assignment. But so much more enjoyable for pleasure than for school work!

Topgunmommy profile image

Topgunmommy  says:
5 months ago

While I have heard of the story, I have never read it --- Now i want to -- guess I'd better make trip to the library soon.

Thanks for the inspiration.

Patty Inglish, MS profile image

Patty Inglish, MS  says:
5 months ago

Thank for the comments! This was never assignmed reading for me, either. But it was vrey insightful recently as I read it.

adventure profile image

adventure  says:
5 months ago

I read this classic years ago and loved it. Great choice.

Patty Inglish, MS profile image

Patty Inglish, MS  says:
5 months ago

Thank you! I am impressed by struggling to survive and succeeding, even if it takes a decade. I've read your mountain experience and that is what I am talking about! I'll make a comment over there soon.

moons profile image

moons  says:
5 months ago

Your story a new one to me. Thanks.

Patty Inglish, MS profile image

Patty Inglish, MS  says:
5 months ago

Hi Moons, the story is considered a classic in American Literature, so I am glad you visited and saw it. Best Wishes!

mouse  says:
2 months ago

oh my gosh that book is so boring i read it at skool n will neva read it agen got do point quote comment on it sooooooooooo BORING

Patty Inglish, MS profile image

Patty Inglish, MS  says:
2 months ago

Not your favorite book, is it mouse? I found it interesting, but I can see how others may indeed see it as dull. I like to think about this story when I think about Moby Dick and the larger human condition. So many things seem connected.

Thanks for posting.

takka83 profile image

takka83  says:
4 weeks ago

Hey, great hub!! I just wrote a review of this book.. it's my first review so I kept it short and sweet. I'm new to Hemingway, but after reading the old man and the sea I wanna read ALL of his works!! If anyone can recomend what I should read next, then please visit my book review and leave a comment! I'd be very grateful! thank you :-)

Patty Inglish, MS profile image

Patty Inglish, MS  says:
4 weeks ago

Make sure to read his short stories. One I like very much is called A Clean Well Lighted Place, from 1926.

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