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Thank Bob Dylan With The Nobel Prize
December 20, 2016
Dear Nobel Prize committee,
The Nobel Prize for Literature is an outstanding prize that honors extraordinary people for their
works in literature. It honors people that have changed literature. On October 13, 2016 you awarded
Bob Dylan with the Nobel Prize in Literature. This marks him as the first musician ever to win this
prize. Many people agree with your decision, while others are not delighted with this fact. I agree
with the committee to honoring Bob Dylan with the Nobel Prize in literature "for having created
new poetic expressions within the great American song tradition."
Bob Dylan was born as Robert Allen Zimmerman on May 24, 1941 in Duluth, Minnesota. While
growing up, Bob was influenced by Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis, and Little Richard. He was also
in a few bands while growing up. While he was in college he began performing folk and country
music at local cafes under the name Bob Dillon. In 1960, he dropped out of college and moved to
New York. In New York, Bob met his idol Woody Guthrie and visited him regularly and became
great friends with him. In 1961, he signed his first recording contract at Columbia Records and
became one of the most original influential voices in the history of American popular music.
Throughout his lifetime he 's been awarded with Grammy's, Academy and Golden Globe awards. In
2012, he received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President Barack Obama. Bob Dylan
wrote music based on social issues, war and civil
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Analyzing Melvin Burgess 'Junk'
In the literary world, it is a well–known fact that the Carnegie Prize Award for Literature is the most
prestigious award around, and the one that is most sought after by authors. It is presented annually
to a novelist who has produced an outstanding book for children or young adults, one that captivates
its audience, has an engaging and unique plot and is written beautifully. (1) The award is named in
recognition of Andrew Carnegie, a philanthropist and self–made industrialist who made his fortune
in the USA. However, instead of using his wealth for self–indulgence, he funded over 2800 libraries,
saying that – "It was from my own early experience that I decided there was no use to which money
could be applied so productive... as the founding ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
However, they have been under harsh criticism from the public due to their contents. Many believe
that the winners "Junk" by Melvin Burgess in 1996 and "The Bunker Diary" by Kevin Brooks in
2014 were wrongly awarded, due to their horrific storylines. "Junk" by Melvin Burgess is set in real
time Brighton, when the punk movement was at its pinnacle and their weapon of choice was junk,
otherwise known as heroin. It follows the lives of Tar and Gemma, two teenage runaways who find
themselves sucked into the devious ways of the Brighton squatters. Soon enough freedom isn't the
only thing they are craving, and you follow them in their downwards descent full of drugs, alcohol
and destruction. This is clearly not a children's novel, surely? Another novel that caused an
onslaught of controversy was "The Bunker Diary" by Kevin Brooks. Released in 2014, it certainly
caused a ripple of disgust in the literary industry, with its terrifying storyline and horrifying themes,
this was certainly not a book suitable for children. It is written in the style of a diary, the narrator
being Linus, a seventeen year old boy who has been lured in and snatched from his home on the
streets, and stuffed into an underground bunker. He and the others who have been captured are
surrounded by surveillance cameras, where the captor watches them from. They must perform
sickening scenarios carefully planned out by their imprisoner. Hardly a fairy–tale,
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Essay on Obama's Nobel Peace Prize
Obama's Nobel Peace Prize It was announced on October 9, 2009 that American President Barack
Obama is this year's recipient of the Nobel Prize for Peace. The Nobel Foundation states that Obama
was chosen "for his extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy and cooperation
between peoples." (Nobel Foundation) Controversy and debate ensued in the world wide media.
Critics have debated Obama's worthiness. Supporters have cited numerous examples of the current
U.S. Presidents' nobility. Obama does deserve this prestigious award. Nobel prizes are awarded for
Physics, Chemistry, Physiology or Medicine, Literature, Peace, and Economics. In his will, award
creator Alfred Nobel "specifically designated the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
(MacDougall) Other notable past winners include the 2007 winners Al Gore and the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) "for their efforts to build up and disseminate
greater knowledge about man–made climate change, and to lay the foundations for the measures that
are needed to counteract such change." In 2001 the United Nations and Kofi Annan shared the
award "for their work for a better organized and more peaceful world" and, in 1993 Nelson Mandela
and former South African President Frederik Willem de Klerk were each awarded half of the prize
"for their work for the peaceful termination of the apartheid regime, and for laying the foundations
for a new democratic South Africa" (Nobel Foundation) The question remains "What has the new
President actually done in a mere 10 months in office to put him in the same league as past laureates
such as Nelson Mandela and Mother Teresa?" (Savage) Savage cites four reasons the Nobel
Committee gave to defend their choice. "Obama's focus on strengthening international diplomacy
and supporting the United Nations, his "work for a world without nuclear weapons," his attention to
climate change, and his improvement of human rights. In each area, Obama has made a start."
(Savage) Obama supporters argue that "Beyond mere
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Alfred Nobel And The Nobel Peace Prize
When the word "peace" comes to mind, one usually thinks about tranquility or absent from violence
but when learning about Alfred Nobel, one learns that the products he invented were far from
"peaceful" in some eyes. The Nobel Peace Prize was created because Nobel left in his will that his
fortune was to be given as awards in the areas of: peace, chemistry, physiology, and literature.
Alfred Nobel himself started with nothing and ended with a large fortune, and as for The Nobel
Peace Prize, it has evolved over the last century into new ways no one saw occurring in the future.
Alfred Nobel was born into bankruptcy in 1833 to Immanual Nobel and Andriette Ahlsell.
According to Nils Ringertz, Alfred's father was eventually able to provide a "first–class" education
to his sons that taught them language, sciences, and literature. At the end of his academics, Nobel
was particularly fascinated with English literature and poetry. His father was not pleased by his
interests so he sent him overseas to study chemical engineering. In Paris, France, Nobel met and
worked with Ascanio Sobrero, the chemist who had discovered nitroglycerin [a highly explosive
substance]. Ringertz states that "Alfred Nobel became very interested in nitroglycerin and how it
could be put to practical use in construction work," with this new interest, Nobel took the chance
with the substance and worked with it for years. In his experiments with nitroglycerin, many
explosions occurred including one in 1864 that
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Alfred Nobel: The Man behind the Prize. Essays
Alfred Nobel: The Man behind the Prize.
Alfred Nobel is known for starting the Nobel Prize. This prize is given every year to some of the
greatest minds in the world who through their work, help to better society. In opposition to the
improvement of society, is the fact that Nobel's other known inventions brought much death and
destruction to the world (Frost). This combination of inventions helps to pose the question who was
Alfred Nobel, and why did Nobel create this prize to help the world. In this paper I will find out who
was the man behind the inventions that brought so much death and destruction to the world. I will
also find out why he created this prize to have people work to better the planet and protect life itself.
Lastly ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Petersburg where he excelled in his studies, especially chemistry (Fant).
As Alfred Nobel grew into a young man he became well traveled, and consequently learned five
different languages fluently (Fant). In his spare time he wrote novels, poetry, and plays (Fant). As
Nobel got older, he started to help in his father's workshop. While working at the workshop Nobel
learned about and became fascinated by nitroglycerin (Frost). Nobel and his father became very
competitive in trying to find out who was better at creating a "massive explosion" (Frost). Young
Nobel finally won the competition with his father by using nitroglycerin to create a larger explosive
device (Frost). Afterwards, Alfred Nobel discovered how to utilize the power contained within the
nitroglycerin compound; however it was still a very volatile substance (Dynamite).
Nobel knew there was a huge potential for such an explosive but he needed to figure out a way to
make it safer. Nobel "worked 16 hours a day" to find out how to harness the power of this unstable
destructive substance (Dynamite). In 1864 a large amount of nitroglycerin exploded accidentally at
the factory where Nobel worked with the dangerous substance (Frost). Nobel's younger brother,
Emil, was killed in the accident. Determined to find a way to make this explosive safer to use, Nobel
returned to work the next day and worked day and night. Nobel never mentioned the accident but
did move his experiment to an offshore barge
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Voices From Chernobyl Essay
Of nine hundred Nobel Prize winners, forty–eight have been women and only fourteen women have
won the prize for literature. Both the ethnicity and the literary canon of the laureates is far from
diverse. In the past, many questions were raised as to why one person was chosen to join this
exclusive club over another. Svetlana Alexieviech won for her moving documentation of the
struggles the people of Pripyat and the soldiers faced in their lives after the nuclear tragedy.
Choosing her to join the society of laureates is no mistake. Her writing fits into the current awarding
of the Nobel Prize in Literature according to the subject matter, according to the attempts to expand
the laureate pool, and according to the unique way she composed her ... Show more content on
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Sigrid Undset and Pearl Buck won the Nobel Prize in Literature for their historical accounts (Jewell
108). Similarly, Svetlana Alexievich's Nobel Award winning work, Voices from Chernobyl, is an
oral history of witnesses of the nuclear accident at Chernobyl. All of these works were historical and
nonfiction in subject matter, as befits the trend among female Nobel Prize laureates. Additionally,
Voices from Chernobyl was written in a journal–like fashion. Its many entries about the
philosophies and lives of the people who had lived through the Chernobyl reactor explosion are
similar to the travel writings by Selma Lagerlof (Jewell 108). Both works are written to describe the
lives of their subjects realistically. The previous works by female laureates in literature are similar to
Svetlana Alexievich's work because they tend not to be fictional. According to Richard Jewell, there
is a propensity to not award the prize to women who write fiction. Thus the subject matter of
Alexieviech's work fits the current and historical awarding of the Nobel Prize. Yet it is who the
subjects are and what they represent that separates her work from the works of many previous
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The Controversy In William Golding's Lord Of The Flies
When William Golding, author of Lord of the Flies and many other books, won the Nobel Prize in
Literature in 1983, it surprised an abundance of people; many critics, especially in the United States,
did not agree with the Academy's choice, leading to a large amount of controversy. One of the Nobel
judges, Artur Lundkvist, even spoke out against Golding because he did not think Golding met
Alfred Nobel's standards. The 1983 Nobel Literature Prize deserved to go to William Golding
because his writing, complex and obscure, met the requirements stated by Alfred Nobel in his will.
On October 6th, 1983, the Swedish Academy announced William Golding as the winner of the
Nobel Literature Prize, "generat[ing] far more controversy than its annual announcements usually
call forth" (Bufkin). There will always be a disagreement when a person is selected in our society,
but when the Academy selected Golding as the laureate in 1983, critics disputed over the decision. A
large amount of the controversy surrounding Golding and the Prize erupted in the United States.
Many Americans disapproved of Golding because he did not have a public personality and did not
support a cause. For example, Golding is not a political or public man, and an English writer called
him independent and hermetic. Also, Golding wrote intellectually, making his books complex and ...
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Because of its complexity and dark morals, not everyone who read it liked it. For example, in Lord
of the Flies, the Lord of the Flies says, "there isn't anyone to help you. Only me. And I'm the Beast"
(Golding 143). In this quotation, Golding reveals some of the dark morals that he acquired from
participating in World War II. His many other books also include similar morals about man's fall
from grace, but the books contain some positive thoughts. So, even though Golding sends obscure
messages in his writing, he also includes many reasonable ideas
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Bob Dylan Research Paper
One can be one of the most important aspect in someone's life. Without it, life would be empty. Bob
Dylan is one of the most influential singer–songwriters of the 20th century whose career began in
the early 1960s after getting a rave review with songs that chronicled social issues like war and civil
rights in the New York Times. On October 13, 2016, Bob Dylan made history by being the first
musician to win the Nobel Prize for Literature. Dylan wrote the song "They Times They Are A–
Changin' " when he was 21. It was during the time of the civil rights movement, the generation gap,
and the Vietnam War. "For today's anti–war and global justice movements, Dylan's songs of the
sixties offer both a bracing protest against enduring enemies and a salutary ... Show more content on
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The poem style of the song is already very engaging, because he welcomes everyone who is willing
to help with the movement. Like in literary work, Dylan uses imagery to express what he feels, and
for readers to be able to identify what is going on, using strong and vivid language. For example in
line 14, " Don't speak too soon for the wheel's still in spin" (Dylan 14), and line 26, "It'll soon shake
your windows and rattle your walls" (Dylan 26). Dylan uses these phrases to create a feeling of hope
and suspense for all that is to come. Also, Dylan shows real life connections in his lyrics by the use
of metaphors. For instance, "Admit that the waters around you have grown, and accept it it that soon
you'll be drenched to the bone" (Dylan 3). He starts off one of his hits by using "the waters" as a
metaphor to all the social changes that happened during the 1960s such as, the civil rights
movement. In addition, it is evident the use of repetition at the end of every verse when he says, "for
the times they are a–changin' " (Dylan), to transmit his message and to make it clear. By using
literary elements like imagery, metaphors and repetition in his lyrics, Dylan transforms an ordinary
song lyrics into poetry, making it worthy of the Nobel Prize for
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Bob Dylan Research Paper
"The Nobel Prize is the world's most important prize and is–not without reason–the most visible and
prestigious"(Heffermehl). Alfred Nobel said "The Nobel Prize shall be awarded to the person who in
the preceding year shall have done the most or the best work for fraternity between nations, for the
abolition or reduction of standing armies and for the holding and promotion of peace congresses"
(Nobel). Born on May 24,1941 in Duluth, Minnesota. Robert Allen Zimmerman also know as Bob
Dylan, was an American artist. His career began in the early 1960s with songs that chronicled social
issues.Dylan influenced music and culture for more than five decades. He received the 2016 Nobel
Prize for Literature. Bob Dylan is one of the most recognized artists ... Show more content on
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As for this, he was known as the world's most influential singer and songwriter. "I'm really thrilled
about this gong for Bob. He created the anthems, the love songs, and the anti–love songs that
defined the post–1968 generation and still resonates today. He is the subtlest rhyme artist – captures
unspoken meanings in the modulations of his rhyme"(Rainbird).In the song, "The times they are a
changin'", Bob Dylan uses imagery to portray a detailed image in the listener's mind of the
horrendous changes that were taking place in the United States. The imagery reflects the poetry in
Bob Dylan's work. In the first stanza, "Come gather 'round people/Wherever you roam/And admit
that the waters/Around you have grown/And accept it that soon/You'll be drenched to the bone/If
your time to you is worth savin'/Then you better start swimmin' or you'll sink like a stone/For the
times they are a–changin'(Dylan 1–9). Line 1–2 , Dylan is calling to the people, lines 3–6, he is
asking people to come together to see what's going on through the country; that if they don't realize
that things need to change, the country in going to stay the same. In lines 7–9, he says that the
people better stand up in what the county is going through, otherwise the worst is to come. By using
imagery, Dylan reflects the overall theme of the song "The times they are a changin'". Another
literary device used in this song was repetition. In line 9, Dylan repeatedly said "For the times they
are a–changin''(Dylan 9). This is also found on line 18,27,36, and 45. Dylan repeated this to convey
his message to his listeners that times are changing. "Dylan and his associates seem to have
understood what he was creating as an enactment of a mode of being that was not about him as a
person but was the product of something that exceeded him, something searching for expression that
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Persuasive Essay: The Folly Of Big Science Awards
Prizes are a big part of life, we all want to feel special and be given an award, but not all people feel
the same way as you do when you get a prize. It's no different with the Nobel Prize. "All the winners
of this year's Nobel Prizes deserve praise," (Prasad, 2015) but it is not always the fairest system of
awarding people. The biggest complaint by the author of The Folly of Big Science Awards was that
the awards were going to top notch scientists who already had fame, success, and funding for their
research; while thousands of other scientists along the road get little or no credit for helping the
"main" scientist out (Prasad, 2015). The author of the article made a persuasive argument because he
explained everything how it needs to be heard in an unfiltered way. For example, the "Nobel Prize
along with the Dickson Lasker–DeBakey, Canada Gairdner and other major awards, honors the
scientists who are usually in the least need of recognition and funding, which squeezes out
opportunities for other scientists" (Prasad, 2015). There are many scientists out ... Show more
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This makes it in turn not fair for all of the other scientists who helped that recipient receive the
prize. There has never been a single scientist or medical researcher in the history of time to create or
proceed with an experiment all by him or herself. For example, Sigmund Freud an Austrian
neurologist, world famous for psychoanalysis was nominated for the Nobel prize 32 times but never
received it (2015, Nobel Media B.) Also, stated in the article, it creates the misconception "that
science is all about discoveries, when the cornerstone of science is replication and corroboration of
results." Even the greatest scientist have to constantly support and re–support theories and
experiments over and over
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Bob Dylan Synthesis
"For having created new poetic expressions within the great American song tradition," ("All Nobel
Prizes in Literature"). Bob Dylan was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2016.
Unprecedentedly, he became the first singer and songwriter who had ever earned the Nobel Prize in
Literature in history. The plausible reasons that Bob was elected mainly reflect in the poetic lyrics
Bob has in his songs and the enormous historical effects lyrics show. Bob Dylan, a rock singer,
songwriter of folk and country music, was born Robert Allen Zimmerman on May 24, 1941, in
Duluth, Minnesota. Later on, he started writing songs about chronicle social issues, such as wars and
civil rights, in college. In 1961, Dylan signed his first recording contract and emerged as one ...
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"Lyrically, "Tangled Up in Blue" chronicles the rise and fall of two relationships: between an
unnamed "he" and "she" and between a first–person narrator (also unnamed) and the same "she.""
(Barkhorn). In order to correctly express the emotion of the protagonists in the song, Dylan basically
utilizes all five senses, especially sight, touch, and hearing: "I heard her say over my shoulder/"We'll
meet again someday on the avenue."" (Dylan 24, 25). Dylan uses "dark, sad night" to connect the
color with the emotion. Darkness represents sadness; it shows that "he" feels so upset that they split
up. "Drift down" vividly tells the readers that "he" never finds a long–time job because he cannot
find interests in doing these jobs but thinking about "her". Dylan also makes images by using
disparate phrases. The quote "But I never did like it all that much/And one day the ax just fell"
(Dylan 29, 30). shows tough life for people during the postwar era. By combining five senses with
some specific words and phrases, Dylan transforms ordinary song lyrics into poetry, thus making
him worthy of the Nobel Prize for
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How Did Bob Dylan Impact Society
Bob Dylan is an American singer/songwriter best known for his rock and roll music starting from
the early sixties. Though he is more famously known as a rock and roll star, Bob Dylan was recently
awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature. Bob Dylan will now go down in history with other literary
laureates including, but not limited to, T.S. Elliot, Toni Morrison, Samuel Beckett, etc. Due to the
honor and elevation associated with these men and their literary achievements, some people today
do not believe that Bob Dylan meets the criteria necessary, as these other poets had, to receive this
award. Based on the information that I have researched stating what criteria the prize is awarded,
Bob Dylan's music contributions, career achievements, and ... Show more content on
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First, let's see how Bob Dylan impact our culture. A main reason Dylan's music was so influential
was because of the time that had his big break. The things that he was singing about in his lyrics
were extremely relevant to the major events happening not only in America, but around the world at
that time, and people were able to relate to his lyrics. Jim Crowe laws were being abolished during
the civil rights movement, communism was coming to end in eastern Europe, and so many other
things were happening around the world. But the thing that made Bob Dylan so influential on our
culture was the fact that he was involved in these events, not only as a person through protests, but
as a musician through his lyrics. He galvanized powerful movements for social justice and peace
though the power of his music and fame. As Dylan's career continued he expanded his music and
made major contributions to the world of music. Many of his songs are folk songs, or renditions of
folksy songs, in a bluesy tone with a raspy voice. He was unforgettable because of his new
innovative sound, but he took it a step further than that when he performed on an electric guitar for
the first time at a concert in 1965. People booed him off the stage during that concert, but the very
next album that he released featured songs with his raspy voice mixed with the electric sound. He
introduced a sound that was foreign to rock and roll music and continued to reinvent himself, and
music, from that point
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How Did Bob Dylan Impact The Civil Rights Movement
To be awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature you must be someone who has created the most
influential work in literature. In the history of The Nobel Prize for Literature no singer/songwriter
has ever won the award. On October 13 2016, Bob Dylan was presented with the highest award that
he ever will be awarded. Bob Dylan wrote songs that changed the lives of many people, his songs
also opened the minds of millions about how they felt about certain situations. In his song "The
Times They Are a Changin" he focuses on the civil rights movement during the sixties and shows
why his literary elements and lyrics are deserving of the Nobel Prize for Literature. All of Bob
Dylan's writings had a very strong meaning and greatly influenced the listener. ... Show more
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" The title track of Dylan's 1964 album The Times they are a–Changin' has become one of the most
famous protest songs ever written. Though articulating the hopes of the Sixties folk generation,
Dylan's creation has proved to possess an enduring cross–generational appeal."(Thompson,
Jennifer). Not only did Bob Dylan influence the listener, he also influenced many other writers
throughout his music. Some people did not feel that they should share their personal opinion with
the public, but Bob Dylan thought differently. An example of this is shown in his song "The Times
They Are Changing", Mr. Dylan explains in the song that race is unimportant and humans should
not be seen by the color of your skin, we should just see other people. Bob Dylan explains that he
wrote this song because "I wanted to write a big song, with short concise verses that piled up on
each other in a hypnotic way. The civil rights movement and the folk music movement were pretty
close for a while and allied together at that time." (Barnes,
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Saul Bellow Response essay
In Saul Bellow's essay, Hidden Within Technology's Kingdom, a Republic of Letters, he reveals to
us that by the 1930's the media was beginning to make the written word obsolete.
Most of Americans are losing their since of literature. Bellow tells us of how Oswald Spengler, one
of the most widely read authors of the early '30s, taught that our tired old civilization was very
nearly finished. His advice to the young was to avoid literature and the arts and to embrace
mechanization and become engineers. Shocked by Oswald Spengler conclusion Bellow refused to
me obsolete. He had faced the challenge and defied the evolutionist historians. A few years later, in
an issue of The Wall Street Journal, Bellow came upon an old ... Show more content on
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In 2002, only 52 percent of Americans ages 18 to 24, the college years, read a book voluntarily,
down from 59 percent in 1992. Money spent on books dropped 14 percent from 1985 to 2005 and
has fallen dramatically since the mid–1990s. The number of adults with bachelor's degrees and
"proficient
in reading prose" dropped from 40 percent in 1992 to 31 percent in 2003.
I believe that print media will soon become obsolete if it is not already obsolete. There are billions
of cell phone users worldwide. It is much easier for them to get the bulk of their news and
information online. Why would they go to a store to buy a newspaper or magazine, when all they
have to do is turn on a cell phone? I believe with the advent of tablets and e– readers, there will be a
time that print media is obsolete. I already find that anytime I am required to print something, I am
shocked that in 2013 we can't have an e–solution. With newspapers dying by the day, I think that e–
media will be the thing left standing. What motivates us to read? Interest, engagement in the topic,
desire to understand, having the choice and recommendation of those we trust leads us to a book.
How often do we take the path less traveled instead of turning on a computer or the television?
What might our society lose if people read fewer books? We may be slowly evolving to be less
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Literary Analysis Of ' The Stranger ' By Charles Camus
While studying many works of literature, several themes present themselves in in–depth readings,
such as the theme of otherness in Albert Camus' "The Guest". This story centers on a character, an
outsider, who is trying to fit into the society in the story. It may not be the fact that the stranger is
different in looks, culture, or language like it is in this short story, but it is just the fact that they are
not the same, which causes them to be the outsider and fulfill the role of the otherness. As we look
through the short story 'The Guest', and through the short novel 'The Stranger', we can see that
Albert Camus is working towards the idea of Otherness and how it can affect societies where the
'otherness' is seen as undesirable.
Otherness, as defined by Merriam Webster, is the quality or fact of being different. In "The Guest"
and in 'The Stranger' we are able to see the use of 'Otherness'. The pattern of 'otherness' and trying to
find common ground between the characters is prevalent in Camus' works set in Algerian French
control. Daru and the prisoner are the complete opposites of each other culturally, linguistically, and
ethnically; they are set up to be each other's 'other' from the beginning, and yet, they seem to be able
to find some kind of common ground. I am interested in why Camus made it so that these two men,
who are strangers in the beginning, can be seen as comrades near the ending. I will compare these
two works by Camus and find out the purpose of his
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To Room Nineteen Crytical Analysis
_"To Room Nineteen"_
I plan to argue "To Room Nineteen" by Doris Lessing for an audience of professors interested in the
field of psychology and it's affect on women's lives, stating that the cause of suicide for Ms. Dubois
is not because of the social judgments and perception negatively that impacted Susan's domestic
responsibilities but rather the lack of emotion within her life and her relationship with her husband,
because she could live up to the ideals valued by culture and beliefs but deep down she married for
the benefit of others and no love in their relationship or with her children.
Traditionally in the mid twentieth century, women held various duties that were crucial to keep their
households intact. Most have sacrificed much ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Also Sophie, the Rawlings' household worker, replaced Susan's position in the family. Ever since
Sophie was welcomed into the family, she has been more of a mother, wife, and mistress of the
house than Susan, which caused her to feel out of place. "She took lunch with Mrs. Parkes, Sophie,
Sophie's Italian friend Maria, and her daughter Molly, and felt like a visitor."(2777) It gives her the
impression that she was invisible and separated from her family. In addition, her four children
require her complete attention to tend for them so that they would grow to be strong and healthy
adults. "She was breaking her part of the bargain and there was no way of forcing her to keep it: that
her spirit, her soul, should live in this house, so that people in it could grow like plants in water, and
Mrs. Parkes remain content in their service."(2772) As long as she's their mother, she will
continuously put all her energy to raise her children. She could not deliver all these requests to
nurture her children, so she decides to abandon her duties. Seclusion is a major aspect that
influences a person to become odd and bizarre.
Women's freedom and liberation are restrained because of the principles followed by customary
lifestyles. "Doris Lessing draws extensively on women's inner, private experiences and on their
departure from the unsatisfactory reality of life in an alienated and alienating society."(Rula
Quawas) Ever since Susan
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The Fifth Child by Doris Lessing
The Fifth Child is the masterpiece of Nobel Prize winner Doris Lessing. Lessing herself described it
as a horror story, but we can also put it into the genre of social –psychological novels. She declared:
'' I hated writing it. It was sweating blood. I was very glad when it was done. It was an upsetting
thing to write – obviously, it goes very deep into me somewhere.'' It is a brilliant novel which deals
not just with the social aspect of family life in England at the end of 19th century but with human
psyches in general. Harriet and David Lovatt are a conventional and traditional couple who met at
the office party and immediately fell in love because of the similar interests that they share. One of
their common desires is to have a pretty family house in the country and produce a large family of
six or eight children. All of their friends, family members and relatives are completely shocked by
their odd wish. Slowly they start building a family life; they buy a huge house in the country, and
have the first baby. Ever since they have their first baby their house is full of family members,
relatives and friends for every holiday, just like they have always dreamed of. Besides the fact that
Harriet does not have easy pregnancies and all the work she has to do makes her completely
exhausted, she enjoys having a house full of people and to impose on them with her perfect life.
Everything is just like Harriet and David Lovatt have always dreamed; they have four cute,
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Compare And Contrast Samuel Hunt And Margaret Atwood
Samuel Hunt: Both Doris Lessing's "On Not Winning a Nobel Prize" (2007) and Margaret Atwood's
"Spotty–Handed Villainesses" (1994) are speeches which demonstrate a great strength of textual
integrity, achieved through the speakers personal styles of presentation and the relevance of the
issues at hand, holding value beyond the contextual audience and towards a modern responder. The
enduring value of any speech is the ability to persuade with conviction, utilising both the arousal of
the audience's emotions to address topics of significance and the qualities of an effective rhetorician.
While Lessing's speech is directed at the issue of world poverty with a focus of education, Atwood's
speech draws attention to gender inequality throughout literature. ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
Lessing addresses that it is crucial that both are aware of this divide and make an effort to bridge the
gap despite the condition not necessarily either ones fault. The motif of a "doorway" is mentioned in
Lessing's speech, as a means of metaphorically demonstrating a barrier to education that can only be
unlocked for both cultures by bridging the divide between poverty and privilege. Whilst stressing
the point of education being needed for the underprivileged, Lessing also points out that the
advantaged world needs to be more educated too, acknowledging that "reading, books, used to part
of a general education." This forces the audience to think about their self–absorbed society that is
unaware of the extended global community. This feature in Lessing's speech contributes to the
textual integrity as it provides a meaning and value that is still relevant, acknowledging that it is the
nature of human beings to be caught up in their own world, but encouraging change within these
people, as these starving people "may yet define us." Lessing's unconventional style of speech does
not build up to make a point; however makes this point very early – ironically and with acerbic wit –
this is because of her already established ethos, being a highly accomplished writer, accepting
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Doris Lessing Essay
This is a literature analysis and in depth exploration into the life of the great author and Nobel Prize
winner, Doris Lessing. In an interesting journey that shows how her early childhood affected her, we
see how she was conditioned to feel the way she did about social injustice. As a young girl her
experiences growing up white in an African dominated land that was actually ruled unfairly by the
white majority, shaped her as an advocate. . The way her mother raised her, not only showed her
how marriage at that time was male dominated, but it also completely turned her against the typical
housewife and motherly role. She published her first novel in 1950 that deeply dived into social
injustice and racism. She was criticized harshly by many ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
Lessing was put in a rigidly strict convent school, where she was constantly terrified into obedience
with tall tales of hell and eternal damnation by fire. She was later shipped off to an all girls' high
school in Salisbury, Zimbabwe's capital and most populated city. Shortly after arriving, at the tender
age of 13, Lessing dropped out school and promptly ended her formal education. Lessing ordered
books from London that not only helped her to self educate but it also expanded her imagination.
Her early reading included Dickens, Stevenson, and Kipling. Lessing accepted a job as Nursemaid,
and left home at 15 to escape her mother. During that time she also wrote short stories, two of them
got sold and published by magazines in South Africa.
In 1937 she moved to Salisbury and met Frank Wisdom, whom she married and had 2 children with.
She later felt trapped by the suburban stereo type she'd hoped she would never become, and left her
two small children with her husband when she divorced him. Lessing once wrote: "There is nothing
more boring for an intelligent woman than to spend endless amounts of time with small children."
Shortly after she was drawn to the communist movement and joined the Left Book Club where she
met and married her second husband, Gottfried Lessing. Their marriage lasted for 6
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
William Golding's Influence On Lord Of The Flies
William Golding, a world–wide known author, transfigured his dream from an English teacher in a
small town in England to an author whose books altered the mindset of its readers. Kids and adults
have contemplated these words from Lord of the Flies, "Ralph wept for the end of innocence, the
darkness of man's heart, and the fall through the air of the true, wise friend called Piggy" (Golding
202). These deep–rooted words from Lord of the Flies, a renowned book written by William
Golding, changed him from a locally known author in England to a Nobel Literature Prize Laureate.
He won the Nobel prize in 1983 for not only writing many successful selling books, such as Lord of
the Flies and Rites of Passage, but in the words of the Nobel committee, he won "...for his novels
which, with the perspicuity of realistic narrative art and the diversity and universality of myth,
illuminate the human condition in the world of today". William Golding's writing became popular
because he incorporated concepts about change in human nature and civilization when war and
savagery plagued daily life and society.
J.R.R. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
William Golding used his fame to express his feelings and opinions on topics, such as,
environmental issues and inhuman nature. The Nobel Literature Prize is the most prominent of
writing awards because not only is it a significant honor, but provides recognition and fame which
allowed him to sell more books and make money. When the King of Sweden presented William
Golding the Nobel Literature Prize he said to him, "It's a pleasure to meet you, Mr Golding. I had to
do Lord of the Flies at school" (William). Fame is earned not granted, William Golding was not
attempting to be a famous author or to write a classic novel, but wrote to appease himself and this
was taken into consideration when voting for the next author to receive the Nobel Literature Prize in
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Naipaul Does Not Deserve his Nobel Prize Essay
What makes an individual worthy of a Nobel Prize in a category as broad as literature? Is it an
immense knowledge of writing procedures that other authors have not begun to attempt to use? Or is
an appropriate representation of the author's subject that is solely objective, and lacks all personal
opinions? If that was the case, several Prizes should be taken away from some authors and handed to
other more deserving writers. V. S. Naipaul, who received a Nobel Prize in Literature for Miguel
Street, falls into the former category. Naipaul may have filled the technical requirements for a Nobel
Prize for his mastery of several difficult techniques, yet his writing neglects to explain the merits of
Trinidad while highlighting the negatives ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
What did Nobel actually mean by ideal? In fact, the history of the Literature Prize appears as a
series of attempts to interpret an imprecisely worded will.
A comparison with "Porgy and Bess" has been suggested. (C. Pierre) The parallel has at least the
merit of reminding us that the whole world is one. In that hospitable mood we might also remember
Mark Twain's tales of life on the Mississippi. But Miguel Street, in Trinidad, is not really very much
like Catfish Row, nor are reminders of nineteenth–century Missouri prevalent. What is true and, if
you will, significant about Mr. Naipaul's book is that it presents a world of its own excellently. Vivid
characters with tenuous means of support populate the place. They sing the latest Calypso songs and
interest themselves in cricket matches and collect junk and talk about migrating across the narrow
sea to Venezuela. If their attitude toward morals is informal it is shown openly, not covertly. Their
standards of courage are high. They speculate endlessly on the tremendous trifles and mysteries that
have troubled man's thinking throughout his tenure on our strange planet. A room with a view of a
mango tree may contain a boisterously quarrelsome family or a recluse devoted to carpentry or
scholarship. The popular beverage is rum, though the gay blades who enjoy it most turn to the
ostentatious patronage of a milk bar during an interval when joy through strength becomes
fashionable. It had so many
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Summary Of The BookThe Guest By Albert Camus
During the mid–twentieth century, Algeria was trying to gain independence from France. It was
writers like Albert Camus who gave the world of taste of what was happening in their country at that
time through literature. He used knowledge and experiences to create stories and plays that captured
Alergia and the period of war they were in. Camus dominated the mid twentieth century
intellectually and artistically. Albert Camus grew up with a strict belief in human freedom, which is
evident through his short story "The Guest."
Growing up Albert Camus did not have an ordinary life. His family was not as fortunate as other
families. He grew up poor and was raised solely by his mother due to his father dying during World
War I. He was born in French Algeria. His mother was of Spanish descent and his father was from
France (Heims). Camus never let this be a disadvantage to his career or interfere with it. He said
"Poverty was never a misfortune for me: it was radiant with light. Even my revolts were brilliant
with sunshine. They were almost always....revolts for everyone, so that life might be lifted into that
light" (Heims). He used this through his career and it shows through his works.
During his life, Algeria was at war. Camus was torn apart personally and intellectually by this war.
He was from Spanish and French descent, however he grew up in Algeria (Taylor). At this time it
was still a French colony and Algeria was part of France for over a hundred years. Muslims and
Berbers
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Nobel Prize in Literature 1993 .. Toni Morrison
"Once upon a time there was an old woman. Blind but wise." Or was it an old man? A guru, perhaps.
Or a griot soothing restless children. I have heard this story, or one exactly like it, in the lore of
several cultures.
"Once upon a time there was an old woman. Blind. Wise."
In the version I know the woman is the daughter of slaves, black, American, and lives alone in a
small house outside of town. Her reputation for wisdom is without peer and without question.
Among her people she is both the law and its transgression. The honor she is paid and the awe in
which she is held reach beyond her neighborhood to places far away; to the city where the
intelligence of rural prophets is the source of much amusement.
One day the woman is ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
It is the language that drinks blood, laps vulnerabilities, tucks its fascist boots under crinolines of
respectability and patriotism as it moves relentlessly toward the bottom line and the bottomed–out
mind. Sexist language, racist language, theistic language – all are typical of the policing languages
of mastery, and cannot, do not permit new knowledge or encourage the mutual exchange of ideas.
The old woman is keenly aware that no intellectual mercenary, nor insatiable dictator, no paid–for
politician or demagogue; no counterfeit journalist would be persuaded by her thoughts. There is and
will be rousing language to keep citizens armed and arming; slaughtered and slaughtering in the
malls, courthouses, post offices, playgrounds, bedrooms and boulevards; stirring, memorializing
language to mask the pity and waste of needless death. There will be more diplomatic language to
countenance rape, torture, assassination. There is and will be more seductive, mutant language
designed to throttle women, to pack their throats like paté–producing geese with their own
unsayable, transgressive words; there will be more of the language of surveillance disguised as
research; of politics and history calculated to render the suffering of millions mute; language
glamorized to thrill the dissatisfied and bereft into assaulting their neighbors; arrogant pseudo–
empirical language crafted to lock creative people into cages of
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Through The Tunnel
Whenever someone accomplishes a huge achievement, they have stories of how hard they worked to
earn it. In almost every single story of accomplishment, there are obstacles the hero has to
overcome. Doris Lessing, a British novelist, had a very hard childhood, full of struggles to survive,
and yet she published 86 novels and won a Nobel Prize in Literature. In Lessing's short story
"Through the Tunnel," the main character Jerry faces the challenge of swimming through a long
underwater passage. A close examination of the story shows dark objects represent setbacks while
the light represents achievement. Thus, the initial darkness of the tunnel's appearance, the luminous
color of the ocean, and the changing of light during Jerry's passage through ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
When he first sees the "black wall of rock looming at him" (Lessing, 132–133), he is overwhelmed
by the challenge the rock brings. The rock's darkness is a symbol for the struggles Jerry will have to
face while trying to complete his mission. He will have to pass this main hurdle of going into the
tunnel first before he can receive his award. When Jerry goes underwater to try to see the hole in the
rock, "he could see nothing through the stinging salt water but the blank rock" (142–143). The lack
of light represents how formidable the challenge seems, how hopeless and unrewarding getting to
the other side might be, and how the tunnel will not easily be conquered. This particular trial will
require a huge amount of hard work and effort, as well as the personal strength to keep going even
when the situation seems tough and daunting. "The great rock ... rose sheer out of the white sand –
black, tufted lightly with greenish weed" (241–244). The appearance is extremely intimidating due
to its black color and contrast to the white sand, which makes his journey ahead seem even more
difficult than it did before. The contrast of color and light helps to exaggerate the impressive tunnel.
Using dark imagery to portray the huge rock and the massive hole in it, Lessing expresses how the
trials ahead may be difficult, but the prize at the end will be worth the
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Leaving The Yellow House By Saul Bellow
Saul Bellow wrote many novels; one of his novels "Leaving the Yellow House" is about an elder
woman who lives in a yellow house and is incapable to take care of herself. Her neighbors tell her
that they will help her only in return for her house. The Rolfe's are the only neighbors that really
care about Hattie and do not want her house in return. "Leaving the Yellow House" was one of Saul
Bellow's most known short story. When Bellow was young he was hospitalized for a while. The
time he spent in the hospital was where his interest in literature grew. When he was in school his
friends influenced him to write. He became so interested in writing that he dropped out of college to
pursue his dream of becoming a writer. Bellow served as a ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
Darly is a sixty–eight–year–old man who works at a dude ranch. He recklessly causes Hattie to
break her arm and never apologizes. As the story goes on he and Hattie are seen as acting differently
towards each other. They have less patients for each other. They do not like the new changes. Pace is
one of Hattie's Neighbors, and runs a dude ranch. When Hattie is in a car accident he offers his help
by giving her a monthly check. He said he will help if she leaves her house for him once she passes
away. Helen Rolfe is one of Hattie's neighbors. She and her husband go on many vacations and have
luxury cars. Hattie feels bitterness towards her because of the calm life that Helen lives. Jerry Rolfe
is one of Hattie's neighbors and is the husband of Helen Rolfe. He is Hattie's only real friend. He is
also the only person who understands Hattie's Pride. Jerry tries his best to help Hattie when she
breaks her arm. Him and his wife have been taking care of Hattie, but is unable to find someone to
care for her like him and his wife have been. Amy Walters is a self–sufficient miner's widow. She
lives twenty miles away from Hattie. Jerry Rolfe tells her that she should move in with Hattie. Amy
is a woman capable of taking care of herself. She will only move in and help Hattie in return for her
house. Conflicts that occur in this short story are Hattie vs. neighbors and Hattie vs. decision. In
Hattie vs. neighbors, her neighbors only offer help
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Dylan Allusion
"Nobel Prize consists of people who have been outstanding in their generation, winning for
themselves an award that has created both interest and concern in a century of unprecedented
material process, gains and losses, active nationalism, and expanded frontiers" (Ringertz). "Alfred
Nobel, the father of the Nobel Prize, wrote that much of his fortune was to be contributed as prizes
to those who have done good in humanity for the field of physics, chemistry, physiology or
medicine, literature and peace" (Ringertz). Dylan was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature on
October 13, 2016 for his outstanding music covering a wide range of topics. Known to be one of the
most influential singer–songwriter of all time, Dylan was born on May 24, 1941 ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
Dylan's portrayal of desperate and changing times in the 60s was evident through his use of literary
devices through the portrayal of metaphor, allusion, and repetition. Using biblical references through
the use of allusion, starting with the allusion to the bible by the phrase 'Come gather 'round people,'
by claiming he used the inclusion of the Sermon on the Mount, Dylan is no stranger in lack of
beautiful, poetic usage in his song. To add on, the allusion goes to exemplify that change is bound to
come, knowingly or not, to men and women of all races, status, and gender. Dylan's usage of
metaphors spoke in philosophical manners and as well in general terms, but was easily able to be
translated in its appropriate context in its period of time referring to the civil rights struggle and the
hippie counter movement. Using metaphorical phrases such as the relation to the individual to the
reference of a "stone that is sinking or swimming"(Dylan 8), as well as "the battle that is raging it'll
soon shake the windows and rattle the walls"(Dylan 25–26) are all a means of Dylan explaining in
simple means that if one wants to make time worthwhile, then one better start living life to the
fullest, or otherwise they may drown as time passes by. In regards to repetition, Dylan uses the
pattern of rhyme schemes. For example in his third verse, "Please heed the call...Don't block up the
hall"(Dylan 20–22) the word call perfectly rhymes with hall and "There's a battle outside ragin'...For
the times they are a changin'"(Dylan 25–26) with the words ragin' and hall rhyming together in a
perfect duo. His proper usage of repetition does not just highlight the underlying, honest message,
but its artistic message that brings out a clever undertone as to how he chooses his use of
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Critical Analysis Of Doris Lessing's 'Through The Tunnel'
Doris Lessing (1919–2013) was a British novelist, poet and playwright. She was awarded the 2007
Nobel Prize in Literature. In 1955, she wrote the short story, "Through the Tunnel," which is one of
her famous stories. At "the crowded beach" (Lessing 1), Jerry, the young English boy, and his
widowed mother take a holiday. They have enjoyed their holidays on the beach for many years, but
this year, he is interested in "a wild and rocky bay" (Lessing 1) near the beach and goes there for the
first time. He encounters some boys who seem to be older than him there. They go through a long
tunnel underwater with breath lasting long. However, at first, Jerry cannot find even the tunnel's
entrance, so he asks his mother to buy some goggles and gains perspective ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
The tunnel is literally the way of hardship he must pass through. The feeling that he first holds
against the tunnel is fear. While the boy who he encounters at the bay is passing through this tunnel,
"Jerry, after waiting for the sleek brown head to appear, let out a yell of warning" (Lessing 2)
because he is afraid of the boy being drowned. Also, when he finds the entrance to the tunnel,
"somethings soft and clammy touched his mouth, he saw a dark frond moving against the greyish
rock, and panic filled him" (Lessing 4). He has a fear against the tunnel and the fear implies how
difficult his rite of passage to become an adolescent is for him. In addition, the length of the tunnel
represents the scale of the trial that he must pass, and going through the tunnel without air indicates
that he cannot go back, and must move forward.
Third, he accomplishes his purpose and returns to his former place. Although he is prepared for
death at one time, he finally succeeds in passing through the tunnel. After overcoming the challenge,
he soon returns to the villa where his mother waits for him. He has striven for one goal, so he has no
more to do anything now: "It was no longer of the least importance to go to the bay" (Lessing 6). He
certainly grows both mentally and physically, and returns to his original
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Spotty Handed Villaesses By Margaret Atwood And Doris...
Speeches aim to manipulate the audience through powerful rhetoric at the expense of substance.
To what extent does this statement align with your view of the speeches set for study.
Rhetoric is the practice of communication that persuades, informs, inspires, or entertains target
audiences in order to change or reinforce behaviors, beliefs, values or actions. It is a linguistic
technique designed to have a persuasive or remarkable effect, but it is often said to be lacking in
meaningful content; but in comparison with powerful rhetoric, and my view of the speeches set for
study it is manifest that the use of rhetoric is used to enhance the substance of each speech.
Due to the engaging rhetoric used within the speeches 'Spotty handed villainesses' by Margaret
Atwood and Doris Lessing's 'On not winning the Nobel prize' it is evident that the use of rhetoric is
used to enrich the substance of each speech.
The two speeches both advocate for common inequalities that effect the whole world.
The founding origins are a result of the worlds growing disparity of people's rights across society.
Atwood's 'Spotty Handed Villainesses' aims to fight the oppression of women in society and the
need for equal rights whereas Lessing's 'On not winning the Nobel prize' highlights the gulf between
first and third world countries. She discusses inequality through the importance of education and
access to books. Both speeches stem from the importance of literacy and how the written world can
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Analysis Of No Witchcraft For Sale By Doris Lessing
Can't Trust Anyone
(An analysis of No Witchcraft For Sale by Doris Lessing and it's 3 messages) Racism is the main
culprit for fighting among not only American citizens, but those in foreign countries. The issue has
progressed but still has a great deal of improving to do. In recent years and months many have
begun take stands against racism and the unfair ways they have been treated. Doris Lessing wrote
novels and short stories that challenged the mainstream beliefs of those in Southern Africa and
England. Mariam Berkley, a biographer explained, "Lessing's life has been a challenge to her belief
that people cannot resist the currents of their time, as she fought against the biological and cultural
imperatives." Her literature was very controversial because the topics she discussed brought in many
different perspectives to problems in society. Her thoughts mainly tie in with racism and sexism. In
Lessing's No Witchcraft for Sale she explains the messages of white people having control over
blacks, the selflessness of the slave, and ways to deal with peer pressure. In No Witchcraft for Sale
Doris Lessing explains the message of white people having complete control over blacks in what
they are and are not able to do. In the early 1900s it was not uncommon to see blacks owned by
whites. Blacks inability to get an education, live on their own, and get a job prohibit them from
being able to be independent. Many had the desire to become educated, but were never able to do
because of the time period. This is still a problem today, whites thinking they are somehow above
blacks. Blogger Karen Fleshman explains her observations about race by posting, "Americans are
not at all on the same page when it comes to race." It is obvious that things have improved, but there
is still a long way to go before racism will ever solved; if that is ever accomplished. Throughout No
Witchcraft for Sale, Lessing uses the influence of the parents on the children. Teddy Farquar played
with the servants son and referred to him laughingly saying, "He's only a black boy,"(line 49). Even
at the young age as both of these children they had already been taught the difference in skin color
and what that meant. This idea bothered Lessing and
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Alfred Nobel Major Accomplishments
Alfred Nobel was a Swedish chemist who was born on October 21, 1833, in Stockholm Sweden. He
worked with his father in his arms factory; he was very experimental as a young man and went
experimenting with chemistry including explosives. In 1864 an explosion occurred went killing his
younger brother, this triggered him into inventing a safer more controlled explosive called the
dynamite. Alfred Nobel held over 355 different patents for different inventions that made a great
impacted still to this day. The dynamite is Alfred Nobel most famous accomplishments; including
the synthetic element nobelium was named after Alfred Nobel. The Nobel prizes each year that are
awarded are held in categories of physics, chemistry, medicine, literature and
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Nobel Prize for Literature: Argumentative Essay on Bob...
Dear Nobel Committee for Literature, The Nobel Prize for Literature was not rewarded to the
deserving writer. You have awarded Bob Dylan the Nobel Prize for Literature on October 13, 2016
degrading dedicated writers around the world. After dropping out of college in the 1960's to pursue
an occupation in which he was already well known as the times "most loved folk poet", he turned to
singing and writing rock–type songs with anti war messages. Whether he did "create new poetic
expressions within the great American tradition" he has not proven himself worthy of such a
significant award. Such a legendary award offered to many other brilliant writers, should be
received by someone who can and will continue to change the world. This award could help out
developing writers, developing countries, and should not be handed out single handedly. Newly
prospering authors and writers deserve as much a chance as anyone. As you may recall, a few of the
runner ups for the Nobel laureate were Adonis, Ngugi Wa Thiong'o, and Ko Un. All of these authors
shared unique talents in writing. In point of fact, Adonis, a Syrian essayist, translator, and poet,
experimented with essential elements in his poetry. He rebelled against the standard poets to say the
least, "I wanted to break the linearity of poetic text – to mess with it, if you will."
(poetryfoundation.org) He was not born into the wealthiest of families and found himself unable to
pay for education, yet he has pushed boundaries for many
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Literary Celebrities: How Fame Can Alter A Persona
Literary Celebrities; How Fame Can Alter A Persona
At the beginning of the 21st century we are all living in a world of celebrities, who are increasingly
playing powerful roles in politics, economics, and naturally in society as a whole. The term celebrity
has been around since the early 1840s in our society, however the meaning of the word has
alternated in the contemporary Western world. Garland stated in his article that celebrity culture was
already in place at least 2,000 years ago; "celebrity has a very long history and many of the
indications of a celebrity culture were already in place in classical antiquity." (484). Even though
some authors in the 1800s and 1900s can be considered literary celebrities, it definitely does not
compare to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Therefore, the concept of a literary celebrity has been widely written about and numerous articles
have been dedicated to this subject; presently students can even take courses in Celebrity Studies.
Nonetheless what exactly is a literary celebrity remains debatable, and opinions differ concerning
the definition of this phenomena. Professor Franssen stated in his article that; "literary celebrity can
be understood as a performance or a 'staging'", furthermore he claims that "popular celebrity has
influenced
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Nobel Prize Research Paper
Nobel Prize
In this paper I am going to discuss the Nobel Prize. Firstly I will inform you of the history of the
prize, secondly its origin, and how it is awarded today. After that I will discuss the 2010 Nobel Prize
for Medicine, 1901 Nobel Prize for Physics, and the 1930 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
Alfred Nobel
The Nobel Prize was named after a Swedish inventor and industrialist, Alfred Bernhard Nobel.
Alfred Nobel was born in Stockholm, Sweden on October 21, 1833. He was born into a wealthy
family, although due to the misfortune of losing building materials on sunken barges, Immanuel
Nobel, Alfred's father, was forced into bankruptcy the same year Alfred was born. In 1842 the
family moved to St. Petersburg, Russia. Alfred ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Although he started working on IVF in the 1950s it took him about 30 years to make it successful,
and about 60 years until he won the Nobel Prize. Edwards is a professor at the University of
Cambridge England, he also founded Bourn Hall, the first IVF center. Today, vitro fertilization is
responsible for over 4 million births worldwide. Edwards discovered that an embryo can be
fertilized in a Petri dish in a laboratory ((4)
http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/medicine/laureates/2010/adv.html). The steps of IVF are started
by prescribing a fertility medication to control the timing of the eggs release. They monitor the
ovaries using ultrasound to make sure the multiple eggs can be collected and that they are
developing the eggs properly and that his is called ovulation induction. To retrieve the eggs a minor
operation is required, sedation and anesthesia is used to prevent discomfort. A hollow needle is
inserted through the pelvic cavity into the ovary to collect the eggs. Now the sperm is needed for
completion of the procedure, this is collected by ejaculation. The process of insemination now
begins; a single sperm is injected into the egg for fertilization. The egg is monitored to make sure
cell division is achieved. It is now considered an embryo after it is fertilized. Three days after the
egg is retrieved from the ovary, and fertilization is achieved then it is inserted into the women's
uterus. The two to four cell embryos is placed
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Alice Munro Research Paper
Reading literature from around the world is one of the most important things people can do in
school and at home. It allows students to learn the truth about misconceptions they might have about
other places. Many of these stories can also teach students many other important lessons. Alice
Munro is an author who's stories can do both of these things for students. Alice Munro should be
included in the World Literature course. She should be included because her short story "Day of the
Butterfly" teaches a lesson that every student should learn about, she won a Nobel Prize in
Literature because of her short stories, and she based many of her stories on her own real life
experiences.
Firstly, Alice Munro should be included in the World Literature ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
These experiences were important for her and her short stories. When talking about her hometown,
she said, "I am intoxicated by this particular landscape, at home with the brick houses, the falling
down barns, the trailer parks, burdensome old churches" ("Alice Munro – Biographical"). She based
the setting in many of her stories on her rural hometown in Ontario (Munro 33). Her living in
Wingham, Ontario also inspired her to write events in her short stories that were complex as ones in
novels ("Alice Munro – Facts"). She says everybody has a role that others create for them in a small
town (Munro 33). She knows because of her experience from living in a rural area. She uses this to
create realistic stories including "Day of the Butterfly." This idea is evident in the way the others
treated Myra in "Day of the Butterfly." When Munro was in school, she came up with ideas for
stories while she walked to there ("Alice Munro – Biographical"). She says, "I was eight, it was
quite a walk, but I liked it" ("Alice Munro – Biographical"). Her stories were also inspired by real
life events in her hometown like her mother's death ("Alice Munro – Biographical"). It is clear that
her own real life experiences influenced her writing and that the stories that won her a Nobel Prize
were based on them. Therefore, these stories should be included in the World Literature
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Examples Of Cultural Hegemony In Doris Lessing
Thesis Statement
Understanding the facts that are presented by Gramsci, Raymond and Althusser, regarding the
growth of the theory of cultural hegemony that is typically originated from Marxist ideas and the
post colonial theory, it is indispensable to apply this to the novels of Doris Lessing. The novels of
Lessing are written mostly about women who lived in the colonial countries and have experienced
the problems of the colonizer and repercussion of colonization. The novels chosen for this research
are The Grass is Singing, The Golden Notebook and The Children of Violence series. The projected
thesis aims to study the hidden injuries of a class which is hurt by the so called rulers. It is the aim
of the scholar to bring out the elements which reveal the dignity of the oppressed, and the
economism and politics of the author as externalized in the selected novels. The main aim is to study
the elements hegemony in these novels. There is great evidence that can be culled from these novels
about the fragmented societies where gender, race and class determine the destiny of people. The
author uses a conventional tone in her ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Much of her work is concerned with the everyday and inner lives of sensitive, receptive women.
Lessing was awarded Nobel Prize in Literature in 2007. The Swedish Academy described her as
"that epicist of the female experience, who with scepticism, fire and visionary power has subjected a
divided civilization to scrutiny". Lessing was the eleventh woman and the oldest person yet to
receive the Nobel Prize in Literature. The premier and foremost literary honour was given to a
woman who has analyzed and judged human nature in the second half of the 20th century like no
other literary writer, when Doris Lessing won the Nobel Prize for Literature in
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
How Did Bob Dylan Impact The Civil Rights Movement
The Nobel Prize for Literature represents an award that should be taken with great pride and
fulfillment. This award has only been granted 109 times to 113 fortunate literates between the years
of 1901 to 2016 (All Nobel Prizes in Literature). Artists whose literature has had an unbelievable
impact on people are the type of artists to be considered for the Nobel Prize in Literature. Bob Dylan
became awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2016 for "having created new poetic expressions
within the great American song tradition" (All Nobel Prizes in Literature). Dylan once said that he
wrote that song to tap into the civil rights and folk music movement, calling out writers and critics
to step up and embrace change (5 Bob Dylan Songs That Actually ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
Bob Dylan uses his talent to influence American history and culture, changing literature forever. The
Civil Rights movement will be remembered as a mass popular movement that enforced that African
Americans should have the same access to and opportunities for the basic privileges and rights of a
white U.S. citizen (Scholastic). It was the unexpected accomplishments from the movement that
shocked many generations. Bob Dylan impacted the civil rights movement in many ways through
his music. Not to mention, The Atlantic states, "He wrote that song to tap into that movement,
calling out writers, critics, senators, congressmen, mothers and fathers to all step up and embrace
change" (The Atlantic). To put it differently, Bob Dylan was communicating with artists
everywhere, encouraging them to express how they were feeling and that they were not alone. Dylan
specifically calls out those people at the beginning of every stanza, and the rest of the verse
accommodates the reasons for why he is calling them out to help. All sorts of commodities were
going on during the 1960s; therefore, Bob Dylan and his music were very much a part of that (The
Atlantic). His music
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Analysis of William Faulkners Nobel Prrize of Literarure...
Caitlyn Buteaux
Mrs. Parham
English III AP 1st block
4 February 2013
Analysis of William Faulkner's Noble Prize of Literature Acceptance Speech William Faulkner was
an often misunderstood writer of many novels and short stories. ("William Faulkner's Nobel Prize
Acceptance Speech ") It was not until 1949 and after his death when he was given the Nobel Prize in
Literature that people began to acknowledge him and his works. ("William Faulkner") In his Nobel
Prize of Literature acceptance speech, at the city hall in Stockholm on December 10, 1950, Faulkner
uses a powerful tone and effective rhetorical devices to convey his purpose. In his Nobel Prize of
Literature acceptance speech, William Faulkner utilizes rhetorical devices such as ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
This device helps him convey that people need to start writing about emotional conflicts with
themselves because that alone can make good writing. He also uses a metaphor to compare the
writing of something meaningful and important to something not when he states, "He writes not of
the heart but of the glands". This helps the effectiveness by comparing something major and
meaningful such as the heart to something less meaningful and pity as a gland. These were effective
by helping Faulkner relate to everyday situations and thing we are familiar in life therefore aiding
him in connecting with his audience.
Faulkner uses syntactical strategies throughout his speech to assist him in communicating his
message to his audience. In the third paragraph he emphasizes a syntax device known as anaphora,
when stating, "He must learn them again... He much teach himself... He writes not of love...He
writes not of the heart...".The anaphora helps Faulkner be effective in his argument by the repetition
of words to help him get his view of things across to the audience. To also succor his effectiveness
he uses polysyndeton, which is used to draw the audience's attention therefore adding the effect of
persistence and intensity to help keep his audiences attention, making his speech effective. An
example of polysyndeton is when he declares "love and honor and pity and pride and compassion
and sacrifice" This quote helps signify that authors need to write from their soul and
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Does Bob Dylan Deserve The 2016 Nobel Prize?
On Thursday, October 13, 2016, Bob Dylan has been awarded the 2016 Nobel Prize in Literature.
Since then, it has been questioned whether or not he deserves this prize. Bob Dylan whose real name
is Robert Allen Zimmerman was raised in Duluth, Minnesota. He has been singing and has been in
bands since he was a teenager and has listened to songs from an even earlier age. He has been given
many awards for his songs and has grown a reputation. However, being awarded the Nobel Prize
had brought up a lot of arguments and questions on if Bob Dylan deserves it. The Nobel Prize was
created by Alfred Nobel who want to prizes to those who have done something incredible in
Physics, Chemistry, Medicine, Literature, Peace, and Economic Sciences. Winners ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
Alfred Nobel wants "outstanding" literature from the Literature Prize winner which is stated in his
will, "...one part to the person who shall have produced in the field of literature the most outstanding
work in an ideal direction." Bob Dylan has created many outstanding songs which can be proven by
the awards he had won. Biography states some of the few awards, "The legendary singer–songwriter
has received Grammy, Academy and Golden Globe awards, as well as the Presidential Medal of
Freedom and the Nobel Prize for Literature." These prizes exhibit that Bob Dylan's work must be
very impressive to have won so many awards and it further supports the reason to give him another.
This also brings up the argument that Bob Dylan has too much spotlight and "real" literature writers
deserve. In the article "Why Bob Dylan Shouldn't Have Gotten The Nobel Prize" nytimes.com
states, "The legendary singer–songwriter has received Grammy, Academy and Golden Globe
awards, as well as the Presidential Medal of Freedom and the Nobel Prize for Literature...By
honoring a musical icon, the committee members may have wanted to bring new cultural currency
to the prize and make it feel relevant to a younger generation. But there are many ways they could
have accomplished this while still honoring a writer." This article is expressing that awarding a
writer would be more appropriate for the Nobel Prize and that Dylan has already won plenty of
awards. However, this would be saying that someone who is passionate and elaborate in their work
all time should not be recognized because someone else wants a chance. This is saying that a person
who gets 100 as their grade all the time should not be credit because someone who got a 90 deserves
a chance. In
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Albert Camus Research Paper
"Albert Camus – Biographical." Nobelprize.org, Nobel Prize,
www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/literature/laureates/1957/camus–bio.html.
From the Nobel Prize website itself, the passage describes briefly and clearly elaborates on Albert
Camus, mostly in the focus of his career, writing and otherwise his involvement in theatre. The main
purpose of this piece is to inform people who are interested in the Nobel Prize selection and in
Camus himself about him, providing a short synopsis on his background and his movement in his
career from political journalism to writing essays, stories, and furthermore novels. Growing up,
Camus expressed a deep interest to philosophy, which later prevailed in all of his publications as
well as his Algerian upbringing. Although his fascinations to the mind and thought were definitely
present, he was unable to attend university for philosophy; however, luck struck him when he was
able to begin working as a columnist and later dabbled in theatre. In many of his works, he utilized
the notion of absurdum and absence, seen heavily in The Myth of Sisyphus and further elaborated
upon in the main character of Meursault in The Stranger. By gathering the pieces that occurred in
Camus's life, it becomes clearer as to why he wrote the story the way it is and what it means, to him
and to others.
"Award Ceremony Speech: The Nobel Prize in Literature 1957." Nobelprize.org, Nobel Prize,
www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/literature/laureates/1957/press.html.
In this
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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Why Bob Dylan Deserved the Nobel Prize in Literature

  • 1. Thank Bob Dylan With The Nobel Prize December 20, 2016 Dear Nobel Prize committee, The Nobel Prize for Literature is an outstanding prize that honors extraordinary people for their works in literature. It honors people that have changed literature. On October 13, 2016 you awarded Bob Dylan with the Nobel Prize in Literature. This marks him as the first musician ever to win this prize. Many people agree with your decision, while others are not delighted with this fact. I agree with the committee to honoring Bob Dylan with the Nobel Prize in literature "for having created new poetic expressions within the great American song tradition." Bob Dylan was born as Robert Allen Zimmerman on May 24, 1941 in Duluth, Minnesota. While growing up, Bob was influenced by Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis, and Little Richard. He was also in a few bands while growing up. While he was in college he began performing folk and country music at local cafes under the name Bob Dillon. In 1960, he dropped out of college and moved to New York. In New York, Bob met his idol Woody Guthrie and visited him regularly and became great friends with him. In 1961, he signed his first recording contract at Columbia Records and became one of the most original influential voices in the history of American popular music. Throughout his lifetime he 's been awarded with Grammy's, Academy and Golden Globe awards. In 2012, he received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President Barack Obama. Bob Dylan wrote music based on social issues, war and civil ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2.
  • 3. Analyzing Melvin Burgess 'Junk' In the literary world, it is a well–known fact that the Carnegie Prize Award for Literature is the most prestigious award around, and the one that is most sought after by authors. It is presented annually to a novelist who has produced an outstanding book for children or young adults, one that captivates its audience, has an engaging and unique plot and is written beautifully. (1) The award is named in recognition of Andrew Carnegie, a philanthropist and self–made industrialist who made his fortune in the USA. However, instead of using his wealth for self–indulgence, he funded over 2800 libraries, saying that – "It was from my own early experience that I decided there was no use to which money could be applied so productive... as the founding ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... However, they have been under harsh criticism from the public due to their contents. Many believe that the winners "Junk" by Melvin Burgess in 1996 and "The Bunker Diary" by Kevin Brooks in 2014 were wrongly awarded, due to their horrific storylines. "Junk" by Melvin Burgess is set in real time Brighton, when the punk movement was at its pinnacle and their weapon of choice was junk, otherwise known as heroin. It follows the lives of Tar and Gemma, two teenage runaways who find themselves sucked into the devious ways of the Brighton squatters. Soon enough freedom isn't the only thing they are craving, and you follow them in their downwards descent full of drugs, alcohol and destruction. This is clearly not a children's novel, surely? Another novel that caused an onslaught of controversy was "The Bunker Diary" by Kevin Brooks. Released in 2014, it certainly caused a ripple of disgust in the literary industry, with its terrifying storyline and horrifying themes, this was certainly not a book suitable for children. It is written in the style of a diary, the narrator being Linus, a seventeen year old boy who has been lured in and snatched from his home on the streets, and stuffed into an underground bunker. He and the others who have been captured are surrounded by surveillance cameras, where the captor watches them from. They must perform sickening scenarios carefully planned out by their imprisoner. Hardly a fairy–tale, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 5. Essay on Obama's Nobel Peace Prize Obama's Nobel Peace Prize It was announced on October 9, 2009 that American President Barack Obama is this year's recipient of the Nobel Prize for Peace. The Nobel Foundation states that Obama was chosen "for his extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy and cooperation between peoples." (Nobel Foundation) Controversy and debate ensued in the world wide media. Critics have debated Obama's worthiness. Supporters have cited numerous examples of the current U.S. Presidents' nobility. Obama does deserve this prestigious award. Nobel prizes are awarded for Physics, Chemistry, Physiology or Medicine, Literature, Peace, and Economics. In his will, award creator Alfred Nobel "specifically designated the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... (MacDougall) Other notable past winners include the 2007 winners Al Gore and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) "for their efforts to build up and disseminate greater knowledge about man–made climate change, and to lay the foundations for the measures that are needed to counteract such change." In 2001 the United Nations and Kofi Annan shared the award "for their work for a better organized and more peaceful world" and, in 1993 Nelson Mandela and former South African President Frederik Willem de Klerk were each awarded half of the prize "for their work for the peaceful termination of the apartheid regime, and for laying the foundations for a new democratic South Africa" (Nobel Foundation) The question remains "What has the new President actually done in a mere 10 months in office to put him in the same league as past laureates such as Nelson Mandela and Mother Teresa?" (Savage) Savage cites four reasons the Nobel Committee gave to defend their choice. "Obama's focus on strengthening international diplomacy and supporting the United Nations, his "work for a world without nuclear weapons," his attention to climate change, and his improvement of human rights. In each area, Obama has made a start." (Savage) Obama supporters argue that "Beyond mere ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 7. Alfred Nobel And The Nobel Peace Prize When the word "peace" comes to mind, one usually thinks about tranquility or absent from violence but when learning about Alfred Nobel, one learns that the products he invented were far from "peaceful" in some eyes. The Nobel Peace Prize was created because Nobel left in his will that his fortune was to be given as awards in the areas of: peace, chemistry, physiology, and literature. Alfred Nobel himself started with nothing and ended with a large fortune, and as for The Nobel Peace Prize, it has evolved over the last century into new ways no one saw occurring in the future. Alfred Nobel was born into bankruptcy in 1833 to Immanual Nobel and Andriette Ahlsell. According to Nils Ringertz, Alfred's father was eventually able to provide a "first–class" education to his sons that taught them language, sciences, and literature. At the end of his academics, Nobel was particularly fascinated with English literature and poetry. His father was not pleased by his interests so he sent him overseas to study chemical engineering. In Paris, France, Nobel met and worked with Ascanio Sobrero, the chemist who had discovered nitroglycerin [a highly explosive substance]. Ringertz states that "Alfred Nobel became very interested in nitroglycerin and how it could be put to practical use in construction work," with this new interest, Nobel took the chance with the substance and worked with it for years. In his experiments with nitroglycerin, many explosions occurred including one in 1864 that ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 9. Alfred Nobel: The Man behind the Prize. Essays Alfred Nobel: The Man behind the Prize. Alfred Nobel is known for starting the Nobel Prize. This prize is given every year to some of the greatest minds in the world who through their work, help to better society. In opposition to the improvement of society, is the fact that Nobel's other known inventions brought much death and destruction to the world (Frost). This combination of inventions helps to pose the question who was Alfred Nobel, and why did Nobel create this prize to help the world. In this paper I will find out who was the man behind the inventions that brought so much death and destruction to the world. I will also find out why he created this prize to have people work to better the planet and protect life itself. Lastly ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Petersburg where he excelled in his studies, especially chemistry (Fant). As Alfred Nobel grew into a young man he became well traveled, and consequently learned five different languages fluently (Fant). In his spare time he wrote novels, poetry, and plays (Fant). As Nobel got older, he started to help in his father's workshop. While working at the workshop Nobel learned about and became fascinated by nitroglycerin (Frost). Nobel and his father became very competitive in trying to find out who was better at creating a "massive explosion" (Frost). Young Nobel finally won the competition with his father by using nitroglycerin to create a larger explosive device (Frost). Afterwards, Alfred Nobel discovered how to utilize the power contained within the nitroglycerin compound; however it was still a very volatile substance (Dynamite). Nobel knew there was a huge potential for such an explosive but he needed to figure out a way to make it safer. Nobel "worked 16 hours a day" to find out how to harness the power of this unstable destructive substance (Dynamite). In 1864 a large amount of nitroglycerin exploded accidentally at the factory where Nobel worked with the dangerous substance (Frost). Nobel's younger brother, Emil, was killed in the accident. Determined to find a way to make this explosive safer to use, Nobel returned to work the next day and worked day and night. Nobel never mentioned the accident but did move his experiment to an offshore barge ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 11. Voices From Chernobyl Essay Of nine hundred Nobel Prize winners, forty–eight have been women and only fourteen women have won the prize for literature. Both the ethnicity and the literary canon of the laureates is far from diverse. In the past, many questions were raised as to why one person was chosen to join this exclusive club over another. Svetlana Alexieviech won for her moving documentation of the struggles the people of Pripyat and the soldiers faced in their lives after the nuclear tragedy. Choosing her to join the society of laureates is no mistake. Her writing fits into the current awarding of the Nobel Prize in Literature according to the subject matter, according to the attempts to expand the laureate pool, and according to the unique way she composed her ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Sigrid Undset and Pearl Buck won the Nobel Prize in Literature for their historical accounts (Jewell 108). Similarly, Svetlana Alexievich's Nobel Award winning work, Voices from Chernobyl, is an oral history of witnesses of the nuclear accident at Chernobyl. All of these works were historical and nonfiction in subject matter, as befits the trend among female Nobel Prize laureates. Additionally, Voices from Chernobyl was written in a journal–like fashion. Its many entries about the philosophies and lives of the people who had lived through the Chernobyl reactor explosion are similar to the travel writings by Selma Lagerlof (Jewell 108). Both works are written to describe the lives of their subjects realistically. The previous works by female laureates in literature are similar to Svetlana Alexievich's work because they tend not to be fictional. According to Richard Jewell, there is a propensity to not award the prize to women who write fiction. Thus the subject matter of Alexieviech's work fits the current and historical awarding of the Nobel Prize. Yet it is who the subjects are and what they represent that separates her work from the works of many previous ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 13. The Controversy In William Golding's Lord Of The Flies When William Golding, author of Lord of the Flies and many other books, won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1983, it surprised an abundance of people; many critics, especially in the United States, did not agree with the Academy's choice, leading to a large amount of controversy. One of the Nobel judges, Artur Lundkvist, even spoke out against Golding because he did not think Golding met Alfred Nobel's standards. The 1983 Nobel Literature Prize deserved to go to William Golding because his writing, complex and obscure, met the requirements stated by Alfred Nobel in his will. On October 6th, 1983, the Swedish Academy announced William Golding as the winner of the Nobel Literature Prize, "generat[ing] far more controversy than its annual announcements usually call forth" (Bufkin). There will always be a disagreement when a person is selected in our society, but when the Academy selected Golding as the laureate in 1983, critics disputed over the decision. A large amount of the controversy surrounding Golding and the Prize erupted in the United States. Many Americans disapproved of Golding because he did not have a public personality and did not support a cause. For example, Golding is not a political or public man, and an English writer called him independent and hermetic. Also, Golding wrote intellectually, making his books complex and ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Because of its complexity and dark morals, not everyone who read it liked it. For example, in Lord of the Flies, the Lord of the Flies says, "there isn't anyone to help you. Only me. And I'm the Beast" (Golding 143). In this quotation, Golding reveals some of the dark morals that he acquired from participating in World War II. His many other books also include similar morals about man's fall from grace, but the books contain some positive thoughts. So, even though Golding sends obscure messages in his writing, he also includes many reasonable ideas ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 15. Bob Dylan Research Paper One can be one of the most important aspect in someone's life. Without it, life would be empty. Bob Dylan is one of the most influential singer–songwriters of the 20th century whose career began in the early 1960s after getting a rave review with songs that chronicled social issues like war and civil rights in the New York Times. On October 13, 2016, Bob Dylan made history by being the first musician to win the Nobel Prize for Literature. Dylan wrote the song "They Times They Are A– Changin' " when he was 21. It was during the time of the civil rights movement, the generation gap, and the Vietnam War. "For today's anti–war and global justice movements, Dylan's songs of the sixties offer both a bracing protest against enduring enemies and a salutary ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The poem style of the song is already very engaging, because he welcomes everyone who is willing to help with the movement. Like in literary work, Dylan uses imagery to express what he feels, and for readers to be able to identify what is going on, using strong and vivid language. For example in line 14, " Don't speak too soon for the wheel's still in spin" (Dylan 14), and line 26, "It'll soon shake your windows and rattle your walls" (Dylan 26). Dylan uses these phrases to create a feeling of hope and suspense for all that is to come. Also, Dylan shows real life connections in his lyrics by the use of metaphors. For instance, "Admit that the waters around you have grown, and accept it it that soon you'll be drenched to the bone" (Dylan 3). He starts off one of his hits by using "the waters" as a metaphor to all the social changes that happened during the 1960s such as, the civil rights movement. In addition, it is evident the use of repetition at the end of every verse when he says, "for the times they are a–changin' " (Dylan), to transmit his message and to make it clear. By using literary elements like imagery, metaphors and repetition in his lyrics, Dylan transforms an ordinary song lyrics into poetry, making it worthy of the Nobel Prize for ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 17. Bob Dylan Research Paper "The Nobel Prize is the world's most important prize and is–not without reason–the most visible and prestigious"(Heffermehl). Alfred Nobel said "The Nobel Prize shall be awarded to the person who in the preceding year shall have done the most or the best work for fraternity between nations, for the abolition or reduction of standing armies and for the holding and promotion of peace congresses" (Nobel). Born on May 24,1941 in Duluth, Minnesota. Robert Allen Zimmerman also know as Bob Dylan, was an American artist. His career began in the early 1960s with songs that chronicled social issues.Dylan influenced music and culture for more than five decades. He received the 2016 Nobel Prize for Literature. Bob Dylan is one of the most recognized artists ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... As for this, he was known as the world's most influential singer and songwriter. "I'm really thrilled about this gong for Bob. He created the anthems, the love songs, and the anti–love songs that defined the post–1968 generation and still resonates today. He is the subtlest rhyme artist – captures unspoken meanings in the modulations of his rhyme"(Rainbird).In the song, "The times they are a changin'", Bob Dylan uses imagery to portray a detailed image in the listener's mind of the horrendous changes that were taking place in the United States. The imagery reflects the poetry in Bob Dylan's work. In the first stanza, "Come gather 'round people/Wherever you roam/And admit that the waters/Around you have grown/And accept it that soon/You'll be drenched to the bone/If your time to you is worth savin'/Then you better start swimmin' or you'll sink like a stone/For the times they are a–changin'(Dylan 1–9). Line 1–2 , Dylan is calling to the people, lines 3–6, he is asking people to come together to see what's going on through the country; that if they don't realize that things need to change, the country in going to stay the same. In lines 7–9, he says that the people better stand up in what the county is going through, otherwise the worst is to come. By using imagery, Dylan reflects the overall theme of the song "The times they are a changin'". Another literary device used in this song was repetition. In line 9, Dylan repeatedly said "For the times they are a–changin''(Dylan 9). This is also found on line 18,27,36, and 45. Dylan repeated this to convey his message to his listeners that times are changing. "Dylan and his associates seem to have understood what he was creating as an enactment of a mode of being that was not about him as a person but was the product of something that exceeded him, something searching for expression that ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 19. Persuasive Essay: The Folly Of Big Science Awards Prizes are a big part of life, we all want to feel special and be given an award, but not all people feel the same way as you do when you get a prize. It's no different with the Nobel Prize. "All the winners of this year's Nobel Prizes deserve praise," (Prasad, 2015) but it is not always the fairest system of awarding people. The biggest complaint by the author of The Folly of Big Science Awards was that the awards were going to top notch scientists who already had fame, success, and funding for their research; while thousands of other scientists along the road get little or no credit for helping the "main" scientist out (Prasad, 2015). The author of the article made a persuasive argument because he explained everything how it needs to be heard in an unfiltered way. For example, the "Nobel Prize along with the Dickson Lasker–DeBakey, Canada Gairdner and other major awards, honors the scientists who are usually in the least need of recognition and funding, which squeezes out opportunities for other scientists" (Prasad, 2015). There are many scientists out ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This makes it in turn not fair for all of the other scientists who helped that recipient receive the prize. There has never been a single scientist or medical researcher in the history of time to create or proceed with an experiment all by him or herself. For example, Sigmund Freud an Austrian neurologist, world famous for psychoanalysis was nominated for the Nobel prize 32 times but never received it (2015, Nobel Media B.) Also, stated in the article, it creates the misconception "that science is all about discoveries, when the cornerstone of science is replication and corroboration of results." Even the greatest scientist have to constantly support and re–support theories and experiments over and over ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 21. Bob Dylan Synthesis "For having created new poetic expressions within the great American song tradition," ("All Nobel Prizes in Literature"). Bob Dylan was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2016. Unprecedentedly, he became the first singer and songwriter who had ever earned the Nobel Prize in Literature in history. The plausible reasons that Bob was elected mainly reflect in the poetic lyrics Bob has in his songs and the enormous historical effects lyrics show. Bob Dylan, a rock singer, songwriter of folk and country music, was born Robert Allen Zimmerman on May 24, 1941, in Duluth, Minnesota. Later on, he started writing songs about chronicle social issues, such as wars and civil rights, in college. In 1961, Dylan signed his first recording contract and emerged as one ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... "Lyrically, "Tangled Up in Blue" chronicles the rise and fall of two relationships: between an unnamed "he" and "she" and between a first–person narrator (also unnamed) and the same "she."" (Barkhorn). In order to correctly express the emotion of the protagonists in the song, Dylan basically utilizes all five senses, especially sight, touch, and hearing: "I heard her say over my shoulder/"We'll meet again someday on the avenue."" (Dylan 24, 25). Dylan uses "dark, sad night" to connect the color with the emotion. Darkness represents sadness; it shows that "he" feels so upset that they split up. "Drift down" vividly tells the readers that "he" never finds a long–time job because he cannot find interests in doing these jobs but thinking about "her". Dylan also makes images by using disparate phrases. The quote "But I never did like it all that much/And one day the ax just fell" (Dylan 29, 30). shows tough life for people during the postwar era. By combining five senses with some specific words and phrases, Dylan transforms ordinary song lyrics into poetry, thus making him worthy of the Nobel Prize for ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 23. How Did Bob Dylan Impact Society Bob Dylan is an American singer/songwriter best known for his rock and roll music starting from the early sixties. Though he is more famously known as a rock and roll star, Bob Dylan was recently awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature. Bob Dylan will now go down in history with other literary laureates including, but not limited to, T.S. Elliot, Toni Morrison, Samuel Beckett, etc. Due to the honor and elevation associated with these men and their literary achievements, some people today do not believe that Bob Dylan meets the criteria necessary, as these other poets had, to receive this award. Based on the information that I have researched stating what criteria the prize is awarded, Bob Dylan's music contributions, career achievements, and ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... First, let's see how Bob Dylan impact our culture. A main reason Dylan's music was so influential was because of the time that had his big break. The things that he was singing about in his lyrics were extremely relevant to the major events happening not only in America, but around the world at that time, and people were able to relate to his lyrics. Jim Crowe laws were being abolished during the civil rights movement, communism was coming to end in eastern Europe, and so many other things were happening around the world. But the thing that made Bob Dylan so influential on our culture was the fact that he was involved in these events, not only as a person through protests, but as a musician through his lyrics. He galvanized powerful movements for social justice and peace though the power of his music and fame. As Dylan's career continued he expanded his music and made major contributions to the world of music. Many of his songs are folk songs, or renditions of folksy songs, in a bluesy tone with a raspy voice. He was unforgettable because of his new innovative sound, but he took it a step further than that when he performed on an electric guitar for the first time at a concert in 1965. People booed him off the stage during that concert, but the very next album that he released featured songs with his raspy voice mixed with the electric sound. He introduced a sound that was foreign to rock and roll music and continued to reinvent himself, and music, from that point ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 25. How Did Bob Dylan Impact The Civil Rights Movement To be awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature you must be someone who has created the most influential work in literature. In the history of The Nobel Prize for Literature no singer/songwriter has ever won the award. On October 13 2016, Bob Dylan was presented with the highest award that he ever will be awarded. Bob Dylan wrote songs that changed the lives of many people, his songs also opened the minds of millions about how they felt about certain situations. In his song "The Times They Are a Changin" he focuses on the civil rights movement during the sixties and shows why his literary elements and lyrics are deserving of the Nobel Prize for Literature. All of Bob Dylan's writings had a very strong meaning and greatly influenced the listener. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... " The title track of Dylan's 1964 album The Times they are a–Changin' has become one of the most famous protest songs ever written. Though articulating the hopes of the Sixties folk generation, Dylan's creation has proved to possess an enduring cross–generational appeal."(Thompson, Jennifer). Not only did Bob Dylan influence the listener, he also influenced many other writers throughout his music. Some people did not feel that they should share their personal opinion with the public, but Bob Dylan thought differently. An example of this is shown in his song "The Times They Are Changing", Mr. Dylan explains in the song that race is unimportant and humans should not be seen by the color of your skin, we should just see other people. Bob Dylan explains that he wrote this song because "I wanted to write a big song, with short concise verses that piled up on each other in a hypnotic way. The civil rights movement and the folk music movement were pretty close for a while and allied together at that time." (Barnes, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 27. Saul Bellow Response essay In Saul Bellow's essay, Hidden Within Technology's Kingdom, a Republic of Letters, he reveals to us that by the 1930's the media was beginning to make the written word obsolete. Most of Americans are losing their since of literature. Bellow tells us of how Oswald Spengler, one of the most widely read authors of the early '30s, taught that our tired old civilization was very nearly finished. His advice to the young was to avoid literature and the arts and to embrace mechanization and become engineers. Shocked by Oswald Spengler conclusion Bellow refused to me obsolete. He had faced the challenge and defied the evolutionist historians. A few years later, in an issue of The Wall Street Journal, Bellow came upon an old ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In 2002, only 52 percent of Americans ages 18 to 24, the college years, read a book voluntarily, down from 59 percent in 1992. Money spent on books dropped 14 percent from 1985 to 2005 and has fallen dramatically since the mid–1990s. The number of adults with bachelor's degrees and "proficient in reading prose" dropped from 40 percent in 1992 to 31 percent in 2003. I believe that print media will soon become obsolete if it is not already obsolete. There are billions of cell phone users worldwide. It is much easier for them to get the bulk of their news and information online. Why would they go to a store to buy a newspaper or magazine, when all they have to do is turn on a cell phone? I believe with the advent of tablets and e– readers, there will be a time that print media is obsolete. I already find that anytime I am required to print something, I am shocked that in 2013 we can't have an e–solution. With newspapers dying by the day, I think that e– media will be the thing left standing. What motivates us to read? Interest, engagement in the topic, desire to understand, having the choice and recommendation of those we trust leads us to a book. How often do we take the path less traveled instead of turning on a computer or the television? What might our society lose if people read fewer books? We may be slowly evolving to be less ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 29. Literary Analysis Of ' The Stranger ' By Charles Camus While studying many works of literature, several themes present themselves in in–depth readings, such as the theme of otherness in Albert Camus' "The Guest". This story centers on a character, an outsider, who is trying to fit into the society in the story. It may not be the fact that the stranger is different in looks, culture, or language like it is in this short story, but it is just the fact that they are not the same, which causes them to be the outsider and fulfill the role of the otherness. As we look through the short story 'The Guest', and through the short novel 'The Stranger', we can see that Albert Camus is working towards the idea of Otherness and how it can affect societies where the 'otherness' is seen as undesirable. Otherness, as defined by Merriam Webster, is the quality or fact of being different. In "The Guest" and in 'The Stranger' we are able to see the use of 'Otherness'. The pattern of 'otherness' and trying to find common ground between the characters is prevalent in Camus' works set in Algerian French control. Daru and the prisoner are the complete opposites of each other culturally, linguistically, and ethnically; they are set up to be each other's 'other' from the beginning, and yet, they seem to be able to find some kind of common ground. I am interested in why Camus made it so that these two men, who are strangers in the beginning, can be seen as comrades near the ending. I will compare these two works by Camus and find out the purpose of his ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 31. To Room Nineteen Crytical Analysis _"To Room Nineteen"_ I plan to argue "To Room Nineteen" by Doris Lessing for an audience of professors interested in the field of psychology and it's affect on women's lives, stating that the cause of suicide for Ms. Dubois is not because of the social judgments and perception negatively that impacted Susan's domestic responsibilities but rather the lack of emotion within her life and her relationship with her husband, because she could live up to the ideals valued by culture and beliefs but deep down she married for the benefit of others and no love in their relationship or with her children. Traditionally in the mid twentieth century, women held various duties that were crucial to keep their households intact. Most have sacrificed much ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Also Sophie, the Rawlings' household worker, replaced Susan's position in the family. Ever since Sophie was welcomed into the family, she has been more of a mother, wife, and mistress of the house than Susan, which caused her to feel out of place. "She took lunch with Mrs. Parkes, Sophie, Sophie's Italian friend Maria, and her daughter Molly, and felt like a visitor."(2777) It gives her the impression that she was invisible and separated from her family. In addition, her four children require her complete attention to tend for them so that they would grow to be strong and healthy adults. "She was breaking her part of the bargain and there was no way of forcing her to keep it: that her spirit, her soul, should live in this house, so that people in it could grow like plants in water, and Mrs. Parkes remain content in their service."(2772) As long as she's their mother, she will continuously put all her energy to raise her children. She could not deliver all these requests to nurture her children, so she decides to abandon her duties. Seclusion is a major aspect that influences a person to become odd and bizarre. Women's freedom and liberation are restrained because of the principles followed by customary lifestyles. "Doris Lessing draws extensively on women's inner, private experiences and on their departure from the unsatisfactory reality of life in an alienated and alienating society."(Rula Quawas) Ever since Susan ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 32.
  • 33. The Fifth Child by Doris Lessing The Fifth Child is the masterpiece of Nobel Prize winner Doris Lessing. Lessing herself described it as a horror story, but we can also put it into the genre of social –psychological novels. She declared: '' I hated writing it. It was sweating blood. I was very glad when it was done. It was an upsetting thing to write – obviously, it goes very deep into me somewhere.'' It is a brilliant novel which deals not just with the social aspect of family life in England at the end of 19th century but with human psyches in general. Harriet and David Lovatt are a conventional and traditional couple who met at the office party and immediately fell in love because of the similar interests that they share. One of their common desires is to have a pretty family house in the country and produce a large family of six or eight children. All of their friends, family members and relatives are completely shocked by their odd wish. Slowly they start building a family life; they buy a huge house in the country, and have the first baby. Ever since they have their first baby their house is full of family members, relatives and friends for every holiday, just like they have always dreamed of. Besides the fact that Harriet does not have easy pregnancies and all the work she has to do makes her completely exhausted, she enjoys having a house full of people and to impose on them with her perfect life. Everything is just like Harriet and David Lovatt have always dreamed; they have four cute, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 35. Compare And Contrast Samuel Hunt And Margaret Atwood Samuel Hunt: Both Doris Lessing's "On Not Winning a Nobel Prize" (2007) and Margaret Atwood's "Spotty–Handed Villainesses" (1994) are speeches which demonstrate a great strength of textual integrity, achieved through the speakers personal styles of presentation and the relevance of the issues at hand, holding value beyond the contextual audience and towards a modern responder. The enduring value of any speech is the ability to persuade with conviction, utilising both the arousal of the audience's emotions to address topics of significance and the qualities of an effective rhetorician. While Lessing's speech is directed at the issue of world poverty with a focus of education, Atwood's speech draws attention to gender inequality throughout literature. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Lessing addresses that it is crucial that both are aware of this divide and make an effort to bridge the gap despite the condition not necessarily either ones fault. The motif of a "doorway" is mentioned in Lessing's speech, as a means of metaphorically demonstrating a barrier to education that can only be unlocked for both cultures by bridging the divide between poverty and privilege. Whilst stressing the point of education being needed for the underprivileged, Lessing also points out that the advantaged world needs to be more educated too, acknowledging that "reading, books, used to part of a general education." This forces the audience to think about their self–absorbed society that is unaware of the extended global community. This feature in Lessing's speech contributes to the textual integrity as it provides a meaning and value that is still relevant, acknowledging that it is the nature of human beings to be caught up in their own world, but encouraging change within these people, as these starving people "may yet define us." Lessing's unconventional style of speech does not build up to make a point; however makes this point very early – ironically and with acerbic wit – this is because of her already established ethos, being a highly accomplished writer, accepting ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 36.
  • 37. Doris Lessing Essay This is a literature analysis and in depth exploration into the life of the great author and Nobel Prize winner, Doris Lessing. In an interesting journey that shows how her early childhood affected her, we see how she was conditioned to feel the way she did about social injustice. As a young girl her experiences growing up white in an African dominated land that was actually ruled unfairly by the white majority, shaped her as an advocate. . The way her mother raised her, not only showed her how marriage at that time was male dominated, but it also completely turned her against the typical housewife and motherly role. She published her first novel in 1950 that deeply dived into social injustice and racism. She was criticized harshly by many ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Lessing was put in a rigidly strict convent school, where she was constantly terrified into obedience with tall tales of hell and eternal damnation by fire. She was later shipped off to an all girls' high school in Salisbury, Zimbabwe's capital and most populated city. Shortly after arriving, at the tender age of 13, Lessing dropped out school and promptly ended her formal education. Lessing ordered books from London that not only helped her to self educate but it also expanded her imagination. Her early reading included Dickens, Stevenson, and Kipling. Lessing accepted a job as Nursemaid, and left home at 15 to escape her mother. During that time she also wrote short stories, two of them got sold and published by magazines in South Africa. In 1937 she moved to Salisbury and met Frank Wisdom, whom she married and had 2 children with. She later felt trapped by the suburban stereo type she'd hoped she would never become, and left her two small children with her husband when she divorced him. Lessing once wrote: "There is nothing more boring for an intelligent woman than to spend endless amounts of time with small children." Shortly after she was drawn to the communist movement and joined the Left Book Club where she met and married her second husband, Gottfried Lessing. Their marriage lasted for 6 ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38.
  • 39. William Golding's Influence On Lord Of The Flies William Golding, a world–wide known author, transfigured his dream from an English teacher in a small town in England to an author whose books altered the mindset of its readers. Kids and adults have contemplated these words from Lord of the Flies, "Ralph wept for the end of innocence, the darkness of man's heart, and the fall through the air of the true, wise friend called Piggy" (Golding 202). These deep–rooted words from Lord of the Flies, a renowned book written by William Golding, changed him from a locally known author in England to a Nobel Literature Prize Laureate. He won the Nobel prize in 1983 for not only writing many successful selling books, such as Lord of the Flies and Rites of Passage, but in the words of the Nobel committee, he won "...for his novels which, with the perspicuity of realistic narrative art and the diversity and universality of myth, illuminate the human condition in the world of today". William Golding's writing became popular because he incorporated concepts about change in human nature and civilization when war and savagery plagued daily life and society. J.R.R. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... William Golding used his fame to express his feelings and opinions on topics, such as, environmental issues and inhuman nature. The Nobel Literature Prize is the most prominent of writing awards because not only is it a significant honor, but provides recognition and fame which allowed him to sell more books and make money. When the King of Sweden presented William Golding the Nobel Literature Prize he said to him, "It's a pleasure to meet you, Mr Golding. I had to do Lord of the Flies at school" (William). Fame is earned not granted, William Golding was not attempting to be a famous author or to write a classic novel, but wrote to appease himself and this was taken into consideration when voting for the next author to receive the Nobel Literature Prize in ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 40.
  • 41. Naipaul Does Not Deserve his Nobel Prize Essay What makes an individual worthy of a Nobel Prize in a category as broad as literature? Is it an immense knowledge of writing procedures that other authors have not begun to attempt to use? Or is an appropriate representation of the author's subject that is solely objective, and lacks all personal opinions? If that was the case, several Prizes should be taken away from some authors and handed to other more deserving writers. V. S. Naipaul, who received a Nobel Prize in Literature for Miguel Street, falls into the former category. Naipaul may have filled the technical requirements for a Nobel Prize for his mastery of several difficult techniques, yet his writing neglects to explain the merits of Trinidad while highlighting the negatives ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... What did Nobel actually mean by ideal? In fact, the history of the Literature Prize appears as a series of attempts to interpret an imprecisely worded will. A comparison with "Porgy and Bess" has been suggested. (C. Pierre) The parallel has at least the merit of reminding us that the whole world is one. In that hospitable mood we might also remember Mark Twain's tales of life on the Mississippi. But Miguel Street, in Trinidad, is not really very much like Catfish Row, nor are reminders of nineteenth–century Missouri prevalent. What is true and, if you will, significant about Mr. Naipaul's book is that it presents a world of its own excellently. Vivid characters with tenuous means of support populate the place. They sing the latest Calypso songs and interest themselves in cricket matches and collect junk and talk about migrating across the narrow sea to Venezuela. If their attitude toward morals is informal it is shown openly, not covertly. Their standards of courage are high. They speculate endlessly on the tremendous trifles and mysteries that have troubled man's thinking throughout his tenure on our strange planet. A room with a view of a mango tree may contain a boisterously quarrelsome family or a recluse devoted to carpentry or scholarship. The popular beverage is rum, though the gay blades who enjoy it most turn to the ostentatious patronage of a milk bar during an interval when joy through strength becomes fashionable. It had so many ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 42.
  • 43. Summary Of The BookThe Guest By Albert Camus During the mid–twentieth century, Algeria was trying to gain independence from France. It was writers like Albert Camus who gave the world of taste of what was happening in their country at that time through literature. He used knowledge and experiences to create stories and plays that captured Alergia and the period of war they were in. Camus dominated the mid twentieth century intellectually and artistically. Albert Camus grew up with a strict belief in human freedom, which is evident through his short story "The Guest." Growing up Albert Camus did not have an ordinary life. His family was not as fortunate as other families. He grew up poor and was raised solely by his mother due to his father dying during World War I. He was born in French Algeria. His mother was of Spanish descent and his father was from France (Heims). Camus never let this be a disadvantage to his career or interfere with it. He said "Poverty was never a misfortune for me: it was radiant with light. Even my revolts were brilliant with sunshine. They were almost always....revolts for everyone, so that life might be lifted into that light" (Heims). He used this through his career and it shows through his works. During his life, Algeria was at war. Camus was torn apart personally and intellectually by this war. He was from Spanish and French descent, however he grew up in Algeria (Taylor). At this time it was still a French colony and Algeria was part of France for over a hundred years. Muslims and Berbers ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 44.
  • 45. The Nobel Prize in Literature 1993 .. Toni Morrison "Once upon a time there was an old woman. Blind but wise." Or was it an old man? A guru, perhaps. Or a griot soothing restless children. I have heard this story, or one exactly like it, in the lore of several cultures. "Once upon a time there was an old woman. Blind. Wise." In the version I know the woman is the daughter of slaves, black, American, and lives alone in a small house outside of town. Her reputation for wisdom is without peer and without question. Among her people she is both the law and its transgression. The honor she is paid and the awe in which she is held reach beyond her neighborhood to places far away; to the city where the intelligence of rural prophets is the source of much amusement. One day the woman is ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... It is the language that drinks blood, laps vulnerabilities, tucks its fascist boots under crinolines of respectability and patriotism as it moves relentlessly toward the bottom line and the bottomed–out mind. Sexist language, racist language, theistic language – all are typical of the policing languages of mastery, and cannot, do not permit new knowledge or encourage the mutual exchange of ideas. The old woman is keenly aware that no intellectual mercenary, nor insatiable dictator, no paid–for politician or demagogue; no counterfeit journalist would be persuaded by her thoughts. There is and will be rousing language to keep citizens armed and arming; slaughtered and slaughtering in the malls, courthouses, post offices, playgrounds, bedrooms and boulevards; stirring, memorializing language to mask the pity and waste of needless death. There will be more diplomatic language to countenance rape, torture, assassination. There is and will be more seductive, mutant language designed to throttle women, to pack their throats like paté–producing geese with their own unsayable, transgressive words; there will be more of the language of surveillance disguised as research; of politics and history calculated to render the suffering of millions mute; language glamorized to thrill the dissatisfied and bereft into assaulting their neighbors; arrogant pseudo– empirical language crafted to lock creative people into cages of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 46.
  • 47. Through The Tunnel Whenever someone accomplishes a huge achievement, they have stories of how hard they worked to earn it. In almost every single story of accomplishment, there are obstacles the hero has to overcome. Doris Lessing, a British novelist, had a very hard childhood, full of struggles to survive, and yet she published 86 novels and won a Nobel Prize in Literature. In Lessing's short story "Through the Tunnel," the main character Jerry faces the challenge of swimming through a long underwater passage. A close examination of the story shows dark objects represent setbacks while the light represents achievement. Thus, the initial darkness of the tunnel's appearance, the luminous color of the ocean, and the changing of light during Jerry's passage through ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... When he first sees the "black wall of rock looming at him" (Lessing, 132–133), he is overwhelmed by the challenge the rock brings. The rock's darkness is a symbol for the struggles Jerry will have to face while trying to complete his mission. He will have to pass this main hurdle of going into the tunnel first before he can receive his award. When Jerry goes underwater to try to see the hole in the rock, "he could see nothing through the stinging salt water but the blank rock" (142–143). The lack of light represents how formidable the challenge seems, how hopeless and unrewarding getting to the other side might be, and how the tunnel will not easily be conquered. This particular trial will require a huge amount of hard work and effort, as well as the personal strength to keep going even when the situation seems tough and daunting. "The great rock ... rose sheer out of the white sand – black, tufted lightly with greenish weed" (241–244). The appearance is extremely intimidating due to its black color and contrast to the white sand, which makes his journey ahead seem even more difficult than it did before. The contrast of color and light helps to exaggerate the impressive tunnel. Using dark imagery to portray the huge rock and the massive hole in it, Lessing expresses how the trials ahead may be difficult, but the prize at the end will be worth the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 48.
  • 49. Leaving The Yellow House By Saul Bellow Saul Bellow wrote many novels; one of his novels "Leaving the Yellow House" is about an elder woman who lives in a yellow house and is incapable to take care of herself. Her neighbors tell her that they will help her only in return for her house. The Rolfe's are the only neighbors that really care about Hattie and do not want her house in return. "Leaving the Yellow House" was one of Saul Bellow's most known short story. When Bellow was young he was hospitalized for a while. The time he spent in the hospital was where his interest in literature grew. When he was in school his friends influenced him to write. He became so interested in writing that he dropped out of college to pursue his dream of becoming a writer. Bellow served as a ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Darly is a sixty–eight–year–old man who works at a dude ranch. He recklessly causes Hattie to break her arm and never apologizes. As the story goes on he and Hattie are seen as acting differently towards each other. They have less patients for each other. They do not like the new changes. Pace is one of Hattie's Neighbors, and runs a dude ranch. When Hattie is in a car accident he offers his help by giving her a monthly check. He said he will help if she leaves her house for him once she passes away. Helen Rolfe is one of Hattie's neighbors. She and her husband go on many vacations and have luxury cars. Hattie feels bitterness towards her because of the calm life that Helen lives. Jerry Rolfe is one of Hattie's neighbors and is the husband of Helen Rolfe. He is Hattie's only real friend. He is also the only person who understands Hattie's Pride. Jerry tries his best to help Hattie when she breaks her arm. Him and his wife have been taking care of Hattie, but is unable to find someone to care for her like him and his wife have been. Amy Walters is a self–sufficient miner's widow. She lives twenty miles away from Hattie. Jerry Rolfe tells her that she should move in with Hattie. Amy is a woman capable of taking care of herself. She will only move in and help Hattie in return for her house. Conflicts that occur in this short story are Hattie vs. neighbors and Hattie vs. decision. In Hattie vs. neighbors, her neighbors only offer help ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 50.
  • 51. Dylan Allusion "Nobel Prize consists of people who have been outstanding in their generation, winning for themselves an award that has created both interest and concern in a century of unprecedented material process, gains and losses, active nationalism, and expanded frontiers" (Ringertz). "Alfred Nobel, the father of the Nobel Prize, wrote that much of his fortune was to be contributed as prizes to those who have done good in humanity for the field of physics, chemistry, physiology or medicine, literature and peace" (Ringertz). Dylan was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature on October 13, 2016 for his outstanding music covering a wide range of topics. Known to be one of the most influential singer–songwriter of all time, Dylan was born on May 24, 1941 ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Dylan's portrayal of desperate and changing times in the 60s was evident through his use of literary devices through the portrayal of metaphor, allusion, and repetition. Using biblical references through the use of allusion, starting with the allusion to the bible by the phrase 'Come gather 'round people,' by claiming he used the inclusion of the Sermon on the Mount, Dylan is no stranger in lack of beautiful, poetic usage in his song. To add on, the allusion goes to exemplify that change is bound to come, knowingly or not, to men and women of all races, status, and gender. Dylan's usage of metaphors spoke in philosophical manners and as well in general terms, but was easily able to be translated in its appropriate context in its period of time referring to the civil rights struggle and the hippie counter movement. Using metaphorical phrases such as the relation to the individual to the reference of a "stone that is sinking or swimming"(Dylan 8), as well as "the battle that is raging it'll soon shake the windows and rattle the walls"(Dylan 25–26) are all a means of Dylan explaining in simple means that if one wants to make time worthwhile, then one better start living life to the fullest, or otherwise they may drown as time passes by. In regards to repetition, Dylan uses the pattern of rhyme schemes. For example in his third verse, "Please heed the call...Don't block up the hall"(Dylan 20–22) the word call perfectly rhymes with hall and "There's a battle outside ragin'...For the times they are a changin'"(Dylan 25–26) with the words ragin' and hall rhyming together in a perfect duo. His proper usage of repetition does not just highlight the underlying, honest message, but its artistic message that brings out a clever undertone as to how he chooses his use of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 52.
  • 53. Critical Analysis Of Doris Lessing's 'Through The Tunnel' Doris Lessing (1919–2013) was a British novelist, poet and playwright. She was awarded the 2007 Nobel Prize in Literature. In 1955, she wrote the short story, "Through the Tunnel," which is one of her famous stories. At "the crowded beach" (Lessing 1), Jerry, the young English boy, and his widowed mother take a holiday. They have enjoyed their holidays on the beach for many years, but this year, he is interested in "a wild and rocky bay" (Lessing 1) near the beach and goes there for the first time. He encounters some boys who seem to be older than him there. They go through a long tunnel underwater with breath lasting long. However, at first, Jerry cannot find even the tunnel's entrance, so he asks his mother to buy some goggles and gains perspective ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The tunnel is literally the way of hardship he must pass through. The feeling that he first holds against the tunnel is fear. While the boy who he encounters at the bay is passing through this tunnel, "Jerry, after waiting for the sleek brown head to appear, let out a yell of warning" (Lessing 2) because he is afraid of the boy being drowned. Also, when he finds the entrance to the tunnel, "somethings soft and clammy touched his mouth, he saw a dark frond moving against the greyish rock, and panic filled him" (Lessing 4). He has a fear against the tunnel and the fear implies how difficult his rite of passage to become an adolescent is for him. In addition, the length of the tunnel represents the scale of the trial that he must pass, and going through the tunnel without air indicates that he cannot go back, and must move forward. Third, he accomplishes his purpose and returns to his former place. Although he is prepared for death at one time, he finally succeeds in passing through the tunnel. After overcoming the challenge, he soon returns to the villa where his mother waits for him. He has striven for one goal, so he has no more to do anything now: "It was no longer of the least importance to go to the bay" (Lessing 6). He certainly grows both mentally and physically, and returns to his original ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 54.
  • 55. Spotty Handed Villaesses By Margaret Atwood And Doris... Speeches aim to manipulate the audience through powerful rhetoric at the expense of substance. To what extent does this statement align with your view of the speeches set for study. Rhetoric is the practice of communication that persuades, informs, inspires, or entertains target audiences in order to change or reinforce behaviors, beliefs, values or actions. It is a linguistic technique designed to have a persuasive or remarkable effect, but it is often said to be lacking in meaningful content; but in comparison with powerful rhetoric, and my view of the speeches set for study it is manifest that the use of rhetoric is used to enhance the substance of each speech. Due to the engaging rhetoric used within the speeches 'Spotty handed villainesses' by Margaret Atwood and Doris Lessing's 'On not winning the Nobel prize' it is evident that the use of rhetoric is used to enrich the substance of each speech. The two speeches both advocate for common inequalities that effect the whole world. The founding origins are a result of the worlds growing disparity of people's rights across society. Atwood's 'Spotty Handed Villainesses' aims to fight the oppression of women in society and the need for equal rights whereas Lessing's 'On not winning the Nobel prize' highlights the gulf between first and third world countries. She discusses inequality through the importance of education and access to books. Both speeches stem from the importance of literacy and how the written world can ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 56.
  • 57. Analysis Of No Witchcraft For Sale By Doris Lessing Can't Trust Anyone (An analysis of No Witchcraft For Sale by Doris Lessing and it's 3 messages) Racism is the main culprit for fighting among not only American citizens, but those in foreign countries. The issue has progressed but still has a great deal of improving to do. In recent years and months many have begun take stands against racism and the unfair ways they have been treated. Doris Lessing wrote novels and short stories that challenged the mainstream beliefs of those in Southern Africa and England. Mariam Berkley, a biographer explained, "Lessing's life has been a challenge to her belief that people cannot resist the currents of their time, as she fought against the biological and cultural imperatives." Her literature was very controversial because the topics she discussed brought in many different perspectives to problems in society. Her thoughts mainly tie in with racism and sexism. In Lessing's No Witchcraft for Sale she explains the messages of white people having control over blacks, the selflessness of the slave, and ways to deal with peer pressure. In No Witchcraft for Sale Doris Lessing explains the message of white people having complete control over blacks in what they are and are not able to do. In the early 1900s it was not uncommon to see blacks owned by whites. Blacks inability to get an education, live on their own, and get a job prohibit them from being able to be independent. Many had the desire to become educated, but were never able to do because of the time period. This is still a problem today, whites thinking they are somehow above blacks. Blogger Karen Fleshman explains her observations about race by posting, "Americans are not at all on the same page when it comes to race." It is obvious that things have improved, but there is still a long way to go before racism will ever solved; if that is ever accomplished. Throughout No Witchcraft for Sale, Lessing uses the influence of the parents on the children. Teddy Farquar played with the servants son and referred to him laughingly saying, "He's only a black boy,"(line 49). Even at the young age as both of these children they had already been taught the difference in skin color and what that meant. This idea bothered Lessing and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 58.
  • 59. Alfred Nobel Major Accomplishments Alfred Nobel was a Swedish chemist who was born on October 21, 1833, in Stockholm Sweden. He worked with his father in his arms factory; he was very experimental as a young man and went experimenting with chemistry including explosives. In 1864 an explosion occurred went killing his younger brother, this triggered him into inventing a safer more controlled explosive called the dynamite. Alfred Nobel held over 355 different patents for different inventions that made a great impacted still to this day. The dynamite is Alfred Nobel most famous accomplishments; including the synthetic element nobelium was named after Alfred Nobel. The Nobel prizes each year that are awarded are held in categories of physics, chemistry, medicine, literature and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 60.
  • 61. The Nobel Prize for Literature: Argumentative Essay on Bob... Dear Nobel Committee for Literature, The Nobel Prize for Literature was not rewarded to the deserving writer. You have awarded Bob Dylan the Nobel Prize for Literature on October 13, 2016 degrading dedicated writers around the world. After dropping out of college in the 1960's to pursue an occupation in which he was already well known as the times "most loved folk poet", he turned to singing and writing rock–type songs with anti war messages. Whether he did "create new poetic expressions within the great American tradition" he has not proven himself worthy of such a significant award. Such a legendary award offered to many other brilliant writers, should be received by someone who can and will continue to change the world. This award could help out developing writers, developing countries, and should not be handed out single handedly. Newly prospering authors and writers deserve as much a chance as anyone. As you may recall, a few of the runner ups for the Nobel laureate were Adonis, Ngugi Wa Thiong'o, and Ko Un. All of these authors shared unique talents in writing. In point of fact, Adonis, a Syrian essayist, translator, and poet, experimented with essential elements in his poetry. He rebelled against the standard poets to say the least, "I wanted to break the linearity of poetic text – to mess with it, if you will." (poetryfoundation.org) He was not born into the wealthiest of families and found himself unable to pay for education, yet he has pushed boundaries for many ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 62.
  • 63. Literary Celebrities: How Fame Can Alter A Persona Literary Celebrities; How Fame Can Alter A Persona At the beginning of the 21st century we are all living in a world of celebrities, who are increasingly playing powerful roles in politics, economics, and naturally in society as a whole. The term celebrity has been around since the early 1840s in our society, however the meaning of the word has alternated in the contemporary Western world. Garland stated in his article that celebrity culture was already in place at least 2,000 years ago; "celebrity has a very long history and many of the indications of a celebrity culture were already in place in classical antiquity." (484). Even though some authors in the 1800s and 1900s can be considered literary celebrities, it definitely does not compare to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Therefore, the concept of a literary celebrity has been widely written about and numerous articles have been dedicated to this subject; presently students can even take courses in Celebrity Studies. Nonetheless what exactly is a literary celebrity remains debatable, and opinions differ concerning the definition of this phenomena. Professor Franssen stated in his article that; "literary celebrity can be understood as a performance or a 'staging'", furthermore he claims that "popular celebrity has influenced ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 64.
  • 65. Nobel Prize Research Paper Nobel Prize In this paper I am going to discuss the Nobel Prize. Firstly I will inform you of the history of the prize, secondly its origin, and how it is awarded today. After that I will discuss the 2010 Nobel Prize for Medicine, 1901 Nobel Prize for Physics, and the 1930 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. Alfred Nobel The Nobel Prize was named after a Swedish inventor and industrialist, Alfred Bernhard Nobel. Alfred Nobel was born in Stockholm, Sweden on October 21, 1833. He was born into a wealthy family, although due to the misfortune of losing building materials on sunken barges, Immanuel Nobel, Alfred's father, was forced into bankruptcy the same year Alfred was born. In 1842 the family moved to St. Petersburg, Russia. Alfred ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Although he started working on IVF in the 1950s it took him about 30 years to make it successful, and about 60 years until he won the Nobel Prize. Edwards is a professor at the University of Cambridge England, he also founded Bourn Hall, the first IVF center. Today, vitro fertilization is responsible for over 4 million births worldwide. Edwards discovered that an embryo can be fertilized in a Petri dish in a laboratory ((4) http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/medicine/laureates/2010/adv.html). The steps of IVF are started by prescribing a fertility medication to control the timing of the eggs release. They monitor the ovaries using ultrasound to make sure the multiple eggs can be collected and that they are developing the eggs properly and that his is called ovulation induction. To retrieve the eggs a minor operation is required, sedation and anesthesia is used to prevent discomfort. A hollow needle is inserted through the pelvic cavity into the ovary to collect the eggs. Now the sperm is needed for completion of the procedure, this is collected by ejaculation. The process of insemination now begins; a single sperm is injected into the egg for fertilization. The egg is monitored to make sure cell division is achieved. It is now considered an embryo after it is fertilized. Three days after the egg is retrieved from the ovary, and fertilization is achieved then it is inserted into the women's uterus. The two to four cell embryos is placed ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 66.
  • 67. Alice Munro Research Paper Reading literature from around the world is one of the most important things people can do in school and at home. It allows students to learn the truth about misconceptions they might have about other places. Many of these stories can also teach students many other important lessons. Alice Munro is an author who's stories can do both of these things for students. Alice Munro should be included in the World Literature course. She should be included because her short story "Day of the Butterfly" teaches a lesson that every student should learn about, she won a Nobel Prize in Literature because of her short stories, and she based many of her stories on her own real life experiences. Firstly, Alice Munro should be included in the World Literature ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... These experiences were important for her and her short stories. When talking about her hometown, she said, "I am intoxicated by this particular landscape, at home with the brick houses, the falling down barns, the trailer parks, burdensome old churches" ("Alice Munro – Biographical"). She based the setting in many of her stories on her rural hometown in Ontario (Munro 33). Her living in Wingham, Ontario also inspired her to write events in her short stories that were complex as ones in novels ("Alice Munro – Facts"). She says everybody has a role that others create for them in a small town (Munro 33). She knows because of her experience from living in a rural area. She uses this to create realistic stories including "Day of the Butterfly." This idea is evident in the way the others treated Myra in "Day of the Butterfly." When Munro was in school, she came up with ideas for stories while she walked to there ("Alice Munro – Biographical"). She says, "I was eight, it was quite a walk, but I liked it" ("Alice Munro – Biographical"). Her stories were also inspired by real life events in her hometown like her mother's death ("Alice Munro – Biographical"). It is clear that her own real life experiences influenced her writing and that the stories that won her a Nobel Prize were based on them. Therefore, these stories should be included in the World Literature ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 68.
  • 69. Examples Of Cultural Hegemony In Doris Lessing Thesis Statement Understanding the facts that are presented by Gramsci, Raymond and Althusser, regarding the growth of the theory of cultural hegemony that is typically originated from Marxist ideas and the post colonial theory, it is indispensable to apply this to the novels of Doris Lessing. The novels of Lessing are written mostly about women who lived in the colonial countries and have experienced the problems of the colonizer and repercussion of colonization. The novels chosen for this research are The Grass is Singing, The Golden Notebook and The Children of Violence series. The projected thesis aims to study the hidden injuries of a class which is hurt by the so called rulers. It is the aim of the scholar to bring out the elements which reveal the dignity of the oppressed, and the economism and politics of the author as externalized in the selected novels. The main aim is to study the elements hegemony in these novels. There is great evidence that can be culled from these novels about the fragmented societies where gender, race and class determine the destiny of people. The author uses a conventional tone in her ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Much of her work is concerned with the everyday and inner lives of sensitive, receptive women. Lessing was awarded Nobel Prize in Literature in 2007. The Swedish Academy described her as "that epicist of the female experience, who with scepticism, fire and visionary power has subjected a divided civilization to scrutiny". Lessing was the eleventh woman and the oldest person yet to receive the Nobel Prize in Literature. The premier and foremost literary honour was given to a woman who has analyzed and judged human nature in the second half of the 20th century like no other literary writer, when Doris Lessing won the Nobel Prize for Literature in ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 70.
  • 71. How Did Bob Dylan Impact The Civil Rights Movement The Nobel Prize for Literature represents an award that should be taken with great pride and fulfillment. This award has only been granted 109 times to 113 fortunate literates between the years of 1901 to 2016 (All Nobel Prizes in Literature). Artists whose literature has had an unbelievable impact on people are the type of artists to be considered for the Nobel Prize in Literature. Bob Dylan became awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2016 for "having created new poetic expressions within the great American song tradition" (All Nobel Prizes in Literature). Dylan once said that he wrote that song to tap into the civil rights and folk music movement, calling out writers and critics to step up and embrace change (5 Bob Dylan Songs That Actually ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Bob Dylan uses his talent to influence American history and culture, changing literature forever. The Civil Rights movement will be remembered as a mass popular movement that enforced that African Americans should have the same access to and opportunities for the basic privileges and rights of a white U.S. citizen (Scholastic). It was the unexpected accomplishments from the movement that shocked many generations. Bob Dylan impacted the civil rights movement in many ways through his music. Not to mention, The Atlantic states, "He wrote that song to tap into that movement, calling out writers, critics, senators, congressmen, mothers and fathers to all step up and embrace change" (The Atlantic). To put it differently, Bob Dylan was communicating with artists everywhere, encouraging them to express how they were feeling and that they were not alone. Dylan specifically calls out those people at the beginning of every stanza, and the rest of the verse accommodates the reasons for why he is calling them out to help. All sorts of commodities were going on during the 1960s; therefore, Bob Dylan and his music were very much a part of that (The Atlantic). His music ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 73. Analysis of William Faulkners Nobel Prrize of Literarure... Caitlyn Buteaux Mrs. Parham English III AP 1st block 4 February 2013 Analysis of William Faulkner's Noble Prize of Literature Acceptance Speech William Faulkner was an often misunderstood writer of many novels and short stories. ("William Faulkner's Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech ") It was not until 1949 and after his death when he was given the Nobel Prize in Literature that people began to acknowledge him and his works. ("William Faulkner") In his Nobel Prize of Literature acceptance speech, at the city hall in Stockholm on December 10, 1950, Faulkner uses a powerful tone and effective rhetorical devices to convey his purpose. In his Nobel Prize of Literature acceptance speech, William Faulkner utilizes rhetorical devices such as ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This device helps him convey that people need to start writing about emotional conflicts with themselves because that alone can make good writing. He also uses a metaphor to compare the writing of something meaningful and important to something not when he states, "He writes not of the heart but of the glands". This helps the effectiveness by comparing something major and meaningful such as the heart to something less meaningful and pity as a gland. These were effective by helping Faulkner relate to everyday situations and thing we are familiar in life therefore aiding him in connecting with his audience. Faulkner uses syntactical strategies throughout his speech to assist him in communicating his message to his audience. In the third paragraph he emphasizes a syntax device known as anaphora, when stating, "He must learn them again... He much teach himself... He writes not of love...He writes not of the heart...".The anaphora helps Faulkner be effective in his argument by the repetition of words to help him get his view of things across to the audience. To also succor his effectiveness he uses polysyndeton, which is used to draw the audience's attention therefore adding the effect of persistence and intensity to help keep his audiences attention, making his speech effective. An example of polysyndeton is when he declares "love and honor and pity and pride and compassion and sacrifice" This quote helps signify that authors need to write from their soul and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 75. Does Bob Dylan Deserve The 2016 Nobel Prize? On Thursday, October 13, 2016, Bob Dylan has been awarded the 2016 Nobel Prize in Literature. Since then, it has been questioned whether or not he deserves this prize. Bob Dylan whose real name is Robert Allen Zimmerman was raised in Duluth, Minnesota. He has been singing and has been in bands since he was a teenager and has listened to songs from an even earlier age. He has been given many awards for his songs and has grown a reputation. However, being awarded the Nobel Prize had brought up a lot of arguments and questions on if Bob Dylan deserves it. The Nobel Prize was created by Alfred Nobel who want to prizes to those who have done something incredible in Physics, Chemistry, Medicine, Literature, Peace, and Economic Sciences. Winners ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Alfred Nobel wants "outstanding" literature from the Literature Prize winner which is stated in his will, "...one part to the person who shall have produced in the field of literature the most outstanding work in an ideal direction." Bob Dylan has created many outstanding songs which can be proven by the awards he had won. Biography states some of the few awards, "The legendary singer–songwriter has received Grammy, Academy and Golden Globe awards, as well as the Presidential Medal of Freedom and the Nobel Prize for Literature." These prizes exhibit that Bob Dylan's work must be very impressive to have won so many awards and it further supports the reason to give him another. This also brings up the argument that Bob Dylan has too much spotlight and "real" literature writers deserve. In the article "Why Bob Dylan Shouldn't Have Gotten The Nobel Prize" nytimes.com states, "The legendary singer–songwriter has received Grammy, Academy and Golden Globe awards, as well as the Presidential Medal of Freedom and the Nobel Prize for Literature...By honoring a musical icon, the committee members may have wanted to bring new cultural currency to the prize and make it feel relevant to a younger generation. But there are many ways they could have accomplished this while still honoring a writer." This article is expressing that awarding a writer would be more appropriate for the Nobel Prize and that Dylan has already won plenty of awards. However, this would be saying that someone who is passionate and elaborate in their work all time should not be recognized because someone else wants a chance. This is saying that a person who gets 100 as their grade all the time should not be credit because someone who got a 90 deserves a chance. In ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 77. Albert Camus Research Paper "Albert Camus – Biographical." Nobelprize.org, Nobel Prize, www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/literature/laureates/1957/camus–bio.html. From the Nobel Prize website itself, the passage describes briefly and clearly elaborates on Albert Camus, mostly in the focus of his career, writing and otherwise his involvement in theatre. The main purpose of this piece is to inform people who are interested in the Nobel Prize selection and in Camus himself about him, providing a short synopsis on his background and his movement in his career from political journalism to writing essays, stories, and furthermore novels. Growing up, Camus expressed a deep interest to philosophy, which later prevailed in all of his publications as well as his Algerian upbringing. Although his fascinations to the mind and thought were definitely present, he was unable to attend university for philosophy; however, luck struck him when he was able to begin working as a columnist and later dabbled in theatre. In many of his works, he utilized the notion of absurdum and absence, seen heavily in The Myth of Sisyphus and further elaborated upon in the main character of Meursault in The Stranger. By gathering the pieces that occurred in Camus's life, it becomes clearer as to why he wrote the story the way it is and what it means, to him and to others. "Award Ceremony Speech: The Nobel Prize in Literature 1957." Nobelprize.org, Nobel Prize, www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/literature/laureates/1957/press.html. In this ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...