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Summary Of The Nobel Lecture By Toni Morrison
In the world, there are about 6909 different languages being spoken. Millions of people are speaking those languages all around the globe, but how
many of them are actually speaking? Language is not just about communication with words. Toni Morrison elaborates more on that idea in her speech
the Nobel Lecture. Toni's writing illustrates her beliefs about language and the deeper meaning of it. She explains that language should "Permit new
knowledge or encourage the mutual exchange of ideas" (Morrison). She believes that America is not achieving those ideas for language but in fact is
doing the opposite. American people do not know the meaning and effect of language and because of that, true language is dying. In the speech, the
Nobel Lecture, by Toni Morrison, the author narrates repetition andconnotation in order to emphasize and elaborate ideas and purposes of language ,
ultimately exposing her beliefs about language.
In the speech, the word "dying" and other synonyms like dead are repeated multiple times. We know that the the bird mentioned in the story is a
metaphor for representing language because Morrison says " the heart of such language is languishing, or perhaps not beating at all–if the bird is
already dead". That sentence connects how the bird and language are correlated in the speech. So the reader can infer from the rest of the speech so
when she says is the bird dead, she is really saying is the language dead. Morrison believes that due to the examples of
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Dr King Nobel Peace Prize Speech Sparknotes
Dr. King's Nobel Peace Prize Lecture was one of the most powerful reading assignments during my first year in the United States. As an international
student from Saudi Arabia, I never imagined that one person could change the world. Dr. King believed in "non–violence" in order to obtain social
justice, racial integration, and civil rights. In essence, Dr. King's speech represented the progressive nature of the United States and it motivated me to
become a future leader in my home county, Saudi Arabia.
Dr. Martin Luther King's Nobel Peace Prize speech is an academic piece of writing which documents his beliefs on nonviolence over his career. It
was my first experience with political writing since this form of freedom of expression is illegal...show more content...
King believed that violence is both impractical and immoral. King was an ordained Baptist minister, who embraced the tenets of Christianity and
wholeheartedly preached brotherhood, peace, and love for all men–including white and blacks, alike. King believed "Violence as a way of achieving
racial justice is both impractical and immoral. I am not unmindful of the fact that violence often brings about momentary results" (King, 1964, pg. 8).
Subsequently, King did not believe in violence and preached non–violence. King felt that nonviolence was the only means to fight oppression, racism,
and injustice. King preached tenets of universal love; moreover, King fought against despair, racial separatism, and hate. King's message is extremely
inspiring and speaks to be broad audience, including residents of the Middle East. The equality of races can only be achieved through peaceful
arguments and demonstrations. For myself, nonviolence is the only legitimate weapon against fighting social injustice. King's message could be
interpreted and applied to any situation or community. For myself, hate and revenge can be only be dominated through the application of nonviolence.
King also spoke about bringing about the end to war and poverty through collective
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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
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Essay about Nobel Prize Ahmed Zewail
Ahmed Zewail Nobel Prize Winner 709 Words
A boy who was named Ahmed Zewail was born February 26, 1946 in Damanhur, the "City of Horus", only 60 km from Alexandria. He
lived a good childhood in the City of Disuq, which is the home of the famous mosque, Sidi Ibrahim. He was the only son in a family of three sisters
and two loving parents. His father was liked and respected by the community because he was helpful, cheerful and very much enjoyed his life. He
worked for the government and also had his own business. His mother was a good natured person and devoted all her life to her...show more content...
He was admitted to the faculty of science at Alexandria University and felt the greatness of the university. His grades through out the next few years
flourished. They flourished in courses like mathematics, physics, chemistry, and geology. His grades were either excellent or very good. In his
second year he scored very highly in Chemistry and was chosen for a group of seven students called "special chemistry", an elite science
group. He graduated with the highest honors, with above 90% in all areas of chemistry. After graduating with the degree of Bachelor of Science, he
was appointed to a University position as a demonstrator to carry on research toward a Masters and then a Ph.D. degree.
Ahmed Zewail who is currently the Linus Pauling Chair Professor of Chemistry and Professor of Physics, and the director of the NSF Laboratory for
Molecular Sciences (LMS) at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. He was awarded theNobel Peace Prize in 1999. He was awarded in
the category of Chemistry for his new developments in the field of femotoscience. He made it possible to observe the movement of the individual
atoms in a femotosecond. A femotosecond is a split second that is a millionth of a billionth of a second. This brilliant development which changed our
view of the dynamics of matter holds great promise in the areas of technology and life sciences. His current research
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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...
(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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Rhetorical Analysis of Nobel Peace Prize Acceptance Speech Malala Yousafzai Malala Yousafzai, the author of this acceptance speech, is a young
female from Pakistan who won the Nobel Peace Prize with the help of Kailash Satyarthi. They won it because of their writing about the struggle for
young children to receive proper education. The audience for this speech is everyone including her teachers and parents, majesties, royal highnesses,
and members of Norwegian Nobel Committee. Issues that she discusses in her speech include children needing proper education and that every sex
should have the same rights to education. Her main purpose for writing this speech was to encourage society to help make quality education for both
boys and girls around the world. Malala Yousafzai hopes that readers understand that her speech is about the education system and how government
leaders need to make quality primary and secondary education for both sexes. In Malala YousafzaiNobel Peace Prize Acceptance Speech, she
discusses how important education is and how discrimination of sex affects proper education in her country. Education is important to her because
it is a privilege and blessing to go to school in her country and many other countries. She shows that education is important by speaking up for
children that do not have access to education. This is shown in her speech when she says, "I am here to stand up for their rights, to raise their voice.
. . it is not time to pity them. It is not time to pity them" (Yousafzai 1). Throughout Yousafzai's speech she repeats phrases to show the importance of
what she is trying to say. For instance, in the above quote she repeats, "it is not time to pity them", by repeating these lines she shows that she wants a
person to help them and that pitying them will not do anything beneficial for their educational situation. When discussing education, she even
references the Islamic religion to display how significant education is to everything. She mentions the Islamic religion when she says, "And do you
not know that the very first word of the Holy Quran is the word Iqra, which means read" (Yousafzai 2). It is significant that read is the first word of
the Holy Quran, because
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All I have to say about A Rose for Emily is that she was a crazy person! Faulkner is a really worthy and famous writer that has a lot to say in his
writings and I think that he accomplishes that when he writes. "On December 10, he delivered his acceptance speech to the academy in a voice so
low and rapid that few could make out what he was saying, but when his words were published in the newspaper the following day, it was
recognized for its brilliance; in later years, Faulkner's speech would be lauded as the best speech ever given at a Nobel ceremony." (Padgett) When
William Faulkner gave his Nobel Acceptance Speech he had a quote in there and I think that he helped man endure by lifting his heart in A Rose for
Emily, he also shows how...show more content...
There were a lot of different emotions that were represented in this selection, but Faulkner didn't tell us that the characters were angry he used
details to show us people's emotions. "Try to be better than yourself. An artist is a creature driven by demons. He doesn't know why they choose
him and he's usually too busy to wonder why. He is completely amoral in that he will rob, borrow, beg, or steal from anybody and everybody to get
the work done." (Faulkner/Stein) When he talks he uses a lot of emotion and that shows his style of writing. William Faulkner gave a Nobel Prize
Acceptance Speech and in it he wrote about A Rose for Emily he gives himself challenges when he writes and one of the challenges is pity and
sacrifice which has been the glory of the past. When he writes he is saying that the people who have had pity thrown upon them and the people
who have made their sacrifices are the only ones who get the glory. "The human drama in Faulkner's novels is then built on the model of the actual,
historical drama extending over almost a century and a half." (Faulkner) In A Rose for Emily this is shown when all of those people who left her life
she didn't really make a big deal out of it she kept to
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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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Faulkner's Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech
Humble
(Critical review on A Rose for Emily and Faulkner's Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech)
In Faulkner's Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech, he talks about how the award was not an award to him as a man, but an award to his work. Faulkner
gives all the credit to his writing career and earning the Nobel Prize to his writing and not to himself. His speech is a very important part of history
because it is such a humble speech and the things he talks about are very true about him as a person. In Faulkner's short story, "A Rose for Emily", the
humbleness of his speech shows through, and really shows that he is a wonderful writer and truly deserved the Nobel Prize Award. "A Rose for
Emily" is a short story about a young woman that talks about how sheltered she was because her father did not believe she needed to get married in
order to be happy. Not...show more content...
Faulkner was one of the greatest writers of all time and it showed in his writing and that is why he won the Nobel Prize Award. His speech was
very well written and went to show that he knew exactly what he was talking about when he wrote. Edmond Volpe talks about Faulkner like he
was the first man to walk on the moon; he said that Faulkner was the greatest writers of all time, but reading his stories took a different type of
reading. He says that in order to read Faulkner's work you need to have a very open mind, and that is something that shows through in "A Rose for
Emily." Faulkner was not the only one to say that. William O'Conner also stated that Faulkner had a "Tangled Fire of a mind" and it showed through
in his work, but it mainly showed through in his more famous story, "A Rose for Emily". Faulkner was a great writer, and that was obviously the
reason that he won the Nobel Prize, and the reason his speech became one of the most famous speeches in the writing
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Marie Curie's Second Nobel Prize
Marie Curie is one of the most famous scientists that ever lived. She was born in November 7, 1867, in Warsaw, Poland and is a Polish–born French
physicist who is famous for being the first woman to win a Nobel Prize. She is the first women professor; the first woman who receives a Nobel
Prize; the first person ever to be awarded two Nobel Prizes. Together, her husband, Pierre Curie and she found the radioactive elements Radium and
Polonium. After the couple discovery of Radium and Polonium, Marie continued to work on their discovery. In 1910, her discovery of Radium
elements brings her second Nobel Prize. Looking at Marie's achievements, it is not hard to
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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...
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
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Wilhelm Rontgen and the Nobel Prize Essay
Wilhelm Conrad Rontgen was born on March 27, 1845 in Lennep, Prussia; which is now Remscheid, Germany. His family moved to Apeldoorn in the
Netherlands, where we went to Institute of Martinus Herman van Doorn, a boarding school. He did not show any special aptitude, but he had a
fascination with nature and loved roaming the countryside and walking through forests. Later he attended a technical school in Utrecht, but
unfortunately was unfairly expelled for allegedly drawing a rude caricature of one of the teachers, which was in fact drawn by another student. He then
entered the University of Utrecht in 1865 to study physics. He did not have the required credentials to enter the University, but he heard he could enter
by passing an exam. He...show more content...
He named this new discovery "X–Ray" because x is the term for an unknown number in mathematics. It was later called "Roentgen Rays" although
changed back to "X–Ray". With his new discovery, he found that the rays would travel through human tissue, but leave a shadow of bone and metal
behind. One of his first experiments was on his wife Bertha's hand with a ring on her finger in 1895. Medical X–rays work by letting fast moving
electrons come to a sudden stop on a metal plate. They show up different on the radiograph because of different absorption rates of different material.
The calcium in bones absorb the most x–rays so they appear white on a radiograph, or the film x–rays are displayed on, although other things like
tissue, fat and skin absorb it less so they appear grey. Air absorbs the least x–rays so this is why lungs look completely black on a radiograph. Todays
x–ray machines are much faster, more efficient and produce much less harmful radiation. Excessive exposure to x–rays can be dangerous but in modern
medicine doctors are able to keep us safe with their knowledge on this. The original x–ray machine took 90 minutes and produced 1500 times the
radiation as modern x–rays. Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen has made a huge impact on todays technology. It's obvious to see that inventing the x–ray is a
big deal, but this was actually a very big accomplishment and made a lot of new things possible. Without the x–ray our ability in the medical world
would be
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Informative Essay: The Nobel Prize
The Nobel Prize The first element the Curies discovered was called polonium, which contained a unstable nucleus. Yet she felt there was something
more powerful still trapped in the pitchblende. On December 26, the Curies announced they had found another element. This was radium! Sadly,
other scientists wouldn't believe them because they didn't have any proof. So for the next four years Marie toiled day and night in a cold and damp
shed to get a piece of pure radium from a ton, as in 2000 pounds, of pitchblende. Finally, in 1902, Marie produced one–tenth of gram of pure radium. In
November, 1903, Curies along with Antoine
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William Faulkner's Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech and its Relevance
William Faulkner's Nobel Prize acceptance speech is a dynamic statement that challenges the writer and man to not simply sit around and watch the end
of man, but to help man endure and prevail. Faulkner refuses to accept the naturalists theme that human beings are dominated, controlled, and
overwhelmed by their environment and nature. He does not accept the end of man, but rather says that man will prevail. Though many have accepted
the easy way out by saying man will simply endure because one can hear his soft, inexhaustible voice even after death, Faulkner also refuses this. He
says man will not only endure, but he shall prevail or triumph over death. Man will...show more content...
Eliot. Eliot wrote about man's effort to transcend the force of time and man's effort to achieve the timelessness of the eternal. His writings reflect his
own personal themes and direction of his life: the quest for eternal salvation. He believes one can "endure and prevail' as Faulkner does as evident in
"The Wasteland". "The Wasteland" emphasizes the decay of the western civilization, yet there was hope and courage in the writings. Eliot joins William
Faulkner in the argument that man controls his own destiny.
Along with many other authors, Stephen Crane would disagree with Eliot and Faulkner on their views because he was a naturalistic author. Crane saw
human beings as wholly controlled by their environment and their heredity. "The Open Boat" expresses Crane's naturalistic qualities showing men
having no control over their destiny as they are stuck in the ocean and are controlled by the sea. Although Crane is seen as a naturalist writer, he is also
seen as a Christian symbolist expressing ultimate understanding of faith and the redemption of people.
Robert Frost, like Stephen Crane, also was a naturalist writer and would disagree with Faulkner. He believed man had no free will and man would
become the sum of your choices. Frost writes in ordinary speech as Faulkner did in his Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech.
Like Frost and Crane, Eugene O'Neill also expressed a naturalistic point of view on his writings. O'Neill's naturalistic
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Malala Yousafzai Nobel Peace Prize Speech Analysis "I am those 66 million girls who are deprived of education. And today I am not raising my
voice, it is the voice of those 66 million girls." Malala Yousafzai makes this statement in her speech to the Nobel Committee as the first Pakistani and,
at the age of sixteen, the youngest person to receive the Nobel Peace Prize Award. Malala was unfortunately shot in the head by a member of theTaliban
, due to the fact that she defied a culture that did not allow girls to have an education. Despite her brush with death, she not only recovered, but
became a champion for the rights of children and girls around the world to receive an education. Malala delivered a speech before the Nobel Committee
...show more content...
Her use of pathos allows her to connect with the audience on an emotional level and helps drive home her argument.
Additionally, her use of ethos allows her to present herself to t audience as a reliable figure by saying, "some people call me the girl who was shot
by the Taliban... some people call me a nobel Laureate now." She convinces the audience of her credibility by reminding them of her personal
experience and that she stands as a credible source. Malala says that the award is not only for her, but " the Nobel Peace Prize money [will be
dedicated] to the Malala Fund", the official organization led by Malala Yousafzai. She builds on personal examples from her life to support the issue,
which shows that she has first–hand experience with the problem and that she is dedicated to finding a solution.
Together with strong appeals to pathos and ethos, she establishes the significance of this subject, persuading the audience to listen to her call to action.
She says "Dear sisters and brothers, dear fellow children, we must work...not wait. Not just the politicians and the world leaders, we all need to
contribute. Me. You. We. It is our duty" (Malala). She reinforces her ideas and provides the strength and seriousness that the topic deserves, while
motivating the audience to unite and face this issue. Furthermore, she says that
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Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech Analysis
There is no denying conflict. Everyone faces conflict of some sort in their lives, whether it be an argument over which sibling gets to sit in the front
seat of the car on the way to school, or a potentially dangerous confrontation that necessitates an immediate reaction. Writers such as Susan Campbell
Bartoletti and Elie Wiesel, who wrote "Hitler Youth: Growing Up in Hitler's Shadow" and "
Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech" respectively, portray
such situations. Bartoletti writes about how one German girl faced conflict during World War Two, and Wiesel shares his personal experience as a
Jew in a concentration camp. Both works show that the most important aspect of facing a conflict is the way in which a person chooses to deal with
it. One could react to conflict by becoming angry or sullen, shouting or going silent, or simply pouting. None of these reactions are the best –– some
can even be counterproductive to one's goals. The best way to deal with conflict is to take a stand for one's beliefs. First off, standing up for one's
beliefs creates many positive effects, for large groups of people as well as for the...show more content...
"Hitler Youth: Growing Up in Hitler's Shadow." Studysync: Reading & Writing Companion. Sonoma, CA: BookheadEd Learning, LLC, 2015.
397–400. Print.
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism. "Underage Drinking." National Institutes of Health. U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services, n.d. Web. 24 Apr. 2017.
Nobel Media. "Liu Xiaobo – Facts." Nobelprize.org. Nobelprize.org, n.d. Web. 24 Apr. 2017.
Town Hall Meetings. "What's New." Town Hall Meetings To Prevent Underage Drinking. Stop Alcohol Abuse, 4 Feb. 2011. Web. 24 Apr. 2017.
Wiesel, Elie. "Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech." Studysync: Reading & Writing Companion. Sonoma, CA: BookheadEd Learning, LLC, 2015. 416–18.
Print.
WorkLife4You. Communication Skills for Healthy Relationships. N.p.: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association, n.d.
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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
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The Achievements Of The Nobel Peace Prize
Winning the Nobel Peace Prize is an amazing feat and accomplishments that very few people receive. Only two US presidents, Theodore Roosevelt,
and Barack Obama have received the award. Roosevelt was the first ever American to win this award. His life story and eventful experiences help
shape him as the person we recognize as an impactful person in history.
Theodore Roosevelt was born on October 27th of 1858 into a Dutch family living in New York. As a child, he struggled with his asthma. Many of
his family members called him "Teddy", a name he wasn't found of. However, that name latched on until people used his nickname to make a toy
many of us are familiar with, a Teddy Bear. His father, Theodore Roosevelt Sr., knew he was very intelligent but thought he did not have the body
to match. He told him to "make his body" by exercising, so young Theodore did and became stronger. This led him to gain an interest in wrestling
and weightlifting. When Theodore became a teenager he also became interested in gymnastics and continued to enjoy sports into his college years
and beyond. Roosevelt went to Harvard College and spent 4 years there. At Harvard, he studied natural science as his major at first, however when his
father died he switched his major to law. He excelled in sports and education and found a good balance between the two. Roosevelt had an interesting
and influential family that helped him be the person we know starting with his first child. On February 12, 1884,
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Criteria For A Nobel Prize
Criteria for a Nobel Prize in Leadership Alan Weber (2009) wrote an article for the Washington Post, that focused on the criteria that one might use
to suggest a nominee. In his article, Weber offered that candidacy for the prize should not be base upon "achievement broadly defined, or abstract
qualities that can be attributed to leaders, but clear and undeniable moral authority" (Weber, 2009, para.1). Cook (2009) added that he would choose a
nominee "who has pretty much transcended his or her own ego, and who sees humanity as interconnected in a vast system to which we all, ultimately,
are contributing"(Cook, 2009, para.4). While these points provide a good starting point for selection the development of selection criteria, I have
demined that any individual who would be a candidate for a Nobel Prize in Pauline Leadership should be characterized by the following the following:
Demonstrated Christ Centered Core Values
Unwavering Sense of Mission and Purpose
Alignment of Character, Ethics, and Actions (Bradberry & Greaves, 2012)
Servant Orientation
Leads by Example
Humility
Self Discipline (Lee, 2003)
Equipping or Developing Others (Lee, 2003)
Lasting Concern for the Broader Community
Influence and Impact
Explanation of the First Nobel Laureate As Lutheran Pastor, it should not be a surprise that I have chosen the 16th Century ReformerMartin Luther as
the first Nobel Laureate in Pauline Leadership. Martin Luther was an Augustinian monk and priest,
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Summary Of The Nobel Lecture By Toni Morrison

  • 1. Summary Of The Nobel Lecture By Toni Morrison In the world, there are about 6909 different languages being spoken. Millions of people are speaking those languages all around the globe, but how many of them are actually speaking? Language is not just about communication with words. Toni Morrison elaborates more on that idea in her speech the Nobel Lecture. Toni's writing illustrates her beliefs about language and the deeper meaning of it. She explains that language should "Permit new knowledge or encourage the mutual exchange of ideas" (Morrison). She believes that America is not achieving those ideas for language but in fact is doing the opposite. American people do not know the meaning and effect of language and because of that, true language is dying. In the speech, the Nobel Lecture, by Toni Morrison, the author narrates repetition andconnotation in order to emphasize and elaborate ideas and purposes of language , ultimately exposing her beliefs about language. In the speech, the word "dying" and other synonyms like dead are repeated multiple times. We know that the the bird mentioned in the story is a metaphor for representing language because Morrison says " the heart of such language is languishing, or perhaps not beating at all–if the bird is already dead". That sentence connects how the bird and language are correlated in the speech. So the reader can infer from the rest of the speech so when she says is the bird dead, she is really saying is the language dead. Morrison believes that due to the examples of Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 2. Dr King Nobel Peace Prize Speech Sparknotes Dr. King's Nobel Peace Prize Lecture was one of the most powerful reading assignments during my first year in the United States. As an international student from Saudi Arabia, I never imagined that one person could change the world. Dr. King believed in "non–violence" in order to obtain social justice, racial integration, and civil rights. In essence, Dr. King's speech represented the progressive nature of the United States and it motivated me to become a future leader in my home county, Saudi Arabia. Dr. Martin Luther King's Nobel Peace Prize speech is an academic piece of writing which documents his beliefs on nonviolence over his career. It was my first experience with political writing since this form of freedom of expression is illegal...show more content... King believed that violence is both impractical and immoral. King was an ordained Baptist minister, who embraced the tenets of Christianity and wholeheartedly preached brotherhood, peace, and love for all men–including white and blacks, alike. King believed "Violence as a way of achieving racial justice is both impractical and immoral. I am not unmindful of the fact that violence often brings about momentary results" (King, 1964, pg. 8). Subsequently, King did not believe in violence and preached non–violence. King felt that nonviolence was the only means to fight oppression, racism, and injustice. King preached tenets of universal love; moreover, King fought against despair, racial separatism, and hate. King's message is extremely inspiring and speaks to be broad audience, including residents of the Middle East. The equality of races can only be achieved through peaceful arguments and demonstrations. For myself, nonviolence is the only legitimate weapon against fighting social injustice. King's message could be interpreted and applied to any situation or community. For myself, hate and revenge can be only be dominated through the application of nonviolence. King also spoke about bringing about the end to war and poverty through collective Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 3. 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 content on HelpWriting.net
  • 4. Essay about Nobel Prize Ahmed Zewail Ahmed Zewail Nobel Prize Winner 709 Words A boy who was named Ahmed Zewail was born February 26, 1946 in Damanhur, the "City of Horus", only 60 km from Alexandria. He lived a good childhood in the City of Disuq, which is the home of the famous mosque, Sidi Ibrahim. He was the only son in a family of three sisters and two loving parents. His father was liked and respected by the community because he was helpful, cheerful and very much enjoyed his life. He worked for the government and also had his own business. His mother was a good natured person and devoted all her life to her...show more content... He was admitted to the faculty of science at Alexandria University and felt the greatness of the university. His grades through out the next few years flourished. They flourished in courses like mathematics, physics, chemistry, and geology. His grades were either excellent or very good. In his second year he scored very highly in Chemistry and was chosen for a group of seven students called "special chemistry", an elite science group. He graduated with the highest honors, with above 90% in all areas of chemistry. After graduating with the degree of Bachelor of Science, he was appointed to a University position as a demonstrator to carry on research toward a Masters and then a Ph.D. degree. Ahmed Zewail who is currently the Linus Pauling Chair Professor of Chemistry and Professor of Physics, and the director of the NSF Laboratory for Molecular Sciences (LMS) at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. He was awarded theNobel Peace Prize in 1999. He was awarded in the category of Chemistry for his new developments in the field of femotoscience. He made it possible to observe the movement of the individual atoms in a femotosecond. A femotosecond is a split second that is a millionth of a billionth of a second. This brilliant development which changed our view of the dynamics of matter holds great promise in the areas of technology and life sciences. His current research Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 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... (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 content on HelpWriting.net
  • 6. Rhetorical Analysis of Nobel Peace Prize Acceptance Speech Malala Yousafzai Malala Yousafzai, the author of this acceptance speech, is a young female from Pakistan who won the Nobel Peace Prize with the help of Kailash Satyarthi. They won it because of their writing about the struggle for young children to receive proper education. The audience for this speech is everyone including her teachers and parents, majesties, royal highnesses, and members of Norwegian Nobel Committee. Issues that she discusses in her speech include children needing proper education and that every sex should have the same rights to education. Her main purpose for writing this speech was to encourage society to help make quality education for both boys and girls around the world. Malala Yousafzai hopes that readers understand that her speech is about the education system and how government leaders need to make quality primary and secondary education for both sexes. In Malala YousafzaiNobel Peace Prize Acceptance Speech, she discusses how important education is and how discrimination of sex affects proper education in her country. Education is important to her because it is a privilege and blessing to go to school in her country and many other countries. She shows that education is important by speaking up for children that do not have access to education. This is shown in her speech when she says, "I am here to stand up for their rights, to raise their voice. . . it is not time to pity them. It is not time to pity them" (Yousafzai 1). Throughout Yousafzai's speech she repeats phrases to show the importance of what she is trying to say. For instance, in the above quote she repeats, "it is not time to pity them", by repeating these lines she shows that she wants a person to help them and that pitying them will not do anything beneficial for their educational situation. When discussing education, she even references the Islamic religion to display how significant education is to everything. She mentions the Islamic religion when she says, "And do you not know that the very first word of the Holy Quran is the word Iqra, which means read" (Yousafzai 2). It is significant that read is the first word of the Holy Quran, because Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 7. All I have to say about A Rose for Emily is that she was a crazy person! Faulkner is a really worthy and famous writer that has a lot to say in his writings and I think that he accomplishes that when he writes. "On December 10, he delivered his acceptance speech to the academy in a voice so low and rapid that few could make out what he was saying, but when his words were published in the newspaper the following day, it was recognized for its brilliance; in later years, Faulkner's speech would be lauded as the best speech ever given at a Nobel ceremony." (Padgett) When William Faulkner gave his Nobel Acceptance Speech he had a quote in there and I think that he helped man endure by lifting his heart in A Rose for Emily, he also shows how...show more content... There were a lot of different emotions that were represented in this selection, but Faulkner didn't tell us that the characters were angry he used details to show us people's emotions. "Try to be better than yourself. An artist is a creature driven by demons. He doesn't know why they choose him and he's usually too busy to wonder why. He is completely amoral in that he will rob, borrow, beg, or steal from anybody and everybody to get the work done." (Faulkner/Stein) When he talks he uses a lot of emotion and that shows his style of writing. William Faulkner gave a Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech and in it he wrote about A Rose for Emily he gives himself challenges when he writes and one of the challenges is pity and sacrifice which has been the glory of the past. When he writes he is saying that the people who have had pity thrown upon them and the people who have made their sacrifices are the only ones who get the glory. "The human drama in Faulkner's novels is then built on the model of the actual, historical drama extending over almost a century and a half." (Faulkner) In A Rose for Emily this is shown when all of those people who left her life she didn't really make a big deal out of it she kept to Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 8. 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 content on HelpWriting.net
  • 9. Faulkner's Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech Humble (Critical review on A Rose for Emily and Faulkner's Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech) In Faulkner's Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech, he talks about how the award was not an award to him as a man, but an award to his work. Faulkner gives all the credit to his writing career and earning the Nobel Prize to his writing and not to himself. His speech is a very important part of history because it is such a humble speech and the things he talks about are very true about him as a person. In Faulkner's short story, "A Rose for Emily", the humbleness of his speech shows through, and really shows that he is a wonderful writer and truly deserved the Nobel Prize Award. "A Rose for Emily" is a short story about a young woman that talks about how sheltered she was because her father did not believe she needed to get married in order to be happy. Not...show more content... Faulkner was one of the greatest writers of all time and it showed in his writing and that is why he won the Nobel Prize Award. His speech was very well written and went to show that he knew exactly what he was talking about when he wrote. Edmond Volpe talks about Faulkner like he was the first man to walk on the moon; he said that Faulkner was the greatest writers of all time, but reading his stories took a different type of reading. He says that in order to read Faulkner's work you need to have a very open mind, and that is something that shows through in "A Rose for Emily." Faulkner was not the only one to say that. William O'Conner also stated that Faulkner had a "Tangled Fire of a mind" and it showed through in his work, but it mainly showed through in his more famous story, "A Rose for Emily". Faulkner was a great writer, and that was obviously the reason that he won the Nobel Prize, and the reason his speech became one of the most famous speeches in the writing Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 10. Marie Curie's Second Nobel Prize Marie Curie is one of the most famous scientists that ever lived. She was born in November 7, 1867, in Warsaw, Poland and is a Polish–born French physicist who is famous for being the first woman to win a Nobel Prize. She is the first women professor; the first woman who receives a Nobel Prize; the first person ever to be awarded two Nobel Prizes. Together, her husband, Pierre Curie and she found the radioactive elements Radium and Polonium. After the couple discovery of Radium and Polonium, Marie continued to work on their discovery. In 1910, her discovery of Radium elements brings her second Nobel Prize. Looking at Marie's achievements, it is not hard to Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 11. 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... 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 content on HelpWriting.net
  • 12. Wilhelm Rontgen and the Nobel Prize Essay Wilhelm Conrad Rontgen was born on March 27, 1845 in Lennep, Prussia; which is now Remscheid, Germany. His family moved to Apeldoorn in the Netherlands, where we went to Institute of Martinus Herman van Doorn, a boarding school. He did not show any special aptitude, but he had a fascination with nature and loved roaming the countryside and walking through forests. Later he attended a technical school in Utrecht, but unfortunately was unfairly expelled for allegedly drawing a rude caricature of one of the teachers, which was in fact drawn by another student. He then entered the University of Utrecht in 1865 to study physics. He did not have the required credentials to enter the University, but he heard he could enter by passing an exam. He...show more content... He named this new discovery "X–Ray" because x is the term for an unknown number in mathematics. It was later called "Roentgen Rays" although changed back to "X–Ray". With his new discovery, he found that the rays would travel through human tissue, but leave a shadow of bone and metal behind. One of his first experiments was on his wife Bertha's hand with a ring on her finger in 1895. Medical X–rays work by letting fast moving electrons come to a sudden stop on a metal plate. They show up different on the radiograph because of different absorption rates of different material. The calcium in bones absorb the most x–rays so they appear white on a radiograph, or the film x–rays are displayed on, although other things like tissue, fat and skin absorb it less so they appear grey. Air absorbs the least x–rays so this is why lungs look completely black on a radiograph. Todays x–ray machines are much faster, more efficient and produce much less harmful radiation. Excessive exposure to x–rays can be dangerous but in modern medicine doctors are able to keep us safe with their knowledge on this. The original x–ray machine took 90 minutes and produced 1500 times the radiation as modern x–rays. Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen has made a huge impact on todays technology. It's obvious to see that inventing the x–ray is a big deal, but this was actually a very big accomplishment and made a lot of new things possible. Without the x–ray our ability in the medical world would be Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 13. Informative Essay: The Nobel Prize The Nobel Prize The first element the Curies discovered was called polonium, which contained a unstable nucleus. Yet she felt there was something more powerful still trapped in the pitchblende. On December 26, the Curies announced they had found another element. This was radium! Sadly, other scientists wouldn't believe them because they didn't have any proof. So for the next four years Marie toiled day and night in a cold and damp shed to get a piece of pure radium from a ton, as in 2000 pounds, of pitchblende. Finally, in 1902, Marie produced one–tenth of gram of pure radium. In November, 1903, Curies along with Antoine Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 14. William Faulkner's Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech and its Relevance William Faulkner's Nobel Prize acceptance speech is a dynamic statement that challenges the writer and man to not simply sit around and watch the end of man, but to help man endure and prevail. Faulkner refuses to accept the naturalists theme that human beings are dominated, controlled, and overwhelmed by their environment and nature. He does not accept the end of man, but rather says that man will prevail. Though many have accepted the easy way out by saying man will simply endure because one can hear his soft, inexhaustible voice even after death, Faulkner also refuses this. He says man will not only endure, but he shall prevail or triumph over death. Man will...show more content... Eliot. Eliot wrote about man's effort to transcend the force of time and man's effort to achieve the timelessness of the eternal. His writings reflect his own personal themes and direction of his life: the quest for eternal salvation. He believes one can "endure and prevail' as Faulkner does as evident in "The Wasteland". "The Wasteland" emphasizes the decay of the western civilization, yet there was hope and courage in the writings. Eliot joins William Faulkner in the argument that man controls his own destiny. Along with many other authors, Stephen Crane would disagree with Eliot and Faulkner on their views because he was a naturalistic author. Crane saw human beings as wholly controlled by their environment and their heredity. "The Open Boat" expresses Crane's naturalistic qualities showing men having no control over their destiny as they are stuck in the ocean and are controlled by the sea. Although Crane is seen as a naturalist writer, he is also seen as a Christian symbolist expressing ultimate understanding of faith and the redemption of people. Robert Frost, like Stephen Crane, also was a naturalist writer and would disagree with Faulkner. He believed man had no free will and man would become the sum of your choices. Frost writes in ordinary speech as Faulkner did in his Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech. Like Frost and Crane, Eugene O'Neill also expressed a naturalistic point of view on his writings. O'Neill's naturalistic Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 15. Malala Yousafzai Nobel Peace Prize Speech Analysis "I am those 66 million girls who are deprived of education. And today I am not raising my voice, it is the voice of those 66 million girls." Malala Yousafzai makes this statement in her speech to the Nobel Committee as the first Pakistani and, at the age of sixteen, the youngest person to receive the Nobel Peace Prize Award. Malala was unfortunately shot in the head by a member of theTaliban , due to the fact that she defied a culture that did not allow girls to have an education. Despite her brush with death, she not only recovered, but became a champion for the rights of children and girls around the world to receive an education. Malala delivered a speech before the Nobel Committee ...show more content... Her use of pathos allows her to connect with the audience on an emotional level and helps drive home her argument. Additionally, her use of ethos allows her to present herself to t audience as a reliable figure by saying, "some people call me the girl who was shot by the Taliban... some people call me a nobel Laureate now." She convinces the audience of her credibility by reminding them of her personal experience and that she stands as a credible source. Malala says that the award is not only for her, but " the Nobel Peace Prize money [will be dedicated] to the Malala Fund", the official organization led by Malala Yousafzai. She builds on personal examples from her life to support the issue, which shows that she has first–hand experience with the problem and that she is dedicated to finding a solution. Together with strong appeals to pathos and ethos, she establishes the significance of this subject, persuading the audience to listen to her call to action. She says "Dear sisters and brothers, dear fellow children, we must work...not wait. Not just the politicians and the world leaders, we all need to contribute. Me. You. We. It is our duty" (Malala). She reinforces her ideas and provides the strength and seriousness that the topic deserves, while motivating the audience to unite and face this issue. Furthermore, she says that Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 16. Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech Analysis There is no denying conflict. Everyone faces conflict of some sort in their lives, whether it be an argument over which sibling gets to sit in the front seat of the car on the way to school, or a potentially dangerous confrontation that necessitates an immediate reaction. Writers such as Susan Campbell Bartoletti and Elie Wiesel, who wrote "Hitler Youth: Growing Up in Hitler's Shadow" and " Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech" respectively, portray such situations. Bartoletti writes about how one German girl faced conflict during World War Two, and Wiesel shares his personal experience as a Jew in a concentration camp. Both works show that the most important aspect of facing a conflict is the way in which a person chooses to deal with it. One could react to conflict by becoming angry or sullen, shouting or going silent, or simply pouting. None of these reactions are the best –– some can even be counterproductive to one's goals. The best way to deal with conflict is to take a stand for one's beliefs. First off, standing up for one's beliefs creates many positive effects, for large groups of people as well as for the...show more content... "Hitler Youth: Growing Up in Hitler's Shadow." Studysync: Reading & Writing Companion. Sonoma, CA: BookheadEd Learning, LLC, 2015. 397–400. Print. National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism. "Underage Drinking." National Institutes of Health. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, n.d. Web. 24 Apr. 2017. Nobel Media. "Liu Xiaobo – Facts." Nobelprize.org. Nobelprize.org, n.d. Web. 24 Apr. 2017. Town Hall Meetings. "What's New." Town Hall Meetings To Prevent Underage Drinking. Stop Alcohol Abuse, 4 Feb. 2011. Web. 24 Apr. 2017. Wiesel, Elie. "Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech." Studysync: Reading & Writing Companion. Sonoma, CA: BookheadEd Learning, LLC, 2015. 416–18. Print. WorkLife4You. Communication Skills for Healthy Relationships. N.p.: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association, n.d. Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 17. 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 content on HelpWriting.net
  • 18. The Achievements Of The Nobel Peace Prize Winning the Nobel Peace Prize is an amazing feat and accomplishments that very few people receive. Only two US presidents, Theodore Roosevelt, and Barack Obama have received the award. Roosevelt was the first ever American to win this award. His life story and eventful experiences help shape him as the person we recognize as an impactful person in history. Theodore Roosevelt was born on October 27th of 1858 into a Dutch family living in New York. As a child, he struggled with his asthma. Many of his family members called him "Teddy", a name he wasn't found of. However, that name latched on until people used his nickname to make a toy many of us are familiar with, a Teddy Bear. His father, Theodore Roosevelt Sr., knew he was very intelligent but thought he did not have the body to match. He told him to "make his body" by exercising, so young Theodore did and became stronger. This led him to gain an interest in wrestling and weightlifting. When Theodore became a teenager he also became interested in gymnastics and continued to enjoy sports into his college years and beyond. Roosevelt went to Harvard College and spent 4 years there. At Harvard, he studied natural science as his major at first, however when his father died he switched his major to law. He excelled in sports and education and found a good balance between the two. Roosevelt had an interesting and influential family that helped him be the person we know starting with his first child. On February 12, 1884, Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 19. Criteria For A Nobel Prize Criteria for a Nobel Prize in Leadership Alan Weber (2009) wrote an article for the Washington Post, that focused on the criteria that one might use to suggest a nominee. In his article, Weber offered that candidacy for the prize should not be base upon "achievement broadly defined, or abstract qualities that can be attributed to leaders, but clear and undeniable moral authority" (Weber, 2009, para.1). Cook (2009) added that he would choose a nominee "who has pretty much transcended his or her own ego, and who sees humanity as interconnected in a vast system to which we all, ultimately, are contributing"(Cook, 2009, para.4). While these points provide a good starting point for selection the development of selection criteria, I have demined that any individual who would be a candidate for a Nobel Prize in Pauline Leadership should be characterized by the following the following: Demonstrated Christ Centered Core Values Unwavering Sense of Mission and Purpose Alignment of Character, Ethics, and Actions (Bradberry & Greaves, 2012) Servant Orientation Leads by Example Humility Self Discipline (Lee, 2003) Equipping or Developing Others (Lee, 2003) Lasting Concern for the Broader Community Influence and Impact Explanation of the First Nobel Laureate As Lutheran Pastor, it should not be a surprise that I have chosen the 16th Century ReformerMartin Luther as the first Nobel Laureate in Pauline Leadership. Martin Luther was an Augustinian monk and priest, Get more content on HelpWriting.net