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Inside The Mecca By Gwendolyn Brooks
Inside the Mecca
The Story of Gwendolyn Brooks
All minds are complex. They are made differently. The way we feel, act and even the way that we write. I feel that my mind is different from
others. Everybody has their way of expressing themselves their own way. My way is writing. It gave me an escape, a way out, and later I found that
it gave a voice to others. I never wanted to die without doing something important and now I realize that I haven't. People say the story of my life was
complicated, but I prefer to call it eventful.
I was born on June 7th, 1917 in Topeka, Kansas to my beautiful and supportive parents Keziah and David. David, my father, was the first person in his
family to graduate high school. He studied a year at Fisk University ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
My many works amazed people and my works even amazed me, but I was never more proud of any of my works more than A Street in Bronzeville. A
Street in Bronzeville was my first book and it brought me national attention. Though A Street in Bronzeville brought me much attention, it didn't bring
me more than my next work: Annie Allen. Annie Allen was my second book of poems about African
–American life in Chicago. When I sent it to my
publisher they sent it to a poet. The poet wrote back telling me to change all of my work. That felt like a bullet in my back. I was certain of my poems
and the way that they reflected real African–American life. Later, I declined to change anything and I sent it out to be published. Annie Allen quickly
gained national attention as well and in 1950 it won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry. This sent me into a long period of happiness and confidence. I was the
first African–American woman to ever win the Pulitzer Prize and that is the best feeling in the world. It proved that African–Americans were capable of
achieving in this prejudice world. It proved that there is no such thing as failure for our
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Age Of Innocence By Edith Wharton
In Edith Wharton's novel, The Age of Innocence, the old New York society accepted those who followed moral codes and dreaded hearing those who
did not. Growing up in a society that has strict rules and traditions in the 1800's, Wharton wrote books about this time period and how characters were
affected by these societal rules and traditions. Edith Wharton grew up in New York Cityand spent most her life there. She met her husband, Edward
Wharton there and continued writing other novels as well. Later on, she divorced him, but had two men who were significant in her life. Jennifer
Bussey and Jennifer Hynes suspect these were her lovers and this moment in her life, with judgement and society against her, this information was put
into her novels. Since she is raised in a judgemental society, she "...soon learned manners and traditions of society life that would characterize her
fiction" ("Age" 2). As seen in The Age of Innocence, Newland Archer and Ellen Olenska are having an affair, but their ways of thinking and decisions
are altered by society. The other characters around them are judgemental and have to follow specific moral codes.
Most characters in The Age of Innocence understand society's expectations and Newland Archer is one of them. He is a man of society of the social
old New York society. He understands and demonstrates the society etiquette and rules. Archer is changed throughout the novel though because of New
York's social codes (Bussey 12). Meanwhile, Ellen
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Dramatic Epiphanys In Edith Wharton's The Age Of Innocence
Dramatic Epiphanies of the Future In the book The Age of Innocence, Edith Wharton tells the tale of a young man who feels constricted by
society, but at the same time embraces the strict rules that ensure that everyone has a place. Newland Archer's life in the 1870s in old New York
changes when he meets his old playmate, Ellen Olenska, right before he is about to announce his engagement to her cousin, May Welland. Newland
starts to doubt his relationship and future with May as he succumbs to Ellen's various charms, and he becomes confused, changing his mind and
being influenced by people around him many times. Throughout the course of the novel, Newland has several internal awakenings which he treats
as if something dramatic is happening in his life. However, these discoveries are not real epiphanies, rather they are just Newland imagining his
future in an ideal world. These awakenings are of the mind or body, and they all have to do with decisions he makes in his love life. Newland Archer
is the kind of man who thinks he is ahead of his time, but when he has the chance to prove that he really believes in these modern ideas, he falls short.
The women's rights movement had just started to make a name for itself at this time, and people felt that they had to take sides in the debate. Newland
had stated that he believed that "Women should be free –– as free as we [men] are" (62). However, when he thinks about why he is marrying May
Welland, he realizes that he is not any
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Allusions In The Age Of Innocence Essay
The Age of Innocence, written by Edith Wharton in 1920, is a novel about Newland Archer, set in New York in the 1870s. In the beginning of the
novel, Newland is engaged to May Welland, however when her cousin Ellen Olenska returns from Europe, he begins to doubt who he really loves. Due
to societal norms, Newland stays with May and never consummates his relationship with Ellen, despite their growing feelings towards each other. At
the time of writing The Age of Innocence, Wharton was reading Sir James George Frazer's The Golden Bough (1914), a 14 volume work on
anthropology, which consisted of myths, customs, and magical practices. This collection sparked interest for Wharton, potentially inspiring her to
enlist many allusions to classical ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
This perfection is what leads Newland to want to marry her as she represents everything the society imagines as a wife. However, like a goddess,
this type of perfection is idealistic and Newland is left in a situation where he will never compare to May. May is portrayed as the symbol of
perfection in the society because Wharton wants to demonstrate that even when she pushes her plans to fruition at the end of the novel, she is still
seen as an upstanding member of society with her image completely untarnished. Society looks at May like an object that they admire from afar, their
perception of her unchanging as they do not look close enough at her as a person.
Continuing from above, May is once again compared to Diana. Before the archery competition, May's entrance is described, "In her white dress, with
a pale green ribbon about the waist and a wreath of ivy on her hat, she had the same Diana–like aloofness as when she had entered the Beaufort
ball–room on the night of her engagement" (173). May is once again compared to Diana in the same sentence where she is depicted wearing white,
further implying the innocence the entire society believes she has. However, this quotation introduces a new concept: May's aloofness. By depicting
her as a goddess who is also distant, Wharton is able to add more of this untouchable nature of perfection. At this point in the novel, May suspects an
affair between Newland and Ellen, however, she is sticks with
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Encounters At The Heart Of The World By Elizabeth Fenn
When the jury and judges awarded Elizabeth Fenn the 2015 Pulitzer Prize in History for her book, Encounters at the Heart of the World: A History of
the Mandan People, their citation described the book as "an engrossing, original narrative showing the Mandans, a Native American tribe in the
Dakotas, as a people with a history."
Strange phrase, "a people with a history." Is there a people without a history? Or did the judges perhaps mean"a people with a recorded history"? If we
set these questions aside, we encounter a further conundrum: Under the rules for the Pulitzer Prize in History, the award goes to "a distinguished and
appropriately documented book upon the history of the United States." But this is a book about the Mandan.
Notwithstanding questions about how the Pulitzer judges and juries understood what they were doing, Fenn's remarkable and remarkably well–written
book richly deserves the Pulitzer Prize. United States history cannot be understood apart from its entanglement with the Indigenous Peoples of the land.
In "Encounters at the Heart of the World," Mandan history illuminates American history, from at least the 17th century to the present.... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
Two Mandan creation stories–one of migration led by Good Furred Robe, the other of Lone Man and First Creator making land–each convey the
position of the Mandan at the center of the world. The Mandan sense of centrality coincides with a geographic fact: the Mandan homeland occupies an
area about 100 miles south of the geographic center of North
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Essay on Immortality and Myth in The Age of Innocence
Immortality and Myth in The Age of Innocence Edith Wharton's books are considered, by some, merely popular fiction of her time. But we must be
careful not to equate popularity with the value of the fiction; i.e., we must not assume that if her books are popular, they are also primitive. Compared
to the works of her contemporary and friend, Henry James, whose books may seem complex and sometimes bewildering; Wharton's The Age of
Innocence appears to be a simplistic, gossipy commentary of New York society during the last decade of the 19th century*. Instead, it is one man's
struggle with the questions of mortality and immortality. Wharton's characters, settings and the minutiae of social rituals, manners, speech habits, dress
and ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Urns and wall paintings tell us about the mythical characters' predilection for a sensual life; this compares to Wharton's characters' penchant for their
own hedonistic life of carousing, sexual cavorting and dizzy social calendars of parties and operas. The Greeks, mythical and real, were masters of
architecture and decoration, which to this day, attest to their immortality. Wharton pays great attention to the mansions and embellishments of the New
York houses. Her society attempts to be immortal in its own buildings; and by amassing ornate bits and bobbles from ages past and paintings and
decorations, the society feels it will live on forever: Then the house had been boldly planned with a ball–room, so that, instead of squeezing through a
narrow passage to get to it (as at the Chiverses') one marched solemnly down a vista of enfiladed drawing–rooms (the sea–green, the crimson and the
botron d'or), seeing from afar the many–candled lustres reflected in the polished parquetry, and beyond that the depths of a conservatory where
camellias and tree–ferns arched their costly foliage over seats of black and gold Bamboo.
Wharton's characters, albeit mortal beings, are made immortal and some can even be compared with mythical characters. We'll begin with the lesser
characters. Newland Archer's sister, Janey who: "was subject to starts and
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Poetry Of Gwendolyn Brooks's Poetry
Poetry is a universal language that can be read and interpreted in many different ways. The versatility of poetry is part of what has made it so
prevalent and popular for thousands of years. Writing is an outlet of feelings or emotions for many poets and usually includes some controversial
meaning or theme that the poet can relate to. For example, Gwendolyn Brooks filled her poems with ambiguity, making her work controversial yet
popular during the era. Brooks used the stigma of racism and racial issues during her lifetime to drive the meaning of her poems. In doing so, she
popularized her own work, making a name for herself, creating new opportunities that could have been hard to acquire as a black woman. Although
many have argued that Gwendolyn Brooks wrote in a style that was majorly controversial, she thrived as a poet from the young age of 13 and her
passion continued to bring her success through poems like "We Real Cool" and "a song in the front yard," eventually providing her with opportunities
to hold superior positions in the poetry community and even receiving multiple honors and rewards. Gwendolyn Brooks was a poet who rose to fame
during the early 20th century. She was born in Topeka, Kansas, and grew up in the popular city ofChicago, Illinois. Brooks had a relatively quiet
childhood. Both of her parents were present in her life, and she attended school everyday like a normal child would. However, Brooks faced some
struggles in school that could possibly be
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Analysis Of The Old Man And The Sea By Ernest Hemingway
Is the achievement of victory an indicator of how valuable a man's life is? This can be answered by examining several characters and the journey
they travel in different stories. The short novel The Old Man and the Sea is written by Ernest Hemingway, and is the story of a Cuban fisherman
who battles with a giant fish for many days. The next book, A Lesson Before Dying is written by Ernest J. Gaines, and tells the story of a man
named Grant who is tasked with convincing a young man sentenced to death that he is not an animal like everyone says he is. Finally, William
Faulkner's Nobel Prize acceptance speech tells writers it is their duty to encourage people to be courageous in the face of danger. The characters in
each of these stories have different life journeys but similar outcomes through achieving moral victory. Achieving a moral victory contributes to the
overall success of one's life.
In The Old Man and the Sea, the main character, Santiago, is an unlucky fisherman who has a tenacious battle with a large marlin while fishing in the
Gulf Stream. Santiago was considered unlucky due to the fact that he had gone eighty–four days without catching a single fish. Although he felt
rejected and defeated, he did not allow the opinions of the other fishermen and even his young friend, Manolin, keep him from moving forward. He
thinks, "maybe today. Every day is a new day. It is better to be lucky." (Hemingway 32) and on the eighty–fifth day he was determined to end his
unlucky
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Times They Are A Changing
Flowers are Red The sage bard, Bob Dylan, on the rapidly rising waters of vicissitude: 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 was hardly a grown man when he groaned the initial verse of his 1964
album's title track, "The Times they are A–Changing" (1964). A masterpiece which would continue to ring in the ears of every new generation of
upcoming adults for nearly half a century. Dylan depicts two conflicting mindsets in his anthem of progress: Those who resist change, otherwise
known as, the first who will later be last; and those who rally for change, the slow that'll later be fast. Respectively, lionized author and classical Ivy
League educator Timothy D. Snyder's, "Why Laptops in Class Are Distracting America's Future Workforce," published by Christian Science Monitor in
2011, documents the decline of his students' attentiveness and well–being due to technology infiltrating his lecture hall. Alternatively, internationally
renowned author, journalist, reporter, and fellow Ivy League scholar, Thomas L. Friedman, writes of why the time has come for technological change
in education in, "Come the Revolution," which was published by The New York Times in 2012. Despite the increasingly large divide that separates the
two's
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Why Laptops Are Distracting America 's Future Workforce
There's no denying that technology has grown to play a major role in education and learning. Students are using laptops, tablets, and smartphones to
research, complete, and even collaborate on assignments, both in and outside of the classroom. Timothy D. Snyder and Thomas L. Friedman both have
written articles expressing their opposing opinions on technology in the classroom. Timothy Snyder is a Professor of History at Yale University who has
written five different award–winning books. In his article, "Why Laptops Are Distracting America's Future Workforce", Snyder explains to students and
teachers why he is against technology in the classroom. Thomas Friedman is a reporter and columnist for The New York Times, author of six
award–winning ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In Thomas Friedman's article, "Come the Revolution," Friedman is confident that an online–only education program called Coursera is the solution to
the problems of rising tuition and the increased importance of education in a knowledge economy. The rhetorical strategies used by Friedman were
much more effective in comparison to Snyder's, especially his use of valid numbers, statistics, and facts to support his claims. One example of this is
in the second paragraph of Friedman's "Come the Revolution." After introducing Andrew Ng, professor and cofounder of Coursera, and explaining the
online platform's benefits, Friedman quotes Ng to support his argument. He writes, " "I normally teach 400 students," Ng explained, but last semester
he taught 100,000 in an online course on machine learning. "To reach that many students before," he said, I would have had to teach my normal
Stanford class for 250 years." " Friedman uses the valid numbers, statistics, and facts from reliable authorities to support his argument.
Another rhetorical strategy that was very effective for Friedman but was ineffective in Snyder's argument is tone. Choosing words and examples
carefully for tone is important when attempting to persuade because tone indicates the writer's attitude towards his subject or audience. In Timothy
Snyder's, "Why Laptops in Class Are Distracting America's
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Times They Are A Changing
Flowers are Red The sage bard, Bob Dylan, on the rapidly rising waters of vicissitude: 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 was hardly a grown man when he groaned the initial verse of his 1964
album's title track, "The Times they are A–Changing" (1964). A masterpiece which would continue to ring in the ears of every new generation of
upcoming adults for nearly half a century. Dylan depicts two conflicting mindsets in his anthem of progress: Those who resist change, otherwise
known as, the first who will later be last; and those who rally for change, the slow that'll later be fast. Respectively, lionized author and classical Ivy
League educator Timothy D. Snyder's, "Why Laptops in Class Are Distracting America's Future Workforce," published by Christian Science Monitor in
2011, documents the decline of his students' attentiveness and well–being due to technology infiltrating his lecture hall. Alternatively, internationally
renowned author, journalist, reporter, and fellow Ivy League scholar, Thomas L. Friedman, writes of why the time has come for technological change
in education in, "Come the Revolution," which was published by The New York Times in 2012. Despite the increasingly large divide that separates the
two's
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Old Man And The Sea Essay
Ernest Hemingway is one of the greatest writing icons of the early to mid 20th century. Known mainly for his success in writing the critically acclaimed
novel, The Old Man and the Sea, Hemingway had many symbolic meanings instituted throughout this novel and many other works. Many having the
theme of a hero confronting a natural force, as seen when Santiago confronts the mighty sea. Along with the heroic themes, Hemingway had become a
religious Catholic man growing up and decided to include many religious references and biblical allusions. Since the beginning of his writing career, he
has been putting these allusions and important uses of the bible into his work. Critics of these works such as, "The Old Man and the Sea," have
discovered and have been aware of these references and parallels for some time. Some critics have always believed these biblical allusions to be just
coincidence or false. Evidence will be shown of these writings and analyzed to show how they translate to not only to the book but also to
Hemingway's life. Almost 20 years of Hemingway 's life was spent living in Cuba. He often visited Cojimar, which was the village that "The Old Man
and the Sea" took place in. Hemingway spent much time shark and marlin fishing while staying in Cuba. His inspiration for writing his novel were the
tireless fishermen that enduring so many obstacles and struggles everyday just to get by. This shows the spirit of the individual as having virtues of
determination as well as
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Plagiarism : Playing With Fire Essay
Albert Dominguez
Dr. Grubic
Comp and Rhet.
23 October 2016
Plagiarism: Playing with Fire Accuracy is one of the main aspects that makes people take information seriously. Without accuracy one will never
know the truth. Some teachers can go from saying Christopher Columbus did not find America to saying he found America and raped and killed
numerous of Indian women. Or some people may state that the President does not have executive powers to instead declaring the President 's ability
to bypass congress. Another situation that can happen is a straight A student can get kicked out of college or gets sued for plagiarism. Accuracy will
make us as Americans, at least in a perfect world, proceed further in life and succeed more. One of the many times in American history that cheating
made a person go far in life was when Joe Biden plagiarized an assignment, received an F in that class, and then became the Vice President of the
United States (Doinne, 1987). Then there is the reporter from the Washington Post, Janet Cooke, who fabricated a false story into an article about an
eight–year–old boy that was a heroin addict and later was publically humiliated by everyone (Cooke,1980). Accuracy depends on how credible of a
source an individual use. Accuracy is everything in a person's life. Accuracy is essential for trustworthiness of non–fiction writing . That shows the
importance of having accurate statements. Accuracy depends on how good of a source an individual use.
As
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Essay on Edwin Arlington Robinson biography
Supremacy
1) There is a drear and lonely tract of hell
2) From all the common gloom removed afar:
3) A flat, sad land it is, where shadows are,
4) Whose lorn estate my verse may never tell.
5) I walked among them and I knew them well:
6) Men I had slandered on life's little star
7) for churls and sluggards; and I knew the scar
8) upon their brows of woe ineffable.
9) But as I went majestic on my way,
10) Into the dark they vanished, one by one,
11) Till, with a shaft of God's eternal day,
12) The dream of all my glory was undone,––
13) And, with a fool's importunate dismay,
14) I heard the dead men singing in the sun.
The composition date isn't known but the format of the sonnet is:
Abbaabbacdcdcd
Edwin Arlington Robinson ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The Man Who Died Twice and Tristram The last two of these won Pulitzer Prizes in 1925 and 1927, when he was elected as a member of the National
Academy of Arts and Letters.
Robinson never married but enjoyed the company of many friends. He died of cancer in hospital in New York on April 6, 1935. A few of his most
known poems are, "The Children of the Night" "Captain Craig" "The Town Down the River" "The Man against the Sky" "The Three Taverns" and
"Avon's Harvest." He had 3 Pulitzer prizes awarded to him.
For the first twenty years of Robinson's writing career, he had difficulty in getting published and attracting an audience. He published his first two
volumes privately and friends secretly guaranteed the publication of the third. He did receive positive reviews from the beginning, however, and with
the publication of The Man Against the Sky in 1916 his reputation was secure.
For the rest of his life he was widely regarded as "America's foremost poet," as William Stanley Braithwaite put it. Both academics and the
general public held him in high esteem, as attested by the fact of his winning three Pulitzer Prizes for poetry for volumes published in 1921, 1924, and
1927, when his Tristram became a national best–seller.
Although Robinson's subject matter and philosophical stance differ markedly from that of his predecessors', his form
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Analysis Of The Old Man And The Sea By Ernest Hemingway
Is the achievement of victory an indicator of how valuable a man's life is? This can be answered by examining several characters and the journey
they travel in different stories. The short novel The Old Man and the Sea is written by Ernest Hemingway, and is the story of a Cuban fisherman
who battles with a giant fish for many days. The next book, A Lesson Before Dying is written by Ernest J. Gaines, and tells the story of a man
named Grant who is tasked with convincing a young man sentenced to death that he is not an animal like everyone says he is. Finally, William
Faulkner's Nobel Prize acceptance speech tells writers it is their duty to encourage people to be courageous in the face of danger. The characters in
each of these stories have different life journeys but similar outcomes through achieving moral victory. Achieving a moral victory contributes to the
overall success of one's life.
In The Old Man and the Sea, the main character, Santiago, is an unlucky fisherman who has a tenacious battle with a large marlin while fishing in the
Gulf Stream. Santiago was considered unlucky due to the fact that he had gone eighty–four days without catching a single fish. Although he felt
rejected and defeated, he did not allow the opinions of the other fishermen and even his young friend, Manolin, keep him from moving forward. He
thinks, "maybe today. Every day is a new day. It is better to be lucky." (Hemingway 32) and on the eighty–fifth day he was determined to end his
unlucky
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Edward Albee Essay
Edward Albee, a famous American Playwright, was born on March 12, 1928 and grew up in Westchester County, New York. Albee grew up with his
adoptive parents and left home at the age of 18, due to conflicts with his adoptive parents and a suffocating environment. Although, his adopted family
was very wealthy and owned multiple theatres, he felt very distanced. However, because he was his family owned theatres, he was exposed to that
realm and idea, which he later found a passion with. Albee's love as a playwright was not supported by his family, as they wanted a son to have a
more respectable job, like a doctor or lawyer. As a student, Albee was known to be expelled or kicked out by many of his schools. He had a passion
to write plays and began experimenting with different styles, while befriending other writers, sculptors and painters.
Albee was an exceptional writer and wrote many poems, but was able to find his break or voice when he began writing plays. He was known for his
dramas and many one act plays. His first breakout and major play was "Zoo Story" and was written in only 3 weeks. Zoo Story is a one act play and its
theme explore the topics of isolation, social ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Edward Albee was a UH professor for distinguished playwriting and was an Associate director at the AlleyTheatre. He was able to take charge of UH's
theatre program from 1989–2003 and returned to UH in 2009 to become a professor and teach young adults about his passion.
Personally for me, I feel like I would enjoy his plays. He is known to evoke a lot of raw and real emotion from the actors and his audience, which
interests me. I already tend to like watching dramas and on top of that, Albee has very many short one act plays, that wouldn't take that much time
away from me. He also has won 3 pulitzer Awards and is known for being one of the greatest modern playwrights of all time, so I think I would very
much enjoy his
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Robert Frost Essay
Robert Frost
Robert Lee Frost, was one of America's leading 20th Century poets, and a four time winner of the Pulitzer Prize. Frost did not receive these
recognitions until his later years when his poetic brilliance was finally recognized. "Frost was a pioneer in the interplay of rhythm and meter"(
Waggoner 1). Frost's brilliance was contributed by many things; including his life, career, andliterary works.
Robert Frost was born on March 26, 1874 in San Francisco, California. Frost is the son of William Prescott Frost and Isabelle Moodie Frost. In 1885,
Frost's father died, so his mother, Isabelle, moved the family to Lawrence, Mass., where she was originally from. There Frost ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
The Frost family returned to the United States in 1915, Robert's poems were also published in the U.S. the year of his return. With two poems
published in the United States, Frost had secured his recognition as a poet, but his income was still negligible. Frost once again, in Plymouth, N.H.,
became a poet–teacher and summer farmer. He spent mainly the academic years 1916–1938 at Amherst College in Plymouth (Waggoner 2). Frost had
several Stillborn children or ones that died in infancy. Frost lived to be 89 years old until his death in Boston Mass., on January 29, 1963.
Frost achieved poetic maturity before the beginning of poetic modernism, which was ushered in by the early 20th century movement known as
imagism (Waggoner 2). With two poems out Frost began to feel like a poet more and more. "Mountain Interval, which appeared in November 1916,
offered readers some of his finest poems, such as Birches, Out, Out–, The Hill Wife, and An Old Man's Winter Night" (Burnshaw 2). Frost released
many poems until his death in 1963, even in his final years Frost released In the Clearing, his ninth and last collection of poems appearing in 1962.
Frost spoke at the Presidential Inauguration for John F. Kennedy, old aged, Frost read the poem by memory.
Frost's life could be summerize in many ways, he was a devoted man, a
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
An Analysis Of William Faulkner And Ernest Hemingway
William Faulkner and Ernest Hemingway were both wonderfully gifted and talented writers in their time. In As I Lay Dying and A Farewell to Arms,
one can see the similarities and differences between Faulkner and Hemingway through their ability to draw from personal experiences to inspire their
work, their narrative styles, and their use of language. William Faulkner was born in New Albany, Mississippi and trained as a pilot in the first Royal
Canadian Air Force during World War 1. After the war, Faulkner beganwriting again. A friend told Faulkner to write about his native Mississippi.
Inspired by the concept, Faulkner began writing about the places and people of his childhood, developing many colorful characters based on the real
people he grew up with or heard about. Many of Faulkner's most successful pieces, including As I Lay Dying, took place in Yoknapatawpha County–a
place nearly identical to where he was raised. (Biography.com). Ernest Hemingway's background, while different from Faulkner's, also inspired his
writing. He was working for a newspaper in Kansas City, when a friend suggested Hemingway volunteer for the American Field Service as an
ambulance driver. In Europe, Hemingway had many of the experiences he used to pull from in writing A Farewell to Arms, including being wounded
by a projectile exploding in the trenches and falling in love with a nurse who would become the model for Catherine Barkley (Roberts). Their narrating
styles are vastly different.
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Old Man And The Sea
Gustav Freytag, a famous German novelist and playwright, developed a well–known structure himself called Freytag's Pyramid or dramatic structure.
Freytag's Pyramid is divided into five stages the exposition, the rising action, climax, falling action, and the denouement. Each one of the stages
describe the different parts of novels and short stories. Ernest Hemingway author of "Hills Like White Elephants" and other works, such as, "A
Farewell to Arms" and "The Old Man and the Sea" has made many accomplishments throughout his writing career. His novel "The Old Man and the
Sea" won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1953. Hemingway also received the Nobel Prize for literature in 1954. Hemingway's works are great
examples of stories that displays the five stages of fiction. "Hills Like White Elephants" was published in 1927 in Hemingway's second collection of
short stories. "Hills Like White Elephants" is the story of two characters, the American and Jig, and their conversation at a train station in a valley in
Spain. The two lovers talk vaguely about an operation and both have opposing views on it; Jig ends the conflict by giving in to the American's request.
Freytag's pyramid in "Hills Like White Elephants" combine to make an interesting tip–of–the–iceberg story. The exposition in of "Hills like White
Elephants" describes a valley that runs along the Ebro River in northern Spain. Two characters are revealed The American and the woman (Jig) who is
with him are sitting on a
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Theme Of Mythology In The Age Of Innocence
Abstract The purpose of this Extended Essay is to challenge the general categorization of male as heroes in novels through one of Edith Wharton's
best novels by examining the question "How does Edith Wharton manifest the role of May Welland and Ellen Olenska in foreshadowing the plot of
The Age of Innocence?" The scope of this essay encompasses two works; first a critical analysis of the character, May and second, an analysis of the
character, Ellen, regarding their roles as foreteller and heroines in the novel. The unique use of Mythology by Wharton as symbols to portray her two
leading female characters, in the era of the Gilded Age, is what initially drew me to write an essay on this topic. This essay thus explores Wharton's use
of mythology ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
To answer that, readers are implored to interpret Ellen's speech to Newland that they partially understood – allowing them to establish a relation
between her connotation of the "enlightened room" and her seemingly fade existence in Newland's life. Wharton encourages her readers to concretize
the gap that she has created in the story by inferring that Ellen has acquired inner peace through "resist[ing] the pulls of the social world" and relying
on herself. It seems to suggest that Ellen was implying to Newland that she cannot continue going on with the shammed relationship and must escape
to remain on the quest of finding her own happiness independently and not on other people's misery. Readers soon recognizes Ellen's hints as an act
of convincing Newland to cease the illicit affair and return to May as her wisdom and receptiveness had taught her to "look at visions and not realities"
– it was impossible for them to be together in any open way. Ellen's words had proven powerful, for in the last chapter, Newland settles with the
believe that "it's more real to [him] to seat on the bench outside Ellen's house than if [he] went up" to meet her. He would rather live with his "youthful
memory of her"
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Why Laptops Are Distracting America 's Future Workforce
There's no denying that technology has grown to play a major role in education and learning. Students are using laptops, tablets, and smartphones to
research, complete, and even collaborate on assignments, both in and outside of the classroom. Timothy D. Snyder and Thomas L. Friedman both have
written articles expressing their opposing opinions on technology in the classroom. Timothy Snyder is a Professor of History at Yale University who has
written five different award–winning books. In his article, "Why Laptops Are Distracting America's Future Workforce", Snyder explains to students and
teachers why he is against technology in the classroom. Thomas Friedman is a reporter and columnist for The New York Times, author of six
award–winning ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In Thomas Friedman's article, "Come the Revolution," Friedman is confident that an online–only education program called Coursera is the solution to
the problems of rising tuition and the increased importance of education in a knowledge economy. The rhetorical strategies used by Friedman were
much more effective in comparison to Snyder's, especially his use of valid numbers, statistics, and facts to support his claims. One example of this is
in the second paragraph of Friedman's "Come the Revolution." After introducing Andrew Ng, professor and cofounder of Coursera, and explaining the
online platform's benefits, Friedman quotes Ng to support his argument. He writes, " "I normally teach 400 students," Ng explained, but last semester
he taught 100,000 in an online course on machine learning. "To reach that many students before," he said, I would have had to teach my normal
Stanford class for 250 years." " Friedman uses the valid numbers, statistics, and facts from reliable authorities to support his argument.
Another rhetorical strategy that was very effective for Friedman but was ineffective in Snyder's argument is tone. Choosing words and examples
carefully for tone is important when attempting to persuade because tone indicates the writer's attitude towards his subject or audience. In Timothy
Snyder's, "Why Laptops in Class Are Distracting America's
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Character Comparison
Stefanie A. Thomas
Professor Judith Angona
English 152
9 October 2012
Character Comparison – Two Repressed Women Both "Hills like White Elephants" by Ernest Hemingway and William Faulkner's "A Rose for
Emily" center around two women who are repressed by their lives' circumstances. However, outside of their feelings, their situations could not be
more different. Miss Emily Grierson is trapped in a life of solitude, despondency, and desperation. The girl, or "Jig", is equally as desperate, but her
repression is not born of loneliness or restraint–it is the child of her freedom. Repression comes in several forms, but it will suffocate and consume
you. In "A Rose for Emily", Miss Emily Grierson lives a life of quiet turmoil. Her ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
"Jig" is a young, modern woman who is faced with the decision of prolonging her freedom and the stability of her relationship or accepting motherhood
and the responsibility that comes with it. It is not to say that motherhood is a prison; it is that motherhood would be the death of everything she loved,
mainly travelling, and the very stability of her relationship with her lover, "the American". "The American" says, "'That's the only thing that bothers us.
It's the only thing that's made us unhappy.'" (Hemingway 115) which unequivocally shows that the center of conflict inside of their relationship is the
presumed pregnancy. There are several instances in the story that "the American" reiterates "Jig's" options for her future. Although he expresses that he
would support and love her no matter what the ultimate choice is, she feels conflicted and her pain, which builds throughout the story and as the
conversation progresses, becomes more obvious. What is most interesting is, as his second thoughts about the unspoken abortion spike, her resistance
to discuss the topic any further grows in tandem. Although the two heroes' love for one another is evident, there is the aching uncertainty between
them: Is there room for a child in their relationship built of travelling, drinking, and discovery? "Jig's" repression, just like Miss Emily's, is inevitable
because of their presented circumstance. These
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Edward Albee Essay
Edward Albee, a famous American Playwright, was born on March 12, 1928 and grew up in Westchester County, New York. Albee grew up with his
adoptive parents and left home at the age of 18, due to conflicts with his adoptive parents and a suffocating environment. Although, his adopted family
was very wealthy and owned multiple theatres, he felt very distanced. However, because he was his family owned theatres, he was exposed to that
realm and idea, which he later found a passion with. Albee's love as a playwright was not supported by his family, as they wanted a son to have a
more respectable job, like a doctor or lawyer. As a student, Albee was known to be expelled or kicked out by many of his schools. He had a passion
to write plays and began experimenting with different styles, while befriending other writers, sculptors and painters.
Albee was an exceptional writer and wrote many poems, but was able to find his break or voice when he began writing plays. He was known for his
dramas and many one act plays. His first breakout and major play was "Zoo Story" and was written in only 3 weeks. Zoo Story is a one act play and its
theme explore the topics of isolation, social ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Edward Albee was a UH professor for distinguished playwriting and was an Associate director at the AlleyTheatre. He was able to take charge of UH's
theatre program from 1989–2003 and returned to UH in 2009 to become a professor and teach young adults about his passion.
Personally for me, I feel like I would enjoy his plays. He is known to evoke a lot of raw and real emotion from the actors and his audience, which
interests me. I already tend to like watching dramas and on top of that, Albee has very many short one act plays, that wouldn't take that much time
away from me. He also has won 3 pulitzer Awards and is known for being one of the greatest modern playwrights of all time, so I think I would very
much enjoy his
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An Analysis of Our Town
It's the little things in life that count
An analysis of the representation of the daily life in Our Town
* Table of Contents
1Introduction3 2Biographical Background4 3Our Town5 3.1General5 3.2Theme5 3.3Publication5 4Analysis6 4.1Act 16 4.2Act 27 4.3Act 38
5Conclusion10 6Bibliography12 6.1Primary Literature12 6.2Secondary Literature12 6.3Webliography12
Introduction
Needless to say, Our Town is one of the most popular plays byThornton Wilder and not for nothing has it won the Pulitzer Prize in 1938. The most
significant aspect in Our Town is the representation of the everyday life. Not only does the play explores American values of religion or... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
He began to study law, but he abandoned his studies only two years later.
"After serving in the United States Coast Guard during World War I, he attended Oberlin College before earning his B.A. at Yale University in 1920,
where he refined his writing skills as a member of the Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity, a literary society. He earned his M.A. in French from Princeton
University in 1926." [Online 4]
After his studies, he began teaching at the University of Chicago, but he never stopped writing. During this time his first novels and plays were
published, for example, "Our Town". This play is considered to be one of this most famous plays, and it also won the Pulitzer Prize in 1938, the year
when the play was published. Thornton Wilder died on December 7, in 1975 in Hamden, Connecticut. He was an "American icon, and an
internationally famous playwright and novelist. To this day, his works are read, performed and appreciated by audiences worldwide." [Online 5]
Our Town
General
Our Town is a so–called "slice–of–life" story, which means that the reader is able to relate to the story. He feels like he is involved in the play,
because of its representation of the daily life and all those little things in life which makes it interesting.
Theme
Our town has a carpe diem theme. Translated it means seize the day, people should concentrate themselves on the little things in life which are often
unappreciated. In some way, the play
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An Analysis Of William Faulkner And Ernest Hemingway
William Faulkner and Ernest Hemingway were both wonderfully gifted and talented writers in their time. In As I Lay Dying and A Farewell to Arms,
one can see the similarities and differences between Faulkner and Hemingway through their ability to draw from personal experiences to inspire their
work, their narrative styles, and their use of language. William Faulkner was born in New Albany, Mississippi and trained as a pilot in the first Royal
Canadian Air Force during World War 1. After the war, Faulkner beganwriting again. A friend told Faulkner to write about his native Mississippi.
Inspired by the concept, Faulkner began writing about the places and people of his childhood, developing many colorful characters based on the real
people he grew up with or heard about. Many of Faulkner's most successful pieces, including As I Lay Dying, took place in Yoknapatawpha County–a
place nearly identical to where he was raised. (Biography.com). Ernest Hemingway's background, while different from Faulkner's, also inspired his
writing. He was working for a newspaper in Kansas City, when a friend suggested Hemingway volunteer for the American Field Service as an
ambulance driver. In Europe, Hemingway had many of the experiences he used to pull from in writing A Farewell to Arms, including being wounded
by a projectile exploding in the trenches and falling in love with a nurse who would become the model for Catherine Barkley (Roberts). Their narrating
styles are vastly different.
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All over but the Shoutin
All Over but the Shoutin'
All Over but the Shoutin' by Rick Bragg is an autobiography that starts from Mr. Bragg's impoverished childhood in a family that included an abusive,
alcoholic father, an incredibly powerful angel of a mother and his two brothers, and follows him through his Pulitzer Prize–winning journalistic career
at the New York Times. The author states at the beginning of the book that readers will laugh and cry reading it. He was right on the money with both
of these points.
The Bragg family grew up with virtually nothing. The father left the family a number of times, offering no financial assistance and stealing whatever
he could before he left. When he was there, he was usually drunk and physically abusive to the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
As I said before, I grew up in a middle class family. This made it difficult for me to completely understand everything that he was talking about in
the book. I never knew what it was like to have little or no food to eat. If we didn't have anything to eat our family would go to a restaurant and eat or
go shopping and get food.
Also, the work aspect is difficult to understand for me. I know what his mother did was what all people in her situation did then. The working
conditions that she dealt with day in and day out were horrific. And the thing was she never complained about it or quit. I know if I was in her
situation I would have never lasted. I would have quit and tried to find another job. Another option that middle class workers have is taking vacation
time if it gets to hot out or if it is raining. That is just the way we deal with situations like that. I believe our generation living in those conditions would
never have made it back then.
Communication is a very important aspect of any family. Good communication leads to a better family life. Bragg and his mother in particular
seemed to communicate very well. The way he details each of his childhood stories is very good and since most of the stories are told by the
motherly figure in your life you can see the communication is good. The communication between Bragg and his father is the complete opposite. It was
very hard
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Biography of Annie Prolux
Annie Prolux is an author of eight books. She was born in Norwich, Connecticut on August 22, 1935. She is the oldest of fives sisters. She
graduated high school in Portland, Maine and attended Colby College. She then attended the University of Vermont and received her bachelor's
degree in History. In 1973 she attended Sir George Williams University of Montreal, where she graduated with a master's degree in History. In 1983
and 1987 Proulx landed two stories in The Best American Short Stories. She published her first fictional book called Heart Songs and Other Stories,
in 1988, followed by a novel, Postcards, in 1992. She won a Pulitzer Prize and a National Book Award for the comic novel, The Shipping News. In
1998 Proulx won two O. Henry prize stories for Brokeback Mountain and The Mud Below. Brokeback Mountain later became an academy award
winning film.
In Prolux's short story 55 Miles to the Gas Pump, a drunken rancher named Mr. Croom hides a secret from his wife. He gets drunk and falls off a
cliff. After his death Mrs. Croom's curiosity sets in. She cuts a hole in the roof and reveals twelve dead women. Some of the women she recognized
from missing posters. The women were badly beaten, some covered in paint, and one covered in newspapers. Mr. Croom had the attic locked for
twelve years.
Proulx uses the plot to keep the reader interested by giving descriptions of the bodies. She starts the story off with Mr. Croom death. It keeps the reader
interested to find out what
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The Music Of Wayne Peterson
American composer, Wayne Peterson, won the Pulitzer Prize in music in 1992. In addition to winning the Pulitzer Prize, Peterson has been honored
with fellowships and commissions from many Foundations, as well as an award of distinction from the American Academy and Institute of Arts and
Letters. He has received awards from the Minnesota Centennial Composition Contest, the American Society of Harpists and the American Academy
and Institute of Arts and Letters. Needless to say Wayne Peterson has been very successful at composingmusic. One may ask when his fascination of
music began and how he inspired today's music.
Wayne Peterson "was born in Albert Lea, a small town Minnesota on March 8th 1927" (Henken, 1992, pp 1). He is now retired and has been living
in San Francisco, California since 1960. Since Peterson is still alive and a private man there are currently no sources that tell how he started writing his
music. Although it is known that where he began composing and that he composed under the influences of Copland, Stravinsky, Schoenberg and
Bartok. Wayne Peterson played piano and studied composition in Minnesota University where he received not only his bachelors and masters but also
his PhD. While he studied at Minnesota University, he studied with American composers, Paul Fetler, Earl George and James Aliferis. "Peterson went
on to advance his studies after his PhD on a Fulbright Scholarship, which enabled him to spend a
year at the Royal Academy of Music in
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Lin Manuel Miranda Influence
An influential person is a person who affects people's lives. They have their words heard and some people can agree with them and some people
cannot. They are inspirational or seen as evil and cruel and people watch them for good reasons. This essay will explain why Lin–Manuel Miranda is a
influential person and how his words are inspirational. Lin–Manuel shows that music is one of the best tools to use to spread inspiration and become
influential. Miranda has taken his talent for music and writing and words to inspire people. Most to all of his listeners would agree, he is definitely
very influential.
Lin–Manuel Miranda, a person who has won countless awards for his music, creating the Broadway hits In The Heights and Hamilton The Musical ...
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The first part of his speech states that nothing in life can be insured, it's all up to the people and what they decide to do. His musical Hamilton is
proof that history is remembered and it is up to the people to not repeat anything bad, learning from the experience of our ancestors. Clearly, we all
have to get back up on our feet even when hate and fear are growing and never give up. The last part of his speech tells you that if you love someone
or something, do not let others influence that. People can love who/what they want and it can never be "killed or swept aside". Another speech, this
one about his Grammy, says, "We write music, we write songs to tell a story," This clearly shows and supports the importance of music like his,
inspiring others and telling stories like books, informing people through music that can toy with your emotions just as well––if not better––than books
can. A last speech, this one from hisPulitzer Prize, says, "To be the 9th musical to ever win the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in its 100 year history is
truly humbling for all of us. For Hamilton to now be in the same company as Of Thee I Sing, South Pacific,......... Rent, and most recently Next to
Normal is outside of our own comprehension. Look at where we are. Look at where we started."" Quoting lyrics from the musical that won the award,
Miranda shows his
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Essay about Analysis of the Biography of Upton Sinclair
Upton Sinclair was born in Baltimore, Maryland on September 20th 1978. Sinclair grew up in a broken household; his father was an alcohol
salesman and killed himself drinking. While his mother would not even think about drinking alcohol. So these personalities naturally clashed. So
Sinclair found some solace in books, Sinclair was a natural writer and he began publishing at the young age of fifteen years old. Sinclair started off
going to school at a small college by the name of New York City College. This was just temporary as Sinclair would need time and money to move
higher up to a form of better education. So as a result Sinclair took the initiative and he started writing columns on ethnic jokes and hack fiction for
small magazines in... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Through college and ready to move on with his career as a writer and his life he began moving quickly. In 1900 Sinclair married Miss Meta H.
Fuller. Sinclair had a child named David with her. The marriage was extremely tough though because both had very little money to work with and
with the addition of his son it didn't help the financial situation in the family. The marriage eventually failed though, Sinclair and Miss Meta H.
Fuller divorced in 1911 as two very unhappy people. This gave Sinclair inspiration though to write a tale. The tale which was called Springtime
and Harvest was a story about a man and woman who had very little. Ironically this was very similar to his marriage with Miss Meta H. Fuller.
Sinclair also wrote another tale which was called The Journal of Author Stirling. This was a fictional story about a man who tried succeed as a
writer but eventually failed. This story started to gain Sinclair attention as a writer and eventually put his name out there. Then Sinclair came out
with a hit, he published The Jungle. Sinclair's book The Jungle won him an extreme amount of fame and as a result he gained a lot of money too.
The book was basically Sinclair giving the public a view of exploitation by factory owners back then. His book was an extreme success. Sinclair also
wrote another great book, by the name of Dragons Teeth. This book was to give the public a view of the rise of Nazism and how quickly it was
spreading. This
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The World Is Too Much With Us
Robert Frost, who is a four–time Pulitzer Prize winner in poetry, also known as American poet hero who has written many famous poems which
includes "The Road Not Taken" and "Stopping by woods on snowy evening". In the poem "Stopping by woods on snowy evening," Frost explain how
the speaker has though task which includes deciding whether to forget his problems and stay with the nature and stay far away from people or go back
and follow his responsibilities and spend rest of his life in city. As compare to William Wordsworth have also written many poem including "I
wandered lonely as a cloud" which shows affinity for nature. William Wordsworth in his poem "The world is too much with us," represents similar
theme as how humans have lost their connections with nature, in which in his opinion it is now only found in memories. In his opinion, we are no
longer connected with natural world. Frost and Wordsworth in their respective poems uses unique rhyme, scheme, symbolism, metaphor and
alliteration to explain their own perspective on how people struggles between modernize world and nature of the world and end neglecting the natural
world. Frost, in his opening line of his poem uses an Imagery sentence, "Whose woods these are I think I know." (1–2) To point out where he is and as
per his knowledge who owns this land. He also mentions that the owner lives in village where civilization lies. Speaker then stated how he wanted to
stay with the nature and admire the snow falling and
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The Importance Of Anonymous Sources In Journalism
Anonymous sources in Journalism
"Journalism scholars, critics, and the public continue to debate the wisdom of using unnamed sourcing in news reports. Proponents argue that granting
sources anonymity is necessary to ensure the free flow of information that otherwise would go unreported. Critics of the practice charge that journalists
too readily grant anonymity and thus risk undermining media credibility." (Duffy).
Anonymous sourcing is defined as the use of information from someone who is not willing to put their name behind whatever they are saying. This
type of sourcing has always been incredibly controversial for obvious reasons. Many argue that anonymous sourcing is unethical and unbelievable,
while others think that information must be legit if sources are skeptical about admitting to it.
"Anonymous sources are one of the sexiest things in journalism. The idea conjures images of late–night meetings in parking garages, voice modulators
and Watergate–era intrigue. The fact that someone feels the need to be protected makes their information feel more valuable," (Dobbs).
There are many reasons why sources choose to keep their identity private, a few of these include the fear of losing employment, and as a security
clearance from the public when giving out information that might be controversial at the time being.
"A flurry of inaccurate stories about O.J. Simpson based on unnamed sources has rekindled the debate over their use. Detractors say they hurt the
media's
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The Poetry Of Gwendolyn Brooks's Poetry
Poetry is a universal language that can be read and interpreted in many different ways. The versatility of poetry is part of what has made it so
prevalent and popular for thousands of years. Writing is an outlet of feelings or emotions for many poets and usually includes some controversial
meaning or theme that the poet can relate to. For example, Gwendolyn Brooks filled her poems with ambiguity, making her work controversial yet
popular during the era. Brooks used the stigma of racism and racial issues during her lifetime to drive the meaning of her poems. In doing so, she
popularized her own work, making a name for herself, creating new opportunities that could have been hard to acquire as a black woman. Although
many have argued that Gwendolyn Brooks wrote in a style that was majorly controversial, she thrived as a poet from the young age of 13 and her
passion continued to bring her success through poems like "We Real Cool" and "a song in the front yard," eventually providing her with opportunities
to hold superior positions in the poetry community and even receiving multiple honors and rewards. Gwendolyn Brooks was a poet who rose to fame
during the early 20th century. She was born in Topeka, Kansas, and grew up in the popular city ofChicago, Illinois. Brooks had a relatively quiet
childhood. Both of her parents were present in her life, and she attended school everyday like a normal child would. However, Brooks faced some
struggles in school that could possibly be
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Richard Cory By Edwin Arlington Robinson
The poem " Richard Cory " is a narrative poem written by Edwin Arlington Robinson . It was published in 1897. One of Mr.Robinson most popular
anthologized poems,The poem begins by introducing us to Richard Cory. He 's a total gentleman he 's good looking, slim, and admired by all of the
people of the nearby town. The poem then keeps on describing Mr. Cory. He 's modestly dressed and friendly, he practically glitters when he walks
down the street, and naturally everyone is excited to see him. Also, this dude is rich. Everyone in the town thinks that they want to be like Richard Cory
.But then, the unthinkable happens. Richard Cory, despite his money, good looks, and his high status in society, goes home and shoots himself in the
head. No one ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
One can imagine Cory surrounded by gawking fans, expecting him to act and behave like a man who has everything. Indeed Cory dutifully fit this
role, he "was always quietly arrayed" and "always human when he talked" when dealing with the public. Cory comes across as a perfect upper–class
gentlemen, an "imperially slim" aristocrat who knew what the public wanted. Cory not only acted, but looked the part – he was a "gentleman from sole
to crown", which was probably why he "fluttered pulses" when he greeted his fans. Cory must have realized that the public "thought he was
everything / To make us wish that we were in his place" or else he would not have acted so "clean favored" whenever he was in their presence. Cory
understood that he served as a role model to people like the speaker, who deal with the everyday hardships of life. Yet even the most caring role
models are subject to fatigue. Cory must have been tried of being expected to act like a gentleman just because he was "richer than a king" . It seems
that after being put on a pedestal for so long, he could not take it any longer.
Through the buildup of praise throughout Richard Cory Reveals an ironic and painful truth – in their quest for happiness, the people caused their hero
to end his life. The irony is structural because the speaker, like the rest of the public, is naГЇve in thinking that their adoration of Richard Cory will not
harm him. The poem starts with a simple assessment of Cory. To the public,
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Vulgarity In Billy Porter's Topdog/Underdog
Jokes about sex, masturbation, and use of vulgarity is acceptable to use in a small group with people you are close to, but this type of language has no
place in a well respected theatre such as the Huntington.
If a viewer was able to overlook the brash language and jokes in Billy Porter's production of Suzan–Lori Parks's "Topdog/Underdog" they would get to
enjoy a great play. I myself was not overly bother by the swearing and I greatly enjoyed the play. With only two actors in the play, they were able to
fill the set with energy and action. Matthew J. Harris brought the Booth/three card character to life. He was upbeat, energetic, and short tempered just as
anyone who read the script would expect. But, what was unexpected and a nice touch ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The swearing and jokes were part of the script so the director couldn't do anything to change it. But, that still doesn't make it appropriate for the
audience at the theatre. Many of the people watching the play when I was at the Huntington were students and teachers, so a different play might
have been more appropriate for school children.There were scenes were one of the actors would tell a joke about the use of a condom. All of the
male viewers were laughing while I noticed a few of the female viewers sitting around me seemed very disturbed by those types of jokes. The play
also featured music that used derogatory slurs such as the n word which some viewers could find unsettling or offensive. I believe that if this play is
to be shown at the Huntington or any theatre it should be advertised as a play for adults and not for school trips.
In the show "Topdog/Underdog" at the Huntington, the superb acting by both Harrison and Harris makes up for the lack of artistic and technical
design and the vulgar language of the character. This is not the type of play that I would recommend to bring your family with you to go see, but it is
a very good play and worthy of the pulitzer prize it
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Ideal Of The American Ideal
The American Ideal
"If approval replaced dedication as creativity's fuel, this world
Would be barren, empty, decidedly less lovely."– Jen Hatmaker In his will, newspaper publisher Joseph Pulitzer specified that a $1,000 prize be
awarded each year "for the American novel; published during the year which shall best present the whole atmosphere of American life, and the highest
standards of American manners and manhood" (6). However, in 1917, the president ofColumbia University and Pulitzer advisory board leader Nichols
Murray Butler changed the wording of the criteria to read "the wholesome atmosphere of American life" (7); and by so doing, limited the scope of
what literature was deemed acceptable for consideration of the honor. Subsequently, in 1921, thePulitzer Prize for fiction was awarded to a novel
about New York high society during the 1870s and controversy soon followed. In a June 22, 1921 article in The New Republic, one of the judges
that year, literary scholar Robert Morse Lovett, wrote that the winner, Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton, had not been the jury's choice (6). The
panel of judges, which included Lovett as well as a literature professor and a novelist, had instead selected Sinclair Lewis's Main Street, a novel Lovett
described using the words of his fellow juror Stuart Pratt Sherman, as having "communicated more life to the reading public than any other novel I
can recall..." (6). The judges' decision to award the p0rize to Lewis was overturned by the
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Encounters At The Heart Of The World By Elizabeth Fenn
When the jury and judges awarded Elizabeth Fenn the 2015 Pulitzer Prize in History for her book, Encounters at the Heart of the World: A History of
the Mandan People, their citation described the book as "an engrossing, original narrative showing the Mandans, a Native American tribe in the
Dakotas, as a people with a history."
Strange phrase, "a people with a history." Is there a people without a history? Or did the judges perhaps mean"a people with a recorded history"? If we
set these questions aside, we encounter a further conundrum: Under the rules for the Pulitzer Prize in History, the award goes to "a distinguished and
appropriately documented book upon the history of the United States." But this is a book about the Mandan.
Notwithstanding questions about how the Pulitzer judges and juries understood what they were doing, Fenn's remarkable and remarkably well–written
book richly deserves the Pulitzer Prize. United States history cannot be understood apart from its entanglement with the Indigenous Peoples of the land.
In "Encounters at the Heart of the World," Mandan history illuminates American history, from at least the 17th century to the present.... Show more
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Two Mandan creation stories–one of migration led by Good Furred Robe, the other of Lone Man and First Creator making land–each convey the
position of the Mandan at the center of the world. The Mandan sense of centrality coincides with a geographic fact: the Mandan homeland occupies an
area about 100 miles south of the geographic center of North
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An Analysis of Our Town
It's the little things in life that count
An analysis of the representation of the daily life in Our Town
* Table of Contents
1Introduction3 2Biographical Background4 3Our Town5 3.1General5 3.2Theme5 3.3Publication5 4Analysis6 4.1Act 16 4.2Act 27 4.3Act 38
5Conclusion10 6Bibliography12 6.1Primary Literature12 6.2Secondary Literature12 6.3Webliography12
Introduction
Needless to say, Our Town is one of the most popular plays byThornton Wilder and not for nothing has it won the Pulitzer Prize in 1938. The most
significant aspect in Our Town is the representation of the everyday life. Not only does the play explores American values of religion or... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
He began to study law, but he abandoned his studies only two years later.
"After serving in the United States Coast Guard during World War I, he attended Oberlin College before earning his B.A. at Yale University in 1920,
where he refined his writing skills as a member of the Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity, a literary society. He earned his M.A. in French from Princeton
University in 1926." [Online 4]
After his studies, he began teaching at the University of Chicago, but he never stopped writing. During this time his first novels and plays were
published, for example, "Our Town". This play is considered to be one of this most famous plays, and it also won the Pulitzer Prize in 1938, the year
when the play was published. Thornton Wilder died on December 7, in 1975 in Hamden, Connecticut. He was an "American icon, and an
internationally famous playwright and novelist. To this day, his works are read, performed and appreciated by audiences worldwide." [Online 5]
Our Town
General
Our Town is a so–called "slice–of–life" story, which means that the reader is able to relate to the story. He feels like he is involved in the play,
because of its representation of the daily life and all those little things in life which makes it interesting.
Theme
Our town has a carpe diem theme. Translated it means seize the day, people should concentrate themselves on the little things in life which are often
unappreciated. In some way, the play
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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Inside The Mecca By Gwendolyn Brooks

  • 1. Inside The Mecca By Gwendolyn Brooks Inside the Mecca The Story of Gwendolyn Brooks All minds are complex. They are made differently. The way we feel, act and even the way that we write. I feel that my mind is different from others. Everybody has their way of expressing themselves their own way. My way is writing. It gave me an escape, a way out, and later I found that it gave a voice to others. I never wanted to die without doing something important and now I realize that I haven't. People say the story of my life was complicated, but I prefer to call it eventful. I was born on June 7th, 1917 in Topeka, Kansas to my beautiful and supportive parents Keziah and David. David, my father, was the first person in his family to graduate high school. He studied a year at Fisk University ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... My many works amazed people and my works even amazed me, but I was never more proud of any of my works more than A Street in Bronzeville. A Street in Bronzeville was my first book and it brought me national attention. Though A Street in Bronzeville brought me much attention, it didn't bring me more than my next work: Annie Allen. Annie Allen was my second book of poems about African –American life in Chicago. When I sent it to my publisher they sent it to a poet. The poet wrote back telling me to change all of my work. That felt like a bullet in my back. I was certain of my poems and the way that they reflected real African–American life. Later, I declined to change anything and I sent it out to be published. Annie Allen quickly gained national attention as well and in 1950 it won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry. This sent me into a long period of happiness and confidence. I was the first African–American woman to ever win the Pulitzer Prize and that is the best feeling in the world. It proved that African–Americans were capable of achieving in this prejudice world. It proved that there is no such thing as failure for our ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2. The Age Of Innocence By Edith Wharton In Edith Wharton's novel, The Age of Innocence, the old New York society accepted those who followed moral codes and dreaded hearing those who did not. Growing up in a society that has strict rules and traditions in the 1800's, Wharton wrote books about this time period and how characters were affected by these societal rules and traditions. Edith Wharton grew up in New York Cityand spent most her life there. She met her husband, Edward Wharton there and continued writing other novels as well. Later on, she divorced him, but had two men who were significant in her life. Jennifer Bussey and Jennifer Hynes suspect these were her lovers and this moment in her life, with judgement and society against her, this information was put into her novels. Since she is raised in a judgemental society, she "...soon learned manners and traditions of society life that would characterize her fiction" ("Age" 2). As seen in The Age of Innocence, Newland Archer and Ellen Olenska are having an affair, but their ways of thinking and decisions are altered by society. The other characters around them are judgemental and have to follow specific moral codes. Most characters in The Age of Innocence understand society's expectations and Newland Archer is one of them. He is a man of society of the social old New York society. He understands and demonstrates the society etiquette and rules. Archer is changed throughout the novel though because of New York's social codes (Bussey 12). Meanwhile, Ellen ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 3. Dramatic Epiphanys In Edith Wharton's The Age Of Innocence Dramatic Epiphanies of the Future In the book The Age of Innocence, Edith Wharton tells the tale of a young man who feels constricted by society, but at the same time embraces the strict rules that ensure that everyone has a place. Newland Archer's life in the 1870s in old New York changes when he meets his old playmate, Ellen Olenska, right before he is about to announce his engagement to her cousin, May Welland. Newland starts to doubt his relationship and future with May as he succumbs to Ellen's various charms, and he becomes confused, changing his mind and being influenced by people around him many times. Throughout the course of the novel, Newland has several internal awakenings which he treats as if something dramatic is happening in his life. However, these discoveries are not real epiphanies, rather they are just Newland imagining his future in an ideal world. These awakenings are of the mind or body, and they all have to do with decisions he makes in his love life. Newland Archer is the kind of man who thinks he is ahead of his time, but when he has the chance to prove that he really believes in these modern ideas, he falls short. The women's rights movement had just started to make a name for itself at this time, and people felt that they had to take sides in the debate. Newland had stated that he believed that "Women should be free –– as free as we [men] are" (62). However, when he thinks about why he is marrying May Welland, he realizes that he is not any ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 4. Allusions In The Age Of Innocence Essay The Age of Innocence, written by Edith Wharton in 1920, is a novel about Newland Archer, set in New York in the 1870s. In the beginning of the novel, Newland is engaged to May Welland, however when her cousin Ellen Olenska returns from Europe, he begins to doubt who he really loves. Due to societal norms, Newland stays with May and never consummates his relationship with Ellen, despite their growing feelings towards each other. At the time of writing The Age of Innocence, Wharton was reading Sir James George Frazer's The Golden Bough (1914), a 14 volume work on anthropology, which consisted of myths, customs, and magical practices. This collection sparked interest for Wharton, potentially inspiring her to enlist many allusions to classical ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This perfection is what leads Newland to want to marry her as she represents everything the society imagines as a wife. However, like a goddess, this type of perfection is idealistic and Newland is left in a situation where he will never compare to May. May is portrayed as the symbol of perfection in the society because Wharton wants to demonstrate that even when she pushes her plans to fruition at the end of the novel, she is still seen as an upstanding member of society with her image completely untarnished. Society looks at May like an object that they admire from afar, their perception of her unchanging as they do not look close enough at her as a person. Continuing from above, May is once again compared to Diana. Before the archery competition, May's entrance is described, "In her white dress, with a pale green ribbon about the waist and a wreath of ivy on her hat, she had the same Diana–like aloofness as when she had entered the Beaufort ball–room on the night of her engagement" (173). May is once again compared to Diana in the same sentence where she is depicted wearing white, further implying the innocence the entire society believes she has. However, this quotation introduces a new concept: May's aloofness. By depicting her as a goddess who is also distant, Wharton is able to add more of this untouchable nature of perfection. At this point in the novel, May suspects an affair between Newland and Ellen, however, she is sticks with ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 5. Encounters At The Heart Of The World By Elizabeth Fenn When the jury and judges awarded Elizabeth Fenn the 2015 Pulitzer Prize in History for her book, Encounters at the Heart of the World: A History of the Mandan People, their citation described the book as "an engrossing, original narrative showing the Mandans, a Native American tribe in the Dakotas, as a people with a history." Strange phrase, "a people with a history." Is there a people without a history? Or did the judges perhaps mean"a people with a recorded history"? If we set these questions aside, we encounter a further conundrum: Under the rules for the Pulitzer Prize in History, the award goes to "a distinguished and appropriately documented book upon the history of the United States." But this is a book about the Mandan. Notwithstanding questions about how the Pulitzer judges and juries understood what they were doing, Fenn's remarkable and remarkably well–written book richly deserves the Pulitzer Prize. United States history cannot be understood apart from its entanglement with the Indigenous Peoples of the land. In "Encounters at the Heart of the World," Mandan history illuminates American history, from at least the 17th century to the present.... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Two Mandan creation stories–one of migration led by Good Furred Robe, the other of Lone Man and First Creator making land–each convey the position of the Mandan at the center of the world. The Mandan sense of centrality coincides with a geographic fact: the Mandan homeland occupies an area about 100 miles south of the geographic center of North ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6. Essay on Immortality and Myth in The Age of Innocence Immortality and Myth in The Age of Innocence Edith Wharton's books are considered, by some, merely popular fiction of her time. But we must be careful not to equate popularity with the value of the fiction; i.e., we must not assume that if her books are popular, they are also primitive. Compared to the works of her contemporary and friend, Henry James, whose books may seem complex and sometimes bewildering; Wharton's The Age of Innocence appears to be a simplistic, gossipy commentary of New York society during the last decade of the 19th century*. Instead, it is one man's struggle with the questions of mortality and immortality. Wharton's characters, settings and the minutiae of social rituals, manners, speech habits, dress and ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Urns and wall paintings tell us about the mythical characters' predilection for a sensual life; this compares to Wharton's characters' penchant for their own hedonistic life of carousing, sexual cavorting and dizzy social calendars of parties and operas. The Greeks, mythical and real, were masters of architecture and decoration, which to this day, attest to their immortality. Wharton pays great attention to the mansions and embellishments of the New York houses. Her society attempts to be immortal in its own buildings; and by amassing ornate bits and bobbles from ages past and paintings and decorations, the society feels it will live on forever: Then the house had been boldly planned with a ball–room, so that, instead of squeezing through a narrow passage to get to it (as at the Chiverses') one marched solemnly down a vista of enfiladed drawing–rooms (the sea–green, the crimson and the botron d'or), seeing from afar the many–candled lustres reflected in the polished parquetry, and beyond that the depths of a conservatory where camellias and tree–ferns arched their costly foliage over seats of black and gold Bamboo. Wharton's characters, albeit mortal beings, are made immortal and some can even be compared with mythical characters. We'll begin with the lesser characters. Newland Archer's sister, Janey who: "was subject to starts and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 7. The Poetry Of Gwendolyn Brooks's Poetry Poetry is a universal language that can be read and interpreted in many different ways. The versatility of poetry is part of what has made it so prevalent and popular for thousands of years. Writing is an outlet of feelings or emotions for many poets and usually includes some controversial meaning or theme that the poet can relate to. For example, Gwendolyn Brooks filled her poems with ambiguity, making her work controversial yet popular during the era. Brooks used the stigma of racism and racial issues during her lifetime to drive the meaning of her poems. In doing so, she popularized her own work, making a name for herself, creating new opportunities that could have been hard to acquire as a black woman. Although many have argued that Gwendolyn Brooks wrote in a style that was majorly controversial, she thrived as a poet from the young age of 13 and her passion continued to bring her success through poems like "We Real Cool" and "a song in the front yard," eventually providing her with opportunities to hold superior positions in the poetry community and even receiving multiple honors and rewards. Gwendolyn Brooks was a poet who rose to fame during the early 20th century. She was born in Topeka, Kansas, and grew up in the popular city ofChicago, Illinois. Brooks had a relatively quiet childhood. Both of her parents were present in her life, and she attended school everyday like a normal child would. However, Brooks faced some struggles in school that could possibly be ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8. Analysis Of The Old Man And The Sea By Ernest Hemingway Is the achievement of victory an indicator of how valuable a man's life is? This can be answered by examining several characters and the journey they travel in different stories. The short novel The Old Man and the Sea is written by Ernest Hemingway, and is the story of a Cuban fisherman who battles with a giant fish for many days. The next book, A Lesson Before Dying is written by Ernest J. Gaines, and tells the story of a man named Grant who is tasked with convincing a young man sentenced to death that he is not an animal like everyone says he is. Finally, William Faulkner's Nobel Prize acceptance speech tells writers it is their duty to encourage people to be courageous in the face of danger. The characters in each of these stories have different life journeys but similar outcomes through achieving moral victory. Achieving a moral victory contributes to the overall success of one's life. In The Old Man and the Sea, the main character, Santiago, is an unlucky fisherman who has a tenacious battle with a large marlin while fishing in the Gulf Stream. Santiago was considered unlucky due to the fact that he had gone eighty–four days without catching a single fish. Although he felt rejected and defeated, he did not allow the opinions of the other fishermen and even his young friend, Manolin, keep him from moving forward. He thinks, "maybe today. Every day is a new day. It is better to be lucky." (Hemingway 32) and on the eighty–fifth day he was determined to end his unlucky ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 9. The Times They Are A Changing Flowers are Red The sage bard, Bob Dylan, on the rapidly rising waters of vicissitude: 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 was hardly a grown man when he groaned the initial verse of his 1964 album's title track, "The Times they are A–Changing" (1964). A masterpiece which would continue to ring in the ears of every new generation of upcoming adults for nearly half a century. Dylan depicts two conflicting mindsets in his anthem of progress: Those who resist change, otherwise known as, the first who will later be last; and those who rally for change, the slow that'll later be fast. Respectively, lionized author and classical Ivy League educator Timothy D. Snyder's, "Why Laptops in Class Are Distracting America's Future Workforce," published by Christian Science Monitor in 2011, documents the decline of his students' attentiveness and well–being due to technology infiltrating his lecture hall. Alternatively, internationally renowned author, journalist, reporter, and fellow Ivy League scholar, Thomas L. Friedman, writes of why the time has come for technological change in education in, "Come the Revolution," which was published by The New York Times in 2012. Despite the increasingly large divide that separates the two's ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 10. Why Laptops Are Distracting America 's Future Workforce There's no denying that technology has grown to play a major role in education and learning. Students are using laptops, tablets, and smartphones to research, complete, and even collaborate on assignments, both in and outside of the classroom. Timothy D. Snyder and Thomas L. Friedman both have written articles expressing their opposing opinions on technology in the classroom. Timothy Snyder is a Professor of History at Yale University who has written five different award–winning books. In his article, "Why Laptops Are Distracting America's Future Workforce", Snyder explains to students and teachers why he is against technology in the classroom. Thomas Friedman is a reporter and columnist for The New York Times, author of six award–winning ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In Thomas Friedman's article, "Come the Revolution," Friedman is confident that an online–only education program called Coursera is the solution to the problems of rising tuition and the increased importance of education in a knowledge economy. The rhetorical strategies used by Friedman were much more effective in comparison to Snyder's, especially his use of valid numbers, statistics, and facts to support his claims. One example of this is in the second paragraph of Friedman's "Come the Revolution." After introducing Andrew Ng, professor and cofounder of Coursera, and explaining the online platform's benefits, Friedman quotes Ng to support his argument. He writes, " "I normally teach 400 students," Ng explained, but last semester he taught 100,000 in an online course on machine learning. "To reach that many students before," he said, I would have had to teach my normal Stanford class for 250 years." " Friedman uses the valid numbers, statistics, and facts from reliable authorities to support his argument. Another rhetorical strategy that was very effective for Friedman but was ineffective in Snyder's argument is tone. Choosing words and examples carefully for tone is important when attempting to persuade because tone indicates the writer's attitude towards his subject or audience. In Timothy Snyder's, "Why Laptops in Class Are Distracting America's ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 11. The Times They Are A Changing Flowers are Red The sage bard, Bob Dylan, on the rapidly rising waters of vicissitude: 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 was hardly a grown man when he groaned the initial verse of his 1964 album's title track, "The Times they are A–Changing" (1964). A masterpiece which would continue to ring in the ears of every new generation of upcoming adults for nearly half a century. Dylan depicts two conflicting mindsets in his anthem of progress: Those who resist change, otherwise known as, the first who will later be last; and those who rally for change, the slow that'll later be fast. Respectively, lionized author and classical Ivy League educator Timothy D. Snyder's, "Why Laptops in Class Are Distracting America's Future Workforce," published by Christian Science Monitor in 2011, documents the decline of his students' attentiveness and well–being due to technology infiltrating his lecture hall. Alternatively, internationally renowned author, journalist, reporter, and fellow Ivy League scholar, Thomas L. Friedman, writes of why the time has come for technological change in education in, "Come the Revolution," which was published by The New York Times in 2012. Despite the increasingly large divide that separates the two's ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12. The Old Man And The Sea Essay Ernest Hemingway is one of the greatest writing icons of the early to mid 20th century. Known mainly for his success in writing the critically acclaimed novel, The Old Man and the Sea, Hemingway had many symbolic meanings instituted throughout this novel and many other works. Many having the theme of a hero confronting a natural force, as seen when Santiago confronts the mighty sea. Along with the heroic themes, Hemingway had become a religious Catholic man growing up and decided to include many religious references and biblical allusions. Since the beginning of his writing career, he has been putting these allusions and important uses of the bible into his work. Critics of these works such as, "The Old Man and the Sea," have discovered and have been aware of these references and parallels for some time. Some critics have always believed these biblical allusions to be just coincidence or false. Evidence will be shown of these writings and analyzed to show how they translate to not only to the book but also to Hemingway's life. Almost 20 years of Hemingway 's life was spent living in Cuba. He often visited Cojimar, which was the village that "The Old Man and the Sea" took place in. Hemingway spent much time shark and marlin fishing while staying in Cuba. His inspiration for writing his novel were the tireless fishermen that enduring so many obstacles and struggles everyday just to get by. This shows the spirit of the individual as having virtues of determination as well as ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 13. Plagiarism : Playing With Fire Essay Albert Dominguez Dr. Grubic Comp and Rhet. 23 October 2016 Plagiarism: Playing with Fire Accuracy is one of the main aspects that makes people take information seriously. Without accuracy one will never know the truth. Some teachers can go from saying Christopher Columbus did not find America to saying he found America and raped and killed numerous of Indian women. Or some people may state that the President does not have executive powers to instead declaring the President 's ability to bypass congress. Another situation that can happen is a straight A student can get kicked out of college or gets sued for plagiarism. Accuracy will make us as Americans, at least in a perfect world, proceed further in life and succeed more. One of the many times in American history that cheating made a person go far in life was when Joe Biden plagiarized an assignment, received an F in that class, and then became the Vice President of the United States (Doinne, 1987). Then there is the reporter from the Washington Post, Janet Cooke, who fabricated a false story into an article about an eight–year–old boy that was a heroin addict and later was publically humiliated by everyone (Cooke,1980). Accuracy depends on how credible of a source an individual use. Accuracy is everything in a person's life. Accuracy is essential for trustworthiness of non–fiction writing . That shows the importance of having accurate statements. Accuracy depends on how good of a source an individual use. As ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14. Essay on Edwin Arlington Robinson biography Supremacy 1) There is a drear and lonely tract of hell 2) From all the common gloom removed afar: 3) A flat, sad land it is, where shadows are, 4) Whose lorn estate my verse may never tell. 5) I walked among them and I knew them well: 6) Men I had slandered on life's little star 7) for churls and sluggards; and I knew the scar 8) upon their brows of woe ineffable. 9) But as I went majestic on my way, 10) Into the dark they vanished, one by one, 11) Till, with a shaft of God's eternal day, 12) The dream of all my glory was undone,–– 13) And, with a fool's importunate dismay, 14) I heard the dead men singing in the sun. The composition date isn't known but the format of the sonnet is: Abbaabbacdcdcd Edwin Arlington Robinson ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The Man Who Died Twice and Tristram The last two of these won Pulitzer Prizes in 1925 and 1927, when he was elected as a member of the National Academy of Arts and Letters. Robinson never married but enjoyed the company of many friends. He died of cancer in hospital in New York on April 6, 1935. A few of his most known poems are, "The Children of the Night" "Captain Craig" "The Town Down the River" "The Man against the Sky" "The Three Taverns" and "Avon's Harvest." He had 3 Pulitzer prizes awarded to him.
  • 15. For the first twenty years of Robinson's writing career, he had difficulty in getting published and attracting an audience. He published his first two volumes privately and friends secretly guaranteed the publication of the third. He did receive positive reviews from the beginning, however, and with the publication of The Man Against the Sky in 1916 his reputation was secure. For the rest of his life he was widely regarded as "America's foremost poet," as William Stanley Braithwaite put it. Both academics and the general public held him in high esteem, as attested by the fact of his winning three Pulitzer Prizes for poetry for volumes published in 1921, 1924, and 1927, when his Tristram became a national best–seller. Although Robinson's subject matter and philosophical stance differ markedly from that of his predecessors', his form ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 16. Analysis Of The Old Man And The Sea By Ernest Hemingway Is the achievement of victory an indicator of how valuable a man's life is? This can be answered by examining several characters and the journey they travel in different stories. The short novel The Old Man and the Sea is written by Ernest Hemingway, and is the story of a Cuban fisherman who battles with a giant fish for many days. The next book, A Lesson Before Dying is written by Ernest J. Gaines, and tells the story of a man named Grant who is tasked with convincing a young man sentenced to death that he is not an animal like everyone says he is. Finally, William Faulkner's Nobel Prize acceptance speech tells writers it is their duty to encourage people to be courageous in the face of danger. The characters in each of these stories have different life journeys but similar outcomes through achieving moral victory. Achieving a moral victory contributes to the overall success of one's life. In The Old Man and the Sea, the main character, Santiago, is an unlucky fisherman who has a tenacious battle with a large marlin while fishing in the Gulf Stream. Santiago was considered unlucky due to the fact that he had gone eighty–four days without catching a single fish. Although he felt rejected and defeated, he did not allow the opinions of the other fishermen and even his young friend, Manolin, keep him from moving forward. He thinks, "maybe today. Every day is a new day. It is better to be lucky." (Hemingway 32) and on the eighty–fifth day he was determined to end his unlucky ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 17. Edward Albee Essay Edward Albee, a famous American Playwright, was born on March 12, 1928 and grew up in Westchester County, New York. Albee grew up with his adoptive parents and left home at the age of 18, due to conflicts with his adoptive parents and a suffocating environment. Although, his adopted family was very wealthy and owned multiple theatres, he felt very distanced. However, because he was his family owned theatres, he was exposed to that realm and idea, which he later found a passion with. Albee's love as a playwright was not supported by his family, as they wanted a son to have a more respectable job, like a doctor or lawyer. As a student, Albee was known to be expelled or kicked out by many of his schools. He had a passion to write plays and began experimenting with different styles, while befriending other writers, sculptors and painters. Albee was an exceptional writer and wrote many poems, but was able to find his break or voice when he began writing plays. He was known for his dramas and many one act plays. His first breakout and major play was "Zoo Story" and was written in only 3 weeks. Zoo Story is a one act play and its theme explore the topics of isolation, social ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Edward Albee was a UH professor for distinguished playwriting and was an Associate director at the AlleyTheatre. He was able to take charge of UH's theatre program from 1989–2003 and returned to UH in 2009 to become a professor and teach young adults about his passion. Personally for me, I feel like I would enjoy his plays. He is known to evoke a lot of raw and real emotion from the actors and his audience, which interests me. I already tend to like watching dramas and on top of that, Albee has very many short one act plays, that wouldn't take that much time away from me. He also has won 3 pulitzer Awards and is known for being one of the greatest modern playwrights of all time, so I think I would very much enjoy his ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18. Robert Frost Essay Robert Frost Robert Lee Frost, was one of America's leading 20th Century poets, and a four time winner of the Pulitzer Prize. Frost did not receive these recognitions until his later years when his poetic brilliance was finally recognized. "Frost was a pioneer in the interplay of rhythm and meter"( Waggoner 1). Frost's brilliance was contributed by many things; including his life, career, andliterary works. Robert Frost was born on March 26, 1874 in San Francisco, California. Frost is the son of William Prescott Frost and Isabelle Moodie Frost. In 1885, Frost's father died, so his mother, Isabelle, moved the family to Lawrence, Mass., where she was originally from. There Frost ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The Frost family returned to the United States in 1915, Robert's poems were also published in the U.S. the year of his return. With two poems published in the United States, Frost had secured his recognition as a poet, but his income was still negligible. Frost once again, in Plymouth, N.H., became a poet–teacher and summer farmer. He spent mainly the academic years 1916–1938 at Amherst College in Plymouth (Waggoner 2). Frost had several Stillborn children or ones that died in infancy. Frost lived to be 89 years old until his death in Boston Mass., on January 29, 1963. Frost achieved poetic maturity before the beginning of poetic modernism, which was ushered in by the early 20th century movement known as imagism (Waggoner 2). With two poems out Frost began to feel like a poet more and more. "Mountain Interval, which appeared in November 1916, offered readers some of his finest poems, such as Birches, Out, Out–, The Hill Wife, and An Old Man's Winter Night" (Burnshaw 2). Frost released many poems until his death in 1963, even in his final years Frost released In the Clearing, his ninth and last collection of poems appearing in 1962. Frost spoke at the Presidential Inauguration for John F. Kennedy, old aged, Frost read the poem by memory. Frost's life could be summerize in many ways, he was a devoted man, a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 19. An Analysis Of William Faulkner And Ernest Hemingway William Faulkner and Ernest Hemingway were both wonderfully gifted and talented writers in their time. In As I Lay Dying and A Farewell to Arms, one can see the similarities and differences between Faulkner and Hemingway through their ability to draw from personal experiences to inspire their work, their narrative styles, and their use of language. William Faulkner was born in New Albany, Mississippi and trained as a pilot in the first Royal Canadian Air Force during World War 1. After the war, Faulkner beganwriting again. A friend told Faulkner to write about his native Mississippi. Inspired by the concept, Faulkner began writing about the places and people of his childhood, developing many colorful characters based on the real people he grew up with or heard about. Many of Faulkner's most successful pieces, including As I Lay Dying, took place in Yoknapatawpha County–a place nearly identical to where he was raised. (Biography.com). Ernest Hemingway's background, while different from Faulkner's, also inspired his writing. He was working for a newspaper in Kansas City, when a friend suggested Hemingway volunteer for the American Field Service as an ambulance driver. In Europe, Hemingway had many of the experiences he used to pull from in writing A Farewell to Arms, including being wounded by a projectile exploding in the trenches and falling in love with a nurse who would become the model for Catherine Barkley (Roberts). Their narrating styles are vastly different. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 20. The Old Man And The Sea Gustav Freytag, a famous German novelist and playwright, developed a well–known structure himself called Freytag's Pyramid or dramatic structure. Freytag's Pyramid is divided into five stages the exposition, the rising action, climax, falling action, and the denouement. Each one of the stages describe the different parts of novels and short stories. Ernest Hemingway author of "Hills Like White Elephants" and other works, such as, "A Farewell to Arms" and "The Old Man and the Sea" has made many accomplishments throughout his writing career. His novel "The Old Man and the Sea" won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1953. Hemingway also received the Nobel Prize for literature in 1954. Hemingway's works are great examples of stories that displays the five stages of fiction. "Hills Like White Elephants" was published in 1927 in Hemingway's second collection of short stories. "Hills Like White Elephants" is the story of two characters, the American and Jig, and their conversation at a train station in a valley in Spain. The two lovers talk vaguely about an operation and both have opposing views on it; Jig ends the conflict by giving in to the American's request. Freytag's pyramid in "Hills Like White Elephants" combine to make an interesting tip–of–the–iceberg story. The exposition in of "Hills like White Elephants" describes a valley that runs along the Ebro River in northern Spain. Two characters are revealed The American and the woman (Jig) who is with him are sitting on a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 21. Theme Of Mythology In The Age Of Innocence Abstract The purpose of this Extended Essay is to challenge the general categorization of male as heroes in novels through one of Edith Wharton's best novels by examining the question "How does Edith Wharton manifest the role of May Welland and Ellen Olenska in foreshadowing the plot of The Age of Innocence?" The scope of this essay encompasses two works; first a critical analysis of the character, May and second, an analysis of the character, Ellen, regarding their roles as foreteller and heroines in the novel. The unique use of Mythology by Wharton as symbols to portray her two leading female characters, in the era of the Gilded Age, is what initially drew me to write an essay on this topic. This essay thus explores Wharton's use of mythology ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... To answer that, readers are implored to interpret Ellen's speech to Newland that they partially understood – allowing them to establish a relation between her connotation of the "enlightened room" and her seemingly fade existence in Newland's life. Wharton encourages her readers to concretize the gap that she has created in the story by inferring that Ellen has acquired inner peace through "resist[ing] the pulls of the social world" and relying on herself. It seems to suggest that Ellen was implying to Newland that she cannot continue going on with the shammed relationship and must escape to remain on the quest of finding her own happiness independently and not on other people's misery. Readers soon recognizes Ellen's hints as an act of convincing Newland to cease the illicit affair and return to May as her wisdom and receptiveness had taught her to "look at visions and not realities" – it was impossible for them to be together in any open way. Ellen's words had proven powerful, for in the last chapter, Newland settles with the believe that "it's more real to [him] to seat on the bench outside Ellen's house than if [he] went up" to meet her. He would rather live with his "youthful memory of her" ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 22. Why Laptops Are Distracting America 's Future Workforce There's no denying that technology has grown to play a major role in education and learning. Students are using laptops, tablets, and smartphones to research, complete, and even collaborate on assignments, both in and outside of the classroom. Timothy D. Snyder and Thomas L. Friedman both have written articles expressing their opposing opinions on technology in the classroom. Timothy Snyder is a Professor of History at Yale University who has written five different award–winning books. In his article, "Why Laptops Are Distracting America's Future Workforce", Snyder explains to students and teachers why he is against technology in the classroom. Thomas Friedman is a reporter and columnist for The New York Times, author of six award–winning ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In Thomas Friedman's article, "Come the Revolution," Friedman is confident that an online–only education program called Coursera is the solution to the problems of rising tuition and the increased importance of education in a knowledge economy. The rhetorical strategies used by Friedman were much more effective in comparison to Snyder's, especially his use of valid numbers, statistics, and facts to support his claims. One example of this is in the second paragraph of Friedman's "Come the Revolution." After introducing Andrew Ng, professor and cofounder of Coursera, and explaining the online platform's benefits, Friedman quotes Ng to support his argument. He writes, " "I normally teach 400 students," Ng explained, but last semester he taught 100,000 in an online course on machine learning. "To reach that many students before," he said, I would have had to teach my normal Stanford class for 250 years." " Friedman uses the valid numbers, statistics, and facts from reliable authorities to support his argument. Another rhetorical strategy that was very effective for Friedman but was ineffective in Snyder's argument is tone. Choosing words and examples carefully for tone is important when attempting to persuade because tone indicates the writer's attitude towards his subject or audience. In Timothy Snyder's, "Why Laptops in Class Are Distracting America's ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 23. Character Comparison Stefanie A. Thomas Professor Judith Angona English 152 9 October 2012 Character Comparison – Two Repressed Women Both "Hills like White Elephants" by Ernest Hemingway and William Faulkner's "A Rose for Emily" center around two women who are repressed by their lives' circumstances. However, outside of their feelings, their situations could not be more different. Miss Emily Grierson is trapped in a life of solitude, despondency, and desperation. The girl, or "Jig", is equally as desperate, but her repression is not born of loneliness or restraint–it is the child of her freedom. Repression comes in several forms, but it will suffocate and consume you. In "A Rose for Emily", Miss Emily Grierson lives a life of quiet turmoil. Her ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... "Jig" is a young, modern woman who is faced with the decision of prolonging her freedom and the stability of her relationship or accepting motherhood and the responsibility that comes with it. It is not to say that motherhood is a prison; it is that motherhood would be the death of everything she loved, mainly travelling, and the very stability of her relationship with her lover, "the American". "The American" says, "'That's the only thing that bothers us. It's the only thing that's made us unhappy.'" (Hemingway 115) which unequivocally shows that the center of conflict inside of their relationship is the presumed pregnancy. There are several instances in the story that "the American" reiterates "Jig's" options for her future. Although he expresses that he would support and love her no matter what the ultimate choice is, she feels conflicted and her pain, which builds throughout the story and as the conversation progresses, becomes more obvious. What is most interesting is, as his second thoughts about the unspoken abortion spike, her resistance to discuss the topic any further grows in tandem. Although the two heroes' love for one another is evident, there is the aching uncertainty between them: Is there room for a child in their relationship built of travelling, drinking, and discovery? "Jig's" repression, just like Miss Emily's, is inevitable because of their presented circumstance. These ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 24. Edward Albee Essay Edward Albee, a famous American Playwright, was born on March 12, 1928 and grew up in Westchester County, New York. Albee grew up with his adoptive parents and left home at the age of 18, due to conflicts with his adoptive parents and a suffocating environment. Although, his adopted family was very wealthy and owned multiple theatres, he felt very distanced. However, because he was his family owned theatres, he was exposed to that realm and idea, which he later found a passion with. Albee's love as a playwright was not supported by his family, as they wanted a son to have a more respectable job, like a doctor or lawyer. As a student, Albee was known to be expelled or kicked out by many of his schools. He had a passion to write plays and began experimenting with different styles, while befriending other writers, sculptors and painters. Albee was an exceptional writer and wrote many poems, but was able to find his break or voice when he began writing plays. He was known for his dramas and many one act plays. His first breakout and major play was "Zoo Story" and was written in only 3 weeks. Zoo Story is a one act play and its theme explore the topics of isolation, social ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Edward Albee was a UH professor for distinguished playwriting and was an Associate director at the AlleyTheatre. He was able to take charge of UH's theatre program from 1989–2003 and returned to UH in 2009 to become a professor and teach young adults about his passion. Personally for me, I feel like I would enjoy his plays. He is known to evoke a lot of raw and real emotion from the actors and his audience, which interests me. I already tend to like watching dramas and on top of that, Albee has very many short one act plays, that wouldn't take that much time away from me. He also has won 3 pulitzer Awards and is known for being one of the greatest modern playwrights of all time, so I think I would very much enjoy his ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 25. An Analysis of Our Town It's the little things in life that count An analysis of the representation of the daily life in Our Town * Table of Contents 1Introduction3 2Biographical Background4 3Our Town5 3.1General5 3.2Theme5 3.3Publication5 4Analysis6 4.1Act 16 4.2Act 27 4.3Act 38 5Conclusion10 6Bibliography12 6.1Primary Literature12 6.2Secondary Literature12 6.3Webliography12 Introduction Needless to say, Our Town is one of the most popular plays byThornton Wilder and not for nothing has it won the Pulitzer Prize in 1938. The most significant aspect in Our Town is the representation of the everyday life. Not only does the play explores American values of religion or... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He began to study law, but he abandoned his studies only two years later. "After serving in the United States Coast Guard during World War I, he attended Oberlin College before earning his B.A. at Yale University in 1920, where he refined his writing skills as a member of the Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity, a literary society. He earned his M.A. in French from Princeton University in 1926." [Online 4] After his studies, he began teaching at the University of Chicago, but he never stopped writing. During this time his first novels and plays were published, for example, "Our Town". This play is considered to be one of this most famous plays, and it also won the Pulitzer Prize in 1938, the year when the play was published. Thornton Wilder died on December 7, in 1975 in Hamden, Connecticut. He was an "American icon, and an internationally famous playwright and novelist. To this day, his works are read, performed and appreciated by audiences worldwide." [Online 5] Our Town General Our Town is a so–called "slice–of–life" story, which means that the reader is able to relate to the story. He feels like he is involved in the play, because of its representation of the daily life and all those little things in life which makes it interesting.
  • 26. Theme Our town has a carpe diem theme. Translated it means seize the day, people should concentrate themselves on the little things in life which are often unappreciated. In some way, the play ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 27. An Analysis Of William Faulkner And Ernest Hemingway William Faulkner and Ernest Hemingway were both wonderfully gifted and talented writers in their time. In As I Lay Dying and A Farewell to Arms, one can see the similarities and differences between Faulkner and Hemingway through their ability to draw from personal experiences to inspire their work, their narrative styles, and their use of language. William Faulkner was born in New Albany, Mississippi and trained as a pilot in the first Royal Canadian Air Force during World War 1. After the war, Faulkner beganwriting again. A friend told Faulkner to write about his native Mississippi. Inspired by the concept, Faulkner began writing about the places and people of his childhood, developing many colorful characters based on the real people he grew up with or heard about. Many of Faulkner's most successful pieces, including As I Lay Dying, took place in Yoknapatawpha County–a place nearly identical to where he was raised. (Biography.com). Ernest Hemingway's background, while different from Faulkner's, also inspired his writing. He was working for a newspaper in Kansas City, when a friend suggested Hemingway volunteer for the American Field Service as an ambulance driver. In Europe, Hemingway had many of the experiences he used to pull from in writing A Farewell to Arms, including being wounded by a projectile exploding in the trenches and falling in love with a nurse who would become the model for Catherine Barkley (Roberts). Their narrating styles are vastly different. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 28. All over but the Shoutin All Over but the Shoutin' All Over but the Shoutin' by Rick Bragg is an autobiography that starts from Mr. Bragg's impoverished childhood in a family that included an abusive, alcoholic father, an incredibly powerful angel of a mother and his two brothers, and follows him through his Pulitzer Prize–winning journalistic career at the New York Times. The author states at the beginning of the book that readers will laugh and cry reading it. He was right on the money with both of these points. The Bragg family grew up with virtually nothing. The father left the family a number of times, offering no financial assistance and stealing whatever he could before he left. When he was there, he was usually drunk and physically abusive to the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... As I said before, I grew up in a middle class family. This made it difficult for me to completely understand everything that he was talking about in the book. I never knew what it was like to have little or no food to eat. If we didn't have anything to eat our family would go to a restaurant and eat or go shopping and get food. Also, the work aspect is difficult to understand for me. I know what his mother did was what all people in her situation did then. The working conditions that she dealt with day in and day out were horrific. And the thing was she never complained about it or quit. I know if I was in her situation I would have never lasted. I would have quit and tried to find another job. Another option that middle class workers have is taking vacation time if it gets to hot out or if it is raining. That is just the way we deal with situations like that. I believe our generation living in those conditions would never have made it back then. Communication is a very important aspect of any family. Good communication leads to a better family life. Bragg and his mother in particular seemed to communicate very well. The way he details each of his childhood stories is very good and since most of the stories are told by the motherly figure in your life you can see the communication is good. The communication between Bragg and his father is the complete opposite. It was very hard ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 29. Biography of Annie Prolux Annie Prolux is an author of eight books. She was born in Norwich, Connecticut on August 22, 1935. She is the oldest of fives sisters. She graduated high school in Portland, Maine and attended Colby College. She then attended the University of Vermont and received her bachelor's degree in History. In 1973 she attended Sir George Williams University of Montreal, where she graduated with a master's degree in History. In 1983 and 1987 Proulx landed two stories in The Best American Short Stories. She published her first fictional book called Heart Songs and Other Stories, in 1988, followed by a novel, Postcards, in 1992. She won a Pulitzer Prize and a National Book Award for the comic novel, The Shipping News. In 1998 Proulx won two O. Henry prize stories for Brokeback Mountain and The Mud Below. Brokeback Mountain later became an academy award winning film. In Prolux's short story 55 Miles to the Gas Pump, a drunken rancher named Mr. Croom hides a secret from his wife. He gets drunk and falls off a cliff. After his death Mrs. Croom's curiosity sets in. She cuts a hole in the roof and reveals twelve dead women. Some of the women she recognized from missing posters. The women were badly beaten, some covered in paint, and one covered in newspapers. Mr. Croom had the attic locked for twelve years. Proulx uses the plot to keep the reader interested by giving descriptions of the bodies. She starts the story off with Mr. Croom death. It keeps the reader interested to find out what ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 30. The Music Of Wayne Peterson American composer, Wayne Peterson, won the Pulitzer Prize in music in 1992. In addition to winning the Pulitzer Prize, Peterson has been honored with fellowships and commissions from many Foundations, as well as an award of distinction from the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters. He has received awards from the Minnesota Centennial Composition Contest, the American Society of Harpists and the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters. Needless to say Wayne Peterson has been very successful at composingmusic. One may ask when his fascination of music began and how he inspired today's music. Wayne Peterson "was born in Albert Lea, a small town Minnesota on March 8th 1927" (Henken, 1992, pp 1). He is now retired and has been living in San Francisco, California since 1960. Since Peterson is still alive and a private man there are currently no sources that tell how he started writing his music. Although it is known that where he began composing and that he composed under the influences of Copland, Stravinsky, Schoenberg and Bartok. Wayne Peterson played piano and studied composition in Minnesota University where he received not only his bachelors and masters but also his PhD. While he studied at Minnesota University, he studied with American composers, Paul Fetler, Earl George and James Aliferis. "Peterson went on to advance his studies after his PhD on a Fulbright Scholarship, which enabled him to spend a year at the Royal Academy of Music in ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 31. Lin Manuel Miranda Influence An influential person is a person who affects people's lives. They have their words heard and some people can agree with them and some people cannot. They are inspirational or seen as evil and cruel and people watch them for good reasons. This essay will explain why Lin–Manuel Miranda is a influential person and how his words are inspirational. Lin–Manuel shows that music is one of the best tools to use to spread inspiration and become influential. Miranda has taken his talent for music and writing and words to inspire people. Most to all of his listeners would agree, he is definitely very influential. Lin–Manuel Miranda, a person who has won countless awards for his music, creating the Broadway hits In The Heights and Hamilton The Musical ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The first part of his speech states that nothing in life can be insured, it's all up to the people and what they decide to do. His musical Hamilton is proof that history is remembered and it is up to the people to not repeat anything bad, learning from the experience of our ancestors. Clearly, we all have to get back up on our feet even when hate and fear are growing and never give up. The last part of his speech tells you that if you love someone or something, do not let others influence that. People can love who/what they want and it can never be "killed or swept aside". Another speech, this one about his Grammy, says, "We write music, we write songs to tell a story," This clearly shows and supports the importance of music like his, inspiring others and telling stories like books, informing people through music that can toy with your emotions just as well––if not better––than books can. A last speech, this one from hisPulitzer Prize, says, "To be the 9th musical to ever win the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in its 100 year history is truly humbling for all of us. For Hamilton to now be in the same company as Of Thee I Sing, South Pacific,......... Rent, and most recently Next to Normal is outside of our own comprehension. Look at where we are. Look at where we started."" Quoting lyrics from the musical that won the award, Miranda shows his ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 32. Essay about Analysis of the Biography of Upton Sinclair Upton Sinclair was born in Baltimore, Maryland on September 20th 1978. Sinclair grew up in a broken household; his father was an alcohol salesman and killed himself drinking. While his mother would not even think about drinking alcohol. So these personalities naturally clashed. So Sinclair found some solace in books, Sinclair was a natural writer and he began publishing at the young age of fifteen years old. Sinclair started off going to school at a small college by the name of New York City College. This was just temporary as Sinclair would need time and money to move higher up to a form of better education. So as a result Sinclair took the initiative and he started writing columns on ethnic jokes and hack fiction for small magazines in... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Through college and ready to move on with his career as a writer and his life he began moving quickly. In 1900 Sinclair married Miss Meta H. Fuller. Sinclair had a child named David with her. The marriage was extremely tough though because both had very little money to work with and with the addition of his son it didn't help the financial situation in the family. The marriage eventually failed though, Sinclair and Miss Meta H. Fuller divorced in 1911 as two very unhappy people. This gave Sinclair inspiration though to write a tale. The tale which was called Springtime and Harvest was a story about a man and woman who had very little. Ironically this was very similar to his marriage with Miss Meta H. Fuller. Sinclair also wrote another tale which was called The Journal of Author Stirling. This was a fictional story about a man who tried succeed as a writer but eventually failed. This story started to gain Sinclair attention as a writer and eventually put his name out there. Then Sinclair came out with a hit, he published The Jungle. Sinclair's book The Jungle won him an extreme amount of fame and as a result he gained a lot of money too. The book was basically Sinclair giving the public a view of exploitation by factory owners back then. His book was an extreme success. Sinclair also wrote another great book, by the name of Dragons Teeth. This book was to give the public a view of the rise of Nazism and how quickly it was spreading. This ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 33. The World Is Too Much With Us Robert Frost, who is a four–time Pulitzer Prize winner in poetry, also known as American poet hero who has written many famous poems which includes "The Road Not Taken" and "Stopping by woods on snowy evening". In the poem "Stopping by woods on snowy evening," Frost explain how the speaker has though task which includes deciding whether to forget his problems and stay with the nature and stay far away from people or go back and follow his responsibilities and spend rest of his life in city. As compare to William Wordsworth have also written many poem including "I wandered lonely as a cloud" which shows affinity for nature. William Wordsworth in his poem "The world is too much with us," represents similar theme as how humans have lost their connections with nature, in which in his opinion it is now only found in memories. In his opinion, we are no longer connected with natural world. Frost and Wordsworth in their respective poems uses unique rhyme, scheme, symbolism, metaphor and alliteration to explain their own perspective on how people struggles between modernize world and nature of the world and end neglecting the natural world. Frost, in his opening line of his poem uses an Imagery sentence, "Whose woods these are I think I know." (1–2) To point out where he is and as per his knowledge who owns this land. He also mentions that the owner lives in village where civilization lies. Speaker then stated how he wanted to stay with the nature and admire the snow falling and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 34. The Importance Of Anonymous Sources In Journalism Anonymous sources in Journalism "Journalism scholars, critics, and the public continue to debate the wisdom of using unnamed sourcing in news reports. Proponents argue that granting sources anonymity is necessary to ensure the free flow of information that otherwise would go unreported. Critics of the practice charge that journalists too readily grant anonymity and thus risk undermining media credibility." (Duffy). Anonymous sourcing is defined as the use of information from someone who is not willing to put their name behind whatever they are saying. This type of sourcing has always been incredibly controversial for obvious reasons. Many argue that anonymous sourcing is unethical and unbelievable, while others think that information must be legit if sources are skeptical about admitting to it. "Anonymous sources are one of the sexiest things in journalism. The idea conjures images of late–night meetings in parking garages, voice modulators and Watergate–era intrigue. The fact that someone feels the need to be protected makes their information feel more valuable," (Dobbs). There are many reasons why sources choose to keep their identity private, a few of these include the fear of losing employment, and as a security clearance from the public when giving out information that might be controversial at the time being. "A flurry of inaccurate stories about O.J. Simpson based on unnamed sources has rekindled the debate over their use. Detractors say they hurt the media's ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 35. The Poetry Of Gwendolyn Brooks's Poetry Poetry is a universal language that can be read and interpreted in many different ways. The versatility of poetry is part of what has made it so prevalent and popular for thousands of years. Writing is an outlet of feelings or emotions for many poets and usually includes some controversial meaning or theme that the poet can relate to. For example, Gwendolyn Brooks filled her poems with ambiguity, making her work controversial yet popular during the era. Brooks used the stigma of racism and racial issues during her lifetime to drive the meaning of her poems. In doing so, she popularized her own work, making a name for herself, creating new opportunities that could have been hard to acquire as a black woman. Although many have argued that Gwendolyn Brooks wrote in a style that was majorly controversial, she thrived as a poet from the young age of 13 and her passion continued to bring her success through poems like "We Real Cool" and "a song in the front yard," eventually providing her with opportunities to hold superior positions in the poetry community and even receiving multiple honors and rewards. Gwendolyn Brooks was a poet who rose to fame during the early 20th century. She was born in Topeka, Kansas, and grew up in the popular city ofChicago, Illinois. Brooks had a relatively quiet childhood. Both of her parents were present in her life, and she attended school everyday like a normal child would. However, Brooks faced some struggles in school that could possibly be ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 36. Richard Cory By Edwin Arlington Robinson The poem " Richard Cory " is a narrative poem written by Edwin Arlington Robinson . It was published in 1897. One of Mr.Robinson most popular anthologized poems,The poem begins by introducing us to Richard Cory. He 's a total gentleman he 's good looking, slim, and admired by all of the people of the nearby town. The poem then keeps on describing Mr. Cory. He 's modestly dressed and friendly, he practically glitters when he walks down the street, and naturally everyone is excited to see him. Also, this dude is rich. Everyone in the town thinks that they want to be like Richard Cory .But then, the unthinkable happens. Richard Cory, despite his money, good looks, and his high status in society, goes home and shoots himself in the head. No one ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... One can imagine Cory surrounded by gawking fans, expecting him to act and behave like a man who has everything. Indeed Cory dutifully fit this role, he "was always quietly arrayed" and "always human when he talked" when dealing with the public. Cory comes across as a perfect upper–class gentlemen, an "imperially slim" aristocrat who knew what the public wanted. Cory not only acted, but looked the part – he was a "gentleman from sole to crown", which was probably why he "fluttered pulses" when he greeted his fans. Cory must have realized that the public "thought he was everything / To make us wish that we were in his place" or else he would not have acted so "clean favored" whenever he was in their presence. Cory understood that he served as a role model to people like the speaker, who deal with the everyday hardships of life. Yet even the most caring role models are subject to fatigue. Cory must have been tried of being expected to act like a gentleman just because he was "richer than a king" . It seems that after being put on a pedestal for so long, he could not take it any longer. Through the buildup of praise throughout Richard Cory Reveals an ironic and painful truth – in their quest for happiness, the people caused their hero to end his life. The irony is structural because the speaker, like the rest of the public, is naГЇve in thinking that their adoration of Richard Cory will not harm him. The poem starts with a simple assessment of Cory. To the public, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 37. Vulgarity In Billy Porter's Topdog/Underdog Jokes about sex, masturbation, and use of vulgarity is acceptable to use in a small group with people you are close to, but this type of language has no place in a well respected theatre such as the Huntington. If a viewer was able to overlook the brash language and jokes in Billy Porter's production of Suzan–Lori Parks's "Topdog/Underdog" they would get to enjoy a great play. I myself was not overly bother by the swearing and I greatly enjoyed the play. With only two actors in the play, they were able to fill the set with energy and action. Matthew J. Harris brought the Booth/three card character to life. He was upbeat, energetic, and short tempered just as anyone who read the script would expect. But, what was unexpected and a nice touch ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The swearing and jokes were part of the script so the director couldn't do anything to change it. But, that still doesn't make it appropriate for the audience at the theatre. Many of the people watching the play when I was at the Huntington were students and teachers, so a different play might have been more appropriate for school children.There were scenes were one of the actors would tell a joke about the use of a condom. All of the male viewers were laughing while I noticed a few of the female viewers sitting around me seemed very disturbed by those types of jokes. The play also featured music that used derogatory slurs such as the n word which some viewers could find unsettling or offensive. I believe that if this play is to be shown at the Huntington or any theatre it should be advertised as a play for adults and not for school trips. In the show "Topdog/Underdog" at the Huntington, the superb acting by both Harrison and Harris makes up for the lack of artistic and technical design and the vulgar language of the character. This is not the type of play that I would recommend to bring your family with you to go see, but it is a very good play and worthy of the pulitzer prize it ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38. Ideal Of The American Ideal The American Ideal "If approval replaced dedication as creativity's fuel, this world Would be barren, empty, decidedly less lovely."– Jen Hatmaker In his will, newspaper publisher Joseph Pulitzer specified that a $1,000 prize be awarded each year "for the American novel; published during the year which shall best present the whole atmosphere of American life, and the highest standards of American manners and manhood" (6). However, in 1917, the president ofColumbia University and Pulitzer advisory board leader Nichols Murray Butler changed the wording of the criteria to read "the wholesome atmosphere of American life" (7); and by so doing, limited the scope of what literature was deemed acceptable for consideration of the honor. Subsequently, in 1921, thePulitzer Prize for fiction was awarded to a novel about New York high society during the 1870s and controversy soon followed. In a June 22, 1921 article in The New Republic, one of the judges that year, literary scholar Robert Morse Lovett, wrote that the winner, Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton, had not been the jury's choice (6). The panel of judges, which included Lovett as well as a literature professor and a novelist, had instead selected Sinclair Lewis's Main Street, a novel Lovett described using the words of his fellow juror Stuart Pratt Sherman, as having "communicated more life to the reading public than any other novel I can recall..." (6). The judges' decision to award the p0rize to Lewis was overturned by the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 39. Encounters At The Heart Of The World By Elizabeth Fenn When the jury and judges awarded Elizabeth Fenn the 2015 Pulitzer Prize in History for her book, Encounters at the Heart of the World: A History of the Mandan People, their citation described the book as "an engrossing, original narrative showing the Mandans, a Native American tribe in the Dakotas, as a people with a history." Strange phrase, "a people with a history." Is there a people without a history? Or did the judges perhaps mean"a people with a recorded history"? If we set these questions aside, we encounter a further conundrum: Under the rules for the Pulitzer Prize in History, the award goes to "a distinguished and appropriately documented book upon the history of the United States." But this is a book about the Mandan. Notwithstanding questions about how the Pulitzer judges and juries understood what they were doing, Fenn's remarkable and remarkably well–written book richly deserves the Pulitzer Prize. United States history cannot be understood apart from its entanglement with the Indigenous Peoples of the land. In "Encounters at the Heart of the World," Mandan history illuminates American history, from at least the 17th century to the present.... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Two Mandan creation stories–one of migration led by Good Furred Robe, the other of Lone Man and First Creator making land–each convey the position of the Mandan at the center of the world. The Mandan sense of centrality coincides with a geographic fact: the Mandan homeland occupies an area about 100 miles south of the geographic center of North ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 40. An Analysis of Our Town It's the little things in life that count An analysis of the representation of the daily life in Our Town * Table of Contents 1Introduction3 2Biographical Background4 3Our Town5 3.1General5 3.2Theme5 3.3Publication5 4Analysis6 4.1Act 16 4.2Act 27 4.3Act 38 5Conclusion10 6Bibliography12 6.1Primary Literature12 6.2Secondary Literature12 6.3Webliography12 Introduction Needless to say, Our Town is one of the most popular plays byThornton Wilder and not for nothing has it won the Pulitzer Prize in 1938. The most significant aspect in Our Town is the representation of the everyday life. Not only does the play explores American values of religion or... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He began to study law, but he abandoned his studies only two years later. "After serving in the United States Coast Guard during World War I, he attended Oberlin College before earning his B.A. at Yale University in 1920, where he refined his writing skills as a member of the Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity, a literary society. He earned his M.A. in French from Princeton University in 1926." [Online 4] After his studies, he began teaching at the University of Chicago, but he never stopped writing. During this time his first novels and plays were published, for example, "Our Town". This play is considered to be one of this most famous plays, and it also won the Pulitzer Prize in 1938, the year when the play was published. Thornton Wilder died on December 7, in 1975 in Hamden, Connecticut. He was an "American icon, and an internationally famous playwright and novelist. To this day, his works are read, performed and appreciated by audiences worldwide." [Online 5] Our Town General Our Town is a so–called "slice–of–life" story, which means that the reader is able to relate to the story. He feels like he is involved in the play, because of its representation of the daily life and all those little things in life which makes it interesting.
  • 41. Theme Our town has a carpe diem theme. Translated it means seize the day, people should concentrate themselves on the little things in life which are often unappreciated. In some way, the play ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...