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A multi-platform approach to investigative journalism
Published 2012-05-01Subjects: Get full text
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The Use of Land in Momaday’s House Made of Dawn and Silko’s Ceremony
Published 2008-12-01“…The recognition and accolades from the mainstream for these two writers of ethnic origins are tinged with possibilities of patronization: Momaday is the first male and Silko is the first female American Indian authors to receive Pulitzer Prizes. Their recognition in the late sixties and early seventies can be justified in terms of the general swinging mood after the Civil Rights Movement. …”
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Understanding Politics and History through the Images
Published 2017-12-01“…Book Review: Heinz-Dietrich Fischer, Coverage of Political Occurrences in Asia. Pulitzer Prize Winning Articles, Cartoons and Photos. …”
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This Is How You Lose Her /
Published 2013“…A major New York Times bestseller and a finalist for the National Book Award, This Is How You Lose Her is Pulitzer Prize-winner Junot Díaz’s celebration of love in all its facets—obsessive love, illicit love, fading love, maternal love. …”
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Strings of Life: Memory as Myth in Porter’s Miranda Stories
Published 2016-12-01“…The Pulitzer-prize writer, Katherine Anne Porter, dedicates a great part of her work to the Southern history. …”
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Documenting the (Un)official Kevin Carter Narrative: Encyclopedism, Irrealism, and Intimization in House of Leaves
Published 2018-08-01“…Protagonist Will Navidson is a Pulitzer Prize-winning photo-journalist and documentary filmmaker modelled on actual Pulitzer Prize-winner (and 1994 suicide) Kevin Carter. …”
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A Slave by Any Other Name: Names and Identity in Toni Morrison's Beloved
Published 2008-03-01“…Abstract Names and naming play an important part in Toni Morrison's Beloved: A Novel, which won the 1987 Pulitzer Prize. The story is set in 1873, a decade after the Civil War, but much of it is told through memories and flashbacks of the time when the main characters, Baby Suggs, Paul D, and Halle, were slaves. …”
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Simic's Shoes
Published 2021-10-01“…This is a short essay that pays tribute to the Pulitzer Prize winning poet Charles Simic who turned 92 on 9th May.The article looks at one poem by Simic routed through the vision of Van Gogh and the reality of the 16 deaths of migrant workers on the railway track in Maharashtra, India, on 8th May. …”
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Jhumpa Lahiri, the Interpreter of the New Indian Diaspora
Published 2015-04-01“…Published in 1999, at the turn of a new century and on the threshold of the third millennium, Jhumpa Lahiri’s Interpreter of Maladies (winner of the Pulitzer Prize for fiction, among many other awards) is a collection of stories charting the new Indian diaspora, in the aftermath of the 1965 reformation of the American immigration policy. …”
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Literature and Learning in Marilynne Robinson’s Novel Gilead
Published 2017-07-01“…Literature and learning play an important role in Marilynne Robinson’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel Gilead (2004). By focusing on the author’s many references to books, literature and learning, the present paper attempts to study their individual contextual occurrences and explores how they saturate the discursive substratum of the novel’s major themes. …”
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LIAQUAT AHAMED Lords of Finance: The Bankers Who Broke the World
Published 2014-09-01“…As a result, the Financial Times the New York Times, Time magazine and Amazon.com declared the volume Best book of the year, simultaneously, its author being awarded the Pulitzer Prize for History.…”
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Louise Glück: Mythological Feminism and an Attempt to Overcome Antagonism
Published 2020-11-01“…Ian Probstein comments on the judges’ decision and reminds about the poet’s “CV” that includes National Book Award, Pulitzer Prize, Bollingen Prize, National Book Critics Circle Award, National Humanities Medal, several Guggenheim fellowships and some other prestigious awards. …”
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American Minimalism: The Western Vernacular in Norman Mailer’s The Executioner’s Song.
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A Beloved Performance: Reading between the Lines
Published 2012-02-01“…American author Toni Morrison won the Pulitzer Prize in Fiction (1988) and the Nobel Prize in Literature (1993) following the publication of Beloved in 1987. …”
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CHARLES SIMIC’S “THE WORLD DOESN’T END”: PROSE POEMS
Published 2017-03-01“…Em 1990, ganhou o Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, pelo livro The World Doesn’t End. …”
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The Human, Nonhuman, Inhuman in Cormac McCarthy's The Road
Published 2023-01-01“… Cormac McCarthy’s summoned gothic realm of terrorizing darkness and bestial hunger in his Pulitzer Prize winning novel The Road (2006) is a spectacle defined by a sweeping sense of loss and a charred landscape. …”
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GOD IN ALICE WALKER’S THE COLOR PURPLE; A PARADOX OF THE DIVINE
Published 2016-08-01“…It aims to discuss the main charachers’ paradoxical state of mind in understanding God in the novel The Color Purple. The 1982 Pulitzer Prize for fiction winner is organized around an intimate conversation between two female characters, Celie and Shug Avery, whose understanding of God were challanged by complexity of sexism and racism in the black family. …”
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A Different Side of the Story: On Neurodiversity and Trees
Published 2020-12-01“…In this way, neurodiversity finely glosses and articulates the kind of animistic, environmental message that Powers instils in his Pulitzer prize winning novel.…”
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