.

Wednesday, March 18, 2020

The eNotes Blog Mo Yan Wins the 2012 Nobel Prize forLiterature

Mo Yan Wins the 2012 Nobel Prize forLiterature This morning, the Nobel Prize for Literature  was announced.   The committee has granted the prestigious award to 57-year Chinese   author Mo Yan. In its press release, the Nobel Committee says that Mo Yan was selected for his writing that merges â€Å"hallucinatory realism (with) folk tales, history and the contemporary.† The choice, though widely lauded, has its critics as well. Although the subjects Yan typically writes about are non-political, the writer has been embraced by the Communist Party, something that gives dissident writers and others pause. Despite political concerns, few would argue that Mos work is not brilliant. His subject matter typically examines rural Chinese life through magical realism. Mos penchant for narrators like talking animals and his inclusion of elements from Chinese fairy tales has drawn comparisons of his work to that of Colombian author  Gabriel Garcia Marquez. Perhaps Mr. Mos best-known work in the Western world is his novel  Red Sorghum.  Published in 1986 and translated into English in 1992,  Red Sorghum  is a bandit-laced tale about the trials of life for rural Chinese. The novel was made into a  movie in 1987. Born in the eastern Chinese province of Shandong in 1955 to farming parents, Mo Yan is the pen name of Guan Moye.   Mo was a teenager during the Cultural Revolution. For several years, he took various agricultural jobs and then joined the Peoples Liberation Army. His first short story, Falling Rain on a Spring Night, was published in 1981.   Many more short stories and novels have since been published. His latest,  Life and Death Are Wearing Me Out,  was written in 2006 and translated into English in 2008.

Sunday, March 1, 2020

How to Become President of the United States

How to Become President of the United States With the primary election coming to an end, only two candidates (if you’re not counting the independent candidates) will remain. While that seems simple enough, the path to becoming the President of the United States can be rather confusing and difficult to understand. After all, our system involves us voting for who we want as our leader, but we technically vote for representatives who then vote for the person we want as our leader, in which the representatives don’t always abide by the wishes of the voter. Make sense? No? Yeah, it’s pretty  convoluted but to make things easier to digest, we’ve compiled a very short and basic infographic on what it takes to become the President of the United States.