E.B. White was known for his essay writings, and his work at The New Yorker magazine. He wrote two classic children books, Charlotte's Web and Stuart Little. White's unique writing style impressed many people because of his pure writing as any in our literature. The book White wrote The Elements of Style also was a great influence on America literature and is still used in collage English courses today. E.B. White's influence on America was great, particularly because of his popular essays and his children's books, which served a great purpose for two generations of readers.
E.B. White was born in Mount Vernon, New York on July 11, 1849. His parents are Samuel Tilley White who was a piano manufacturer and his mom was Jessica Hart. He was one of six children. White served in World War I in 1932. In 1932 White was given three comment columns to protest and he was greatly dismissive of the bonus army. He went to Cornell University on a scholarship when he returned from World War I. In 1917 Whitestarted school at Cornell University. He became the editor of the Cornell Daily Sun school newspaper. While he was at Cornell University he got the nickname Andy. The first school president at Cornell University was Andrew White and E.B. Whites classmates started calling him Andy as a prank, and the nickname stuck with him for the rest his life. He graduated in 1921 with a bachelor degree in arts. After collage white started touring the west.
After touring the west, "White pursued a career in journalism for several years. He worked for the United Press and the Seattle Times before eventually landing a position with The New Yorker magazine in 1927." (E.B. White Biography). White worked at The New Yorker magazine for the rest of his career. ...
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...ite will always be an important part of the American English literature.
Work Cited
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“E.B. White Biography.” School.familyeducation.com. Original. Pearson Education, Inc, 2000-20014. Web. 22 Apr 2014.
“E.B. White – Most Companionable of Writers.” Bbc.co.uk. Edition. British Broadcasting Network, 23 July 2007. Web. 15 Apr 2014.
“Elwyn Brooks White.” The Biography.com. Edition. A&E Television Network, n.d. web. 15 Apr 2014.
Love, Keith. “New Yorker’s E.B. White Dies: Essayist, 86, Also Known for His Children’s Books.” Articles.latimes.com. Original. Los Angeles, 2 Oct 1985. Web. 15 Apr 2014.
Plimpton, George. Personal Interview. “The Paris Review.” Theparisreview.org. Original. The Paris Review, 31 Jan 2013. Web. 22 Apr 2014
Dudley Randall was born on January 19, 1914 in Washington D.C. and died on August 2, 2000 in Southfield, Michigan. His mother Ada Viloa was a teacher and his father Arthur George Clyde Randall was a Congregational minister. His father was very much into politics because of that Dudley and his brother would listen to prominent black speakers. When Randall was about nine years old he and his family move to Detroit, Michigan in 1920. By the time he was thirteen he had his first poem published in the Detroit Free Press. At the age of sixteen he had graduated from high school.
W.E.B. DuBois was born on the twenty-third of February in 1868, in Great Barrington, Massachusetts. Great Barrington, Massachusetts was a free man town, in this African- Americans were given opportunities to own land and to live a better life. He attended Fisk University in Nashville Tennessee from 1885 to 1888. While attending this college this was the first time DuBois has ever been to the south and had to encounter segregation. After graduating from F...
When he was fifteen years old his mother died from appendicitis. From fifteen years of age to his college years he lived in an all-white neighborhood. From 1914-1917, he shifted from many colleges and academic courses of study as well as he changed his cultural identity growing up. He studied physical education, agriculture, and literature at a total of six colleges and universities from Wisconsin to New York. Although he never completed a degree, his educational pursuits laid the foundation for his writing career. He had the knowledge of philosophy and psychology. He attempted to write when he was a youth, but he made a choice to pursue a literary career in 1919. After he published Cane he became part of New York literary circles. He objected both rivalries that prevailed in the fraternity of writers and to attempts to promote him as a black writer (Clay...
2. He moved to New York and got a job as a free-lance writer but failed, he then
After graduation in 1920, he went to Mexico to teach English for a year. While on the train to Mexico, he wrote the poem “the Negro Speaks of Rivers”, which was published in the June 1921 issue of The Crisis, a leading black publication. After his academic year at Columbia, he lived for a year in Harlem, embarked on a six-month voyage as a cabin boy on a merchant freighter bound for West Africa. After its return, he took a job on a ship sailing to Holland.
writing was weak during grade school, but his great pieces came his senior year at Harvard. He became editor for the Harvard Lampoon, which is the school’s newspaper.
"It is one of the blessings of this world that few people see visions and dream dreams" (Hurston). An author, especially during the Harlem Renaissance which immediately followed World War One, is someone who took their dream, acted upon it, and made it into something tangible on paper. An author takes their thoughts and creates something beautifully unique each and every time. Being an author takes a lot of strength in order to find your place in the overpopulated industry of up and coming authors-to-be. In any industry, not just writing, it takes a while to find one's special voice and style. A well respected author of the Harlem Renaissance, Zora Neale Hurston wrote
Hynes, Gerald C. "A Biographical Sketch of W.E.B. DuBois." W.E.B. DuBois Learning Center. N.P., 2004. Web. 18 Feb. 2014.
W.E.B. Du Bois and Booker T. Washington were two very influential leaders in the black community during the late 19th century, early 20th century. However, they both had different views on improvement of social and economic standing for blacks. Booker T. Washington, an ex-slave, put into practice his educational ideas at Tuskegee, which opened in 1881. Washington stressed patience, manual training, and hard work. He believed that blacks should go to school, learn skills, and work their way up the ladder. Washington also urged blacks to accept racial discrimination for the time being, and once they worked their way up, they would gain the respect of whites and be fully accepted as citizens. W.E.B. Du Bois on the other hand, wanted a more aggressive strategy. He studied at Fisk University in Tennessee and the University of Berlin before he went on to study at Harvard. He then took a low paying research job at the University of Pennsylvania, using a new discipline of sociology which emphasized factual observation in the field to study the condition of blacks. The first study of the effect of urban life on blacks, it cited a wealth of statistics, all suggesting that crime in the ward stemmed not from inborn degeneracy but from the environment in which blacks lived. Change the environment, and people would change too; education was a good way to go about it. The different strategies offered by W.E.B. Du Bois and Booker T. Washington in dealing with the problems of poverty and discrimination faced by Black Americans were education, developing economic skills, and insisting on things continually such as the right to vote. ...
Zora Neale Hurston and Maya Angelou are arguably the most influential writers of the mid 20th century . Their work has inspired young African Americans to have more confidence in their own abilities. Their work has also been studied and taught countless times in many schools across the U.S. But the main reason why their work is considered classics in American literature; is because their work stands as testament to the treatment, and struggles of African Americans in the mid 20th century America.
writing, he has captured the hearts of many with his famous works . With his writing style and characters different from any other author at the time really gave him the advantage to become the first author to be famous in both Europe and America . In each story there would be different
When a writer starts his work, most often than not, they think of ways they can catch their reader’s attention, but more importantly, how to awake emotions within them. They want to stand out from the rest and to do so, they must swim against the social trend that marks a specific society. That will make them significant; the way they write, how they make a reader feel, the specific way they write, and the devotion they have for their work. Washington Irving, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Edgard Allan Poe influenced significantly the American literary canon with their styles, themes, and forms, making them three important writers in America.
Elwyn Brooks White, or E.B White is best known for his children’s books The Trumpet of the Swan, Stuart Little, and one of his best known books; Charlotte’s Web. E.B was not a children’s writer from the beginning, he wrote pieces such as poems and short stories for Harper’s Magazine. For that magazine, E.B “wrote three children’s books- Stuart Little, Charlotte’s Web, and The Trumpet of the Swan- which became classics” (The New Yorker 375). White has a very different style that he writes with, “White developed his books for children in the manner of Kafka, The books are Kafka with an American twist, they are Kafka with happy endings” (Epstein 380). William Dean Howells had once said, “What American public wanted ‘was a tragedy with a happy ending’” (Epstein 380). “The combination of seriousness and whimsy, or of the minute and the momentuous, is effective, and at times profoundly true. Because human experience is a curious mixture of shifting tones and moods there is a basic honesty in White’s writing: he reveals himself as a man unafraid of surface contradictions or of simple and natural responses” (Sampson 530). White used experiences he had throughout his life and incorporated them into his children’s books. He also uses animals in his books, because “children love living things and have their own fascination with the animal world. Children, they are permitted to love things they do not understand” (Epstein 380).
The television show I selected for this essay was “Breaking Bad” by Vince Gilligan. The show follows the life of a chemistry teacher named Walter White, and he had discovered that he had stage 3 lung cancer. Upon discovering that he has a death sentence, it propels him into a life of crime with his former student Jesse Pinkman; they disburse crystal meth on the streets to make sure that he could leave his family well of after his death. However, he eventually becomes power hungry and loses all the people he once cared about. As the show progresses, Walter White begins to characteristics that mirror those that Niccolo Machiavelli discusses in the book “The Prince”, these characteristics are usually referred to as Machiavellian character which means to be cunning, deceitful or unscrupulous. (sounds weird less words)
Literature has played an important role in society throughout history, the written word being a powerful tool in communicating ideas. This became even more important during the 20th century, when many people were trying to persuade others or share their emotions and histories. The black movements in the United States made use of this tool, many authors coming out and becoming part of the fabric of society. Three authors in particular, Ralph Ellison, Langston Hughes, and Richard Wright became some of the most influential and important writers of the 20th century, owing to their own history and life experiences to give life and meaning to their works.