enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Racism in the work of Charles Dickens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Racism_in_the_work_of...

    In speaking on the controversy, Dickens' attacked "that platform sympathy with the black- or the native or the Devil.." [5]: 971 In an essay on George Eliot, K.M. Newton writes: [17] Most of the major writers in the Victorian period can be seen as racist to a greater or lesser degree.

  3. Absurdist fiction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absurdist_fiction

    Absurdist fiction is a genre of novels, plays, poems, films, or other media that focuses on the experiences of characters in situations where they cannot find any inherent purpose in life, most often represented by ultimately meaningless actions and events that call into question the certainty of existential concepts such as truth or value. [1]

  4. List of books banned by governments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_books_banned_by...

    The book was banned for its criticism of the actions of the national liberation front and for acknowledging the 1968 massacre of 6000 civilians in Huế Paradise of the Blind: Dương Thu Hương: 1988 Novel, Literary fiction Banned in Vietnam for criticism on the political party in control. [304] No Man's Land: Dương Thu Hương: 2005

  5. Steven Marcus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steven_Marcus

    Steven Paul Marcus (December 13, 1928 – April 25, 2018) was an American academic and literary critic who published influential psychoanalytic analyses of the novels of Charles Dickens and Victorian pornography. He was George Delacorte Professor Emeritus in the Humanities at Columbia University.

  6. The Pickwick Papers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Pickwick_Papers

    The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club (also known as The Pickwick Papers) is the first novel by English author Charles Dickens.His previous work was Sketches by Boz, published in 1836, and his publisher Chapman & Hall asked Dickens to supply descriptions to explain a series of comic "cockney sporting plates" by illustrator Robert Seymour, [1] and to connect them into a novel.

  7. Here's what we do know for sure: until they were collected by early catalogers Giambattista Basile, Charles Perrault, and The Brothers Grimm, fairy tales were shared orally. And, a look at the sources cited in these first collections reveals that the tellers of these tales — at least during the Grimms' heydey — were women.

  8. The White Man's Burden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_White_Man's_Burden

    "The White Man's Burden" was first published in The New York Sun on February 1, 1899 and in The Times (London) on February 4, 1899. [7] On 7 February 1899, during senatorial debate to decide if the US should retain control of the Philippine Islands and the ten million Filipinos conquered from the Spanish Empire, Senator Benjamin Tillman read aloud the first, the fourth, and the fifth stanzas ...

  9. The Lululemon controversy over 'certain customers' comment ...

    www.aol.com/news/lululemon-controversy-over...

    Wilson's latest comments, in which he suggests that Lululemon is "trying to become like the Gap" and expresses his distaste over what he calls Lululemon's "whole diversity and inclusion thing ...