I read every Nobel Literature Prize winner from 1913 to 1921, and this is what I found

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 28. 06. 2024
  • It is the third week of my reading challenge - to read all 120 winners of the Nobel Prize for Literature before the 2024 winner is announced.
    In week three of the 120 Nobels reading challenge I introduce you to the Nobel Prizes stained by World War One - from Rolland in 1915 to France in 1921.
    What do these great writers have to do with war and peace, fascism and socialism, and with some of the most notorious people in world history?
    More details, links to all texts and resources are available at my substack - jeffrich.substack.com. Free to join.
    My 120 Nobels Challenge series on substack will show you how the Nobel Prize is a window onto on understanding the world history, world literature and geopolitics.
    You can chat with me about the 120 Nobels Reading Challenge on the Burning Archive channel CZcams channel comments section and more exclusively at jeffrich.substack.com
    Subscribe to my free weekly email to receive insights from world history in a weekly essay on Saturday at jeffrich.substack.com
    You can support the Burning Archive by contributing at:
    Buy Me A Coffee www.buymeacoffee.com/burninga...
    Or by hitting a thanks button right here on CZcams.
    Check out ‪@NobelPrize‬ for more details about the process of choosing the Nobel Prize for Literature and profiles of the winners.

Komentáře • 1

  • @cyberpunkalphamale
    @cyberpunkalphamale Před 8 dny +1

    I do this with Hugo, Nebula, Philip K. Dick, and Pulitzer prizes.