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  1. Aug 24, 2017 · He was honored with the 1964 Nobel Prize in Literature. 3. Hannah Arendt. (One of the Most Influential Political Theorists of the 20th Century) Birthdate: October 14, 1906. Sun Sign: Libra. Birthplace: Linden - Mitte, Hanover, Germany. Died: December 4, 1975. Hannah Arendt was a political theorist.

    • George Orwell. (Known for His Novels “Animal Farm” and “Nineteen Eighty-Four”) 30 8 Birthdate: June 25, 1903. Sun Sign: Cancer. Birthplace: Motihari, Bihar, India.
    • James Baldwin. (Author Best Known for His Novel 'Go Tell It on the Mountain') 31 7 Birthdate: August 2, 1924. Sun Sign: Leo. Birthplace: Harlem, New York, United States.
    • Arthur Miller. (Playwright Best Known for His Plays “All My Sons,” “Death of a Salesman” and “The Crucible”) 21 6 Birthdate: October 17, 1915. Sun Sign: Libra.
    • T. S. Eliot. (Best Known as a Leader of the Modernist Movement in Poetry) 22 5 Birthdate: September 26, 1888. Sun Sign: Libra. Birthplace: St. Louis, Missouri, United States.
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    Who said it? Franklin D Roosevelt, 1933 About: The United States lay devastated by the Great Depression, an economic collapse without precedent that destroyed the country’s global image as a land of opportunity and reduced millions of Americans to poverty and destitution. The governor of New York, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, had run for and won the ...

    Who said it? Winston Churchill, 1940 About: By June 1940, it seemed that Adolf Hitler had won his war. He had conquered Poland; launched a devastating assault in Denmark and Norway; and attacked in the west, invading the Netherlands and Belgium, and storming through northern France to cut off the British army and much of the French. It was only a m...

    Who said it? Mao Zedong, 1946 About: The dropping of atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasakiin 1945 redefined the world. Leaders had always been able to plunge their peoples into war, but now they could wipe out whole cities, even countries, with a single order. While the United States was the only one with nuclear capability at first, the Soviet Un...

    Who said it? Mandy Rice-Davies, 1963 About: This ordinary retort marked an unlikely watershed in British social history. Marilyn (better known as Mandy) Rice-Davies was a model and dancer working in London’s Soho, where she met Christine Keeler and her friend and protector, Stephen Ward. A successful osteopath,Ward was well-known in high society, h...

    Who said it? Cassius Clay, 1963 About: Muhammad Ali, who changed his name from Cassius Clay in 1964, was always much more than a boxer: he was a role model for young black people around the world and a major international celebrity, mixing his sporting triumphs with irrepressible charm and wit. Boxing had long been a way for poor Americans to bette...

    Who said it? Dr Martin Luther King Jr, 1963 About: Martin Luther King Jr’s iconic speech was delivered in front of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington DC, an enormous statue of the US presidentwho had ended slavery in the United States. By the 1960s, however, true emancipation was still far off as African-Americans faced entrenched legal discriminat...

    Who said it? The Beatles, 1967 About: The Beatles were at the height of their fame and influence by the 1967 ‘summer of love’. Pop music had developed into a young people’s lifestyle and outlook that their parents, of the wartime generation, found utterly bewildering. The Beatles did not just produce hit records: they put forward a new philosophy, ...

    Who said it? Neil Armstrong, 1969 About: That, at any rate, is what Neil Armstrong meant to say when he stepped down from the lunar module onto the surface of the Moon on 20 July 1969. Either he slipped on his words or they were obscured by a bleep in the transmission, because the version heard back on Earth did not have that crucial “a”. It did no...

    Who said it? Margaret Thatcher, 1987 About:The Conservative government of Margaret Thatcher, Britain’s first woman prime minister, ushered in a revolution. Her immediate aim was to resolve the economic problems into which the country had sunk in the 1970s, which she did by promoting a new philosophy based on free enterprise and the rolling-back of ...

    Who said it?Hillary Rodham Clinton, 1995 About:The feminist movement had used a shorter version of this phrase since the 1980s, but it entered the mainstream when Hillary Clinton, the First Lady as wife of US President Bill Clinton, spoke at a United Nations World Conference on Women in Beijing in 1995. The transformation of the position of women i...

  3. Jan 7, 2018 · Twentieth-century literary criticism and theory has comprised a broad range of tendencies and movements: a humanistic tradition, descended from nineteenth-century writers such as Matthew Arnold and continued into the twentieth century through figures such as Irving Babbitt and F. R. Leavis, surviving in our own day in scholars such as Frank ...

  4. Great Thinkers of the 20th Century. The three greatest thinkers of the twentieth century were Sigmund Freud, Marshall McLuhan, and Michel Foucault. Have you ever wished that these men had written more -- much more -- than they did?

  5. American literature - Modernism, Realism, Postmodernism: Important movements in drama, poetry, fiction, and criticism took shape in the years before, during, and after World War I. The eventful period that followed the war left its imprint upon books of all kinds. Literary forms of the period were extraordinarily varied, and in drama, poetry, and fiction the leading authors tended toward ...

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