American Literature of the 20th Century. Upton Sinclair Plan: Introduction Chapter 1. "Lost generation " of American literature in XX century
The description of fights in novels written during the
Second World War
1.2.The description of ordinary people's difficult life during
war in American novels
Chapter 2. The American writers' contribution to the literature in war times
2.1 Writers impression about the Second World War
2.2 How American writers expressed abhorrence to the war in their novels.
Conclusion List of used literature
Introduction The President signed the Education Law. It describes in detail the types of education and forms of education, clarifies the powers of government agencies and enshrines the rights of teachers, students and parents1. President Shavkat Mirziyoyev signed the law “On Education” on 23 September. The document was passed by the Legislative Chamber on May 19 and approved by the Senate on August 7.It, in particular, defines the concept of “education” – a systemic process aimed at providing students with deep theoretical knowledge, skills and practical skills, as well as the formation of general educational and professional knowledge, skills and abilities, and the development of abilities. There was no conceptual framework in the 1997 law The brilliance and diversity of American writing since World War II are at once testimony to the ideals of inclusiveness that inform our civil culture and an intense exposure of our limitations. At once celebratory and feisty, argumentative and lyrical, our writers identify and express the living contradictions of our culture. Through all the chapters that follow there emerges a collective portrait of a period and place marked by every conceivable fault and virtue, split by differences of wealth and position, by habits of outrage or praise, by ethnicity and race, by agendas of the left and right, by narrative realism and innovation, but nevertheless united, if by nothing else, by a sheer intensity of creative drive. The purpose of this companion is to provide a guide through that creative ferment, describe its shaping ideas and the writers who represent the variety of its energies and achievements.
Emily Dickinson's praise of that certain “Slant of light" that sharply exposes “internal difference, / Where the Meanings, are" underscores the power of “difference" to inspire. Out of the argument between the artist and business culture, between those on the margin and those in the mainstream, postwar United States culture has forged dynamic new fusions and combinations. The United States that emerges through our fiction, drama, music, and film is a rhetorical figure for modernity in all its disruption and progress. A nation whose cohesiveness relies on consent to and interpretation of the ideals of its founding documents has nourished an art animated by the power of those ideals to accommodate change and dissent, to provide strategies for the recognition and reconciliation of differences.