Showing posts with label prize winner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prize winner. Show all posts

Sunday, October 15, 2017

The Crucible


The Crucible by Arthur Miller

Miller’s The Crucible speaks to a society where narrow mindedness and provincial thinking clouds vision. The Crucible takes place in 1600s where Abigail Williams accuses multiple women in the town of Salem of witchcraft. The judges in the town support Abigail for all of her accusations and blindly accept what she says merely because she says that her word is trustworthy. 

Miller’s book speaks directly to McCarthyism, but the message still holds true today. In an era of social media, it is all too easy to only listen to what one wants to hear. Just like how Judge Danforth only saw the evidence to help him find witches and how McCarthy only saw the evidence to help him find Communists, people can cherry pick the information that supports their point of view. When Facebook finds news articles that a person might be interested in, it isn’t looking for the most credible piece of information, it is looking for what the user wants to see based on previous preferences. Facebook’s current solution for fighting fake news is to tag questionable pieces in order to provide context. However, the mere-exposure effect shows that simply reading the headline plants that seed of false information. Individuals can’t get their news from just social media. They need to make sure that their news comes from credible and respected sources to get all types of information, not just the ones that users are exposed to through their friends.

Friday, July 28, 2017

Tenth of December



Tenth of December by George Saunders
Fiction
Saunders’s collection of ten short stories in Tenth of December creatively and hilariously explore the cracks in humanity that are exposed under stress. None of George Saunders’s stories are very pleasant and most don’t even have a happy ending. His characters are pushed through difficult conflicts that test their empathy or devotion to their values. But through these trials the readers get a deeper glimpse at what makes us human, and what Saunders seems to be saying is that humans are naïve romantics. Saunders’s characters are idealists in a society that seems to very rarely reward idealists. Sometimes what the reader sees is reassuring, but most of the time I felt disgusted with either our flaws or how society is set up to dismiss virtue.  

Sunday, April 16, 2017

I am Malala


I am Malala by Malala Yousafzai
Nonfiction

Malala Yousafzai obtained international renown when, at the age of fifteen, she was shot in the head by the Taliban for speaking out for girls’ rights to education. In this book, readers are able to understand her origin story. Through her beautiful prose, Malala depicts her serene childhood in Swat and paints pictures of snow covered mountains and trickling streams. We also get to learn more about Malala’s family history, and the amount of support she received from her dad. Malala also shows the atrocities committed by the Taliban with a bit of history thrown in. Driven to fight for her rights and not wanting to stay silent, young Malala delivered speeches and wrote in the diary for BBC, both of which led to the day she was shot in the head. Since then, Malala has continued to fight for education for all, notably having won a Nobel Prize. All of this is baffling when you realize that she is only twenty. Many only know of the time she was shot in the head and that she won a Nobel Prize. Here we get her personal history and some history on the conflict in the Middle East. Malala’s story serves as an inspiration to all, especially young girls, and as a testament to the importance of education.