William Faulkner received his Nobel Peace Prize in December 1950. In the speech, Faulkner declared that this award was not created as a person's life, not as a human being, but as a "derived from the human spirit, which did not exist before." Modern writers lose contact with his spirit and he must reconnect with the universal truth of the mind - "love, honor, compassion, pride, compassion and sacrifice". (PF) Through his personality and the voice of their spiritual exposure, Faulkner notes the immortality of mankind by "promoting his mind, reminding his courage, honor and hope, pride and compassion and pi" It solidifies.
Faulkner is emotional due to his strong tone and a combination of many common rhetorical devices, praising his main purpose in writing this speech and giving other writers the spirit of human beings and re I urge you to connect. "Faulkner believes that the poet is responsible for writing down his soul by reminding his courage, honor, hope, pride, compassion, compassion, and sacrifice, helping people creep on. In addition to recording human efforts, "I work as props and help him to endure the pillars." Writers endure humanity by writing "old universal truth" which is not passed through but passed from generation to generation. If the writer is only writing about the current affair and forgetting the problems of the human heart contradictory to him, he will not fulfill his duty - these truths - love, honor, pity, pride, compassion, Sacrifice - is the truth of the human mind. society
In the speech that won the Nobel Prize in 1950, William Faulkner lamented the lack of "mental problems" in contemporary literature and noted "old universal truth ... love and honor, compassion, pride, compassion" did. Importance of sacrifice Weave a successful, meaningful story. Faulkner classifies all of these human characteristics into one genus and marks it as "the heart of the person conflicting with yourself". A part of the reason why Arthur Miller played "The Death of a Salesman" even after more than 50 years since its initial publication is that this story embodies all of Faulkner's "universal truth". The Roman family is a prototype of the human mind that conflicts with itself.