Nostalgic memories of "faced" is like farmers classifying their own animals as their own animals, and when humans do the same with important events. When an event is so emotional or physically strong, it will always keep a person's sign. The remaining brand symbols can be either positive or negative, but it is certain that it will give you comprehensive emotions. Looking back at the past, most of our memories tend to be displayed in black and white, but this event rarely happens when the event is very unique and it is experienced again.
Yoseph Komunya's poem "Face to It" remembers veteran's restlessness. In this verse, a black man, a veteran of the Vietnam War is visiting the Vietnam War memorial monument in Washington, DC. He looked at his feelings, the wall of memorials, and talked about how his memory is consistent with him. He struggles to not mourn his promise, but now he is facing the wall, so he can hardly cry. this? You are nothing other than a hound, are you crying? Many people who lived in the wonderful era of the 1950s may remember listening to and seeing Elvis Presley's hound dogs, sad hotels, prison rocks, or one of his many popular songs. not. Elvis is wonderful, but there are others who make the 1950s unforgettable, so that his teen idol, James Dean, the day the music died and the famous famous Marilyn can be forgotten
& Lt; Tab / & gt; Yusef Komunyakaa was born on 29th April 1947 in Bogarusa, Louisiana. In the childhood of Komunyakaa, the depth of the south was isolated, and he reflected suppression in many poems. After Youssef graduated from high school in 1965, he entered the army and started the assignment. When he joined the army, Yusuf started writing for the military newspaper and worked very well in the style of news writing. After his military years Komunyakaa studied at the University of Colorado where he found himself as a poet. He finally got a master's degree from Colorado State University and Youssef obtains a bachelor 's degree in 1980 from the University of California, Irvine. In the 1994 Pulitzer Poetry Prize, Yusef Komunyakaa was not only a great poet of African Americans but also one of the best poets ever.
Komunyakaa, Yusef (James Willie Brown, Jr.) (1947-) Poet, essayist, editor, educator A recipient of the poem prize awarded as Neon Verna as a new poetry and poetry (1993) in 1994. The poems of Komuniyaka use the roots of his family in the West Indies and his childhood rural Louisiana, as well as his experience during the Vietnam War. In his poems, sparse words and surreal images are often used, and Komuniyaka also incorporates blues and jazz rhythms. In Blue Notes: Prose, Interviews and Comments (2000), Komuniyaka says poetry "Hint: this is the way of conversation."