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News May 17, 2016

Rep. Jim Cooper (D-TN) on 'All the King's Men' and the 2016 election

Humanities Tennessee founded Chapter 16 to provide comprehensive coverage of literary news and events in the state.

As part of the Pulitzer Centennial Campfires Initiative, Rep. Jim Cooper (D-TN) contributed a piece celebrating 1947 Novel winner All the King's Men, by Robert Penn Warren.

Rep. Jim Cooper

In "An Antidote to Political Venom," the congressman writes: "The novel is dated in its use of the n-word, its dialect, its harness shops and telegrams, and the incomprehensible poverty of the Depression. But human nature has not changed at all; in fact, people proudly refuse to change."

In comparing the tale of Willie Stark to the 2016 election, Cooper continues, "Politicians — even demagogues — are not the true enemy."

So who is, in his opinion? Read the full piece here to find out.

Robert Penn Warren's 'All the King's Men' was made into a movie that won multiple Academy Awards in 1949.

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So the novel is dying? Really?
On the 50th anniversary of the prizes, three-time Pulitzer-winner Robert Penn Warren spoke on trends in fiction with an eye to the future: 'The novel may even leave the printed page — if the age of Gutenberg is really over — but it could still be a novel.'

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