African-American Pulitzer Prize-winners
1950 Gwendolyn Brooks, Annie Allen, Poetry
1969 Moneta Sleet, Jr., Deep Sorrow, Photography
1970 Charles Gordone, No Place to be Somebody, Drama
1976 Scott Joplin, (posthumous), Special Citation, Music
1977 Alex Haley, Roots, Special Citation
1978 James Alan McPherson, Elbow Room, Fiction
1982 Charles Fuller, A Soldiers Play, Drama
1982 John H. White, Journalism, Feature Photography
1983 Alice Walker, The Color Purple, Fiction
1984 Norman Lockman, Journalism (shared), Investigative Reporting
1984 Kirk Scharfenberg, Journalism (shared), Investigative Reporting
1987 Rita Dove, Thomas and Beulah, Poetry
1987 August Wilson, Fences, Drama
1988 Michel duCille, Journalism, Feature Photography
1988 Toni Morrison, Beloved, Fiction
1989 Clarence Page, Journalism, Commentary
1990 August Wilson, The Piano Lesson, Drama
1994 William Raspberry, Journalism, Commentary
1994 Yusef Komunyakaa, Neon Vernacular, Poetry
1994 Isabel Wilkerson, Journalism, Feature Writing
1994 David Levering Lewis, W E B Du Bois: 1868-1919, Biography
1996 E.R. Shipp, Journalism, Commentary
1996 George Walker, Lilacs for…Orchestra, Music
1997 Wynton Marsalis, Blood on the Fields, Music
1998 Clarence Williams, Journalism, Feature Photography
1999 Duke Ellington (posthumous), Special Citation, Music
2001 David Levering Lewis, W E B Du Bois: 1919-1963, Biography
2001 Gerald Boyd, Journalism (shared), National Reporting
2002 Suzan-Lori Parks, Top Dog/Under Dog, Drama
2003 Colbert I. King, Journalism (columnist), Commentary
2004 Leonard Pitts, Journalism, Commentary
2004 Edward P Jones, The Known World, Fiction
2005 Dele Olojede, Journalism, International Reporting
2006 Thelonius Monk, (posthumous), Special Citation
2006 Trymaine Lee, Journalism (shared), Breaking News
2006 Robin Givham, Journalism, Criticism
2006 Irwin Thompson, Journalism (shared), Breaking News
2007 Natasha Trethewey, Native Guard, Poetry
2007 Ornette Coleman, Sound Grammar, Music
2007 John Coltrane, (posthumous), Special Citation
2007 Quinton Smith, Journalism (shared), Breaking News
2007 Cynthia Tucker, Journalism, Commentary
2009 Annette Gordon-Reed, The Hemingses of Monticello, History
2009 Eugene Robinson, Journalism, Commentary
2009 Lynn Nottage, Ruined, Drama
2012 Tracy K. Smith, Life on Mars, Poetry
* Despite exhaustive database diving, this list is probably not inclusive.
No, Philip Emeagwali did not invent either the internet or the computer and has never won a Nobel Prize. He is a Nigerian-born engineer and computer scientist/geologist who was one of two winners of the 1989 Gordon Bell Prize, a prize from the IEEE, for his use of a Connection Machine supercomputer to help analyze petroleum fields. While Emeagwali claims a long list of inventions, they have been all refuted by media agencies. He has been accused of self-promotion and misrepresentation. His application for a PhD was rejected by the University of Michigan.
The best prize I could ever win would be the rights to remove all weapons from the planet The best prize I could ever win would be the rights to remove all weapons from the planet
The four winners in the Korean War were all killed in Acton. Thirteen Vietnam winners included one who died as a Prisoner of War and three were Killed in Action.
J Bradshaw artillary
Tradition. Not all trophies are cups, but it is a fairly common form.
Listing all Pulitzer Prize winners from 1987 to 1997 is a project beyond the scope of this site. You can retrieve that information from the Pulitzer.org database, accessible via Related Links, below.
Listing all Pulitzer Prize winners from 1989 through the present is a project beyond the scope of this site. You can retrieve that information from the Pulitzer.org database, accessible via Related Links, below.
Siddhartha Mukherjee, an Indian-American writer, won the Pulitzer Prize in 2011 for his book "The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer."
You can find a list of Nobel Peace Prize winners on the official Nobel Prize website or through reputable news sources such as BBC or CNN. The list is updated regularly to include recent winners and their achievements.
Many, many people and news organizations have won Pulitzer Prizes since they were first created in 1917. Each year, the Pulitzer Prize Board selects a varying number of entrants to win awards in subcategories of Journalism and Letters, Drama and Music. The scope of your question is too broad to answer in this format; however, you can find the information on the Pulitzer.org website (see Related Links, below).
Click on the link below for the list.
Haley
That's "Nobel", not "Novel". You can find a list of Nobel Prize Winners in the Wikipedia article "List of Nobel laureates". This article has related links; for example, one that lists nobel prize winners by country. The article is "List of Nobel laureates by country".
There are several: the Nobel, the Bookman, the Pulitzer. They are all prestigious. The Nobel is an international award. The Bookman is British. The Pulitzer is American, as is the National Book Award.
There is no Pulitzer Prize-winning Critic who fits all your stated criteria in the Pulitzer.org database. The closest matches are a journalist named Richard Eder, of Los Angeles Times, who won a 1987 Pulitzer for his book reviews; a journalist named Frank Rich, of The New York Times, who was a Pulitzer finalist in 1987 and 2005; and a theatre critic named David Richards, of The Washington Post, who was a finalist in 1989.
Some Nobel Prize winners in the 1900s include Marie Curie (1903 and 1911), Albert Einstein (1921), Martin Luther King Jr. (1964), and Mother Teresa (1979). These individuals were recognized for their groundbreaking work in physics, chemistry, peace, and other fields during the 20th century.
Arthur Miller won a Pulitzer Prize in Drama for his play, Death of a Salesman, in 1949.Robert Miller won a Pulitzer Prize in Music in 1962 for his opera, The Crucible, which was based on Arthur Miller's classic play about the Salem Witch Trials. Miller never won a Pulitzer for the play itself.