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Charles Baudelaire

Index Charles Baudelaire

Charles Pierre Baudelaire (April 9, 1821 – August 31, 1867) was a French poet who also produced notable work as an essayist, art critic, and pioneering translator of Edgar Allan Poe. [1]

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A Series of Unfortunate Events

A Series of Unfortunate Events is a series of thirteen children's novels by Lemony Snicket, the pen name of American author Daniel Handler.

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A Singular Conspiracy

A Singular Conspiracy (1974) by Barry Perowne is a fictional treatment of the unaccounted period in Edgar Allan Poe's life from January to May 1844.

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A Woman With No Clothes On

A Woman With No Clothes On (2008) is V. R. Main's debut novel.

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A. J. Weberman

Alan Jules Weberman (born May 26, 1945), better known as A. J. Weberman, is an American writer, political activist, gadfly, and popularizer of the terms "garbology" and "Dylanology".

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Abraham Valdelomar

Pedro Abraham Valdelomar Pinto (April 27, 1888 - November 3, 1919) was a Peruvian narrator, poet, journalist, essayist and dramatist; he is considered the founder of the avant-garde in Peru, although more for his dandy-like public poses and his founding of the journal Colónida than for his own writing, which is lyrically posmodernista rather than aggressively experimental.

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Absinthe

Absinthe is historically described as a distilled, highly alcoholic (45–74% ABV / 90–148 U.S. proof) beverage.

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Absinthe (Marc Almond album)

Absinthe, also known as Absinthe - The French Album, is the eighth studio album by the British singer/songwriter Marc Almond.

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Absinthe (Naked City album)

Absinthe is the final recording from the band Naked City.

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Abstract art

Abstract art uses a visual language of shape, form, color and line to create a composition which may exist with a degree of independence from visual references in the world.

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Académie française

The Académie française is the pre-eminent French council for matters pertaining to the French language.

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Academic careerism

Academic careerism is the tendency of academics (professors specifically and intellectuals generally) to pursue their own enrichment and self-advancement at the expense of honest inquiry, unbiased research and dissemination of truth to their students and society.

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Achille Devéria

Achille Jacques-Jean-Marie Devéria (6 February 180023 December 1857) was a French painter and lithographer known for his portraits of famous writers and artists.

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Adolf Hallman

Adolf Hallman (1893 – 1968) was a Swedish illustrator who contributed to Swedish, Danish and Norwegian newspapers and magazines, including Tidens Tegn, Dagbladet, Exlex and Politiken.

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Adolphe van Bever

Adolphe van Bever (25 December 1871, 12th arrondissement of Paris – 7 January 1927, Paris) was a 19th–20th-century French bibliographer and erudite.

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Adolphe-Félix Cals

Adolphe-Félix Cals (17 October 1810 – 3 October 1880) was a French portrait, genre, and landscape painter.

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Adrian Maniu

Adrian Maniu (February 6, 1891 – April 20, 1968) was a Romanian poet, prose writer, playwright, essayist and translator.

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AFI (band)

AFI (abbreviation for A Fire Inside) is an American rock band from Ukiah, California, formed in 1991.

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Ain Kaalep

Ain Kaalep (born 4 June 1926 in Tartu) is an Estonian poet, playwright, literary critic and translator.

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Ainsi soit je...

Ainsi soit Je... (a play on ainsi soit-il, which can mean either "so be it" or "amen") is the second album by Mylène Farmer, released in April 1988.

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Aku no Hana

is the fifth studio album by the Japanese rock band Buck-Tick.

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Al. T. Stamatiad

Al.

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Alan Jenkins (poet)

Alan Jenkins (born 1955 in Kingston upon Thames, Surrey) is an English poet.

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Alan Rowland Chisholm

Alan Rowland Chisholm (1888–1981), often referred to as A. R. Chisholm, was a distinguished professor of French, critic and memorialist.

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Albatross

Albatrosses, of the biological family Diomedeidae, are large seabirds related to the procellariids, storm petrels and diving petrels in the order Procellariiformes (the tubenoses).

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Albatross (metaphor)

The word albatross is sometimes used metaphorically to mean a psychological burden that feels like a curse.

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Albert Huybrechts

Albert Huybrechts (12 February 1899 in Dinant – 21 February 1938 in Brussels) was a Belgian composer.

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Albert Niemann (tenor)

Albert Wilhelm Karl Niemann (15 January 1831 – 13 January 1917) was a leading German tenor opera singer especially associated with the operas of Richard Wagner.

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Albert Patin de La Fizelière

Albert de La Fizelière (in full Albert-André Patin de La Fizelière; pen-name Ludovic de Marsay, see box to the right) (b. 7 August 1819 in Marly; d. 11 February 1878 in Paris) was a French littérateur, writer on electoral and constitutional law, art critic, and historian, known for his friendship with Champfleury and for his ties to the Café Guerbois circle.

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Albert Samain

Albert Victor Samain (3 April 185818 August 1900) was a French poet and writer of the Symbolist school.

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Albin Schram

Albin Schram (1926–2005) was one of the greatest collectors of autograph letters by shapers of world history.

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Album de la Pléiade

The Album de la Pléiade is a book published every summer (in May) by the Bibliothèque de la Pléiade usually about one of its authors but sometimes about authors from a specific time period (1961 recording and 1989 album) or about an important topic of the collection(1970 and 2009 albums).

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Aleksandr Lokshin

Aleksandr Lazarevich Lokshin (Александр Лазаревич Локшин) (1920–1987) was a Russian composer of classical music.

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Alençon

Alençon is a commune in Normandy, France, capital of the Orne department.

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Alessandro Solbiati

Alessandro Solbiati (born 9 September 1956) is an Italian composer of classical music, who composed instrumental music for chamber ensembles and orchestra, art songs and operas.

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Alex Kempkens

Alex Kempkens (born Alexander Kempkens, 24September 1942) is a German photographer, photojournalist and computer artist.

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Alexander Gretchaninov

Alexander Tikhonovich Gretchaninov (p;, Kaluga – 3 January 1956, New York City) was a Russian Romantic composer.

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Alexander Ivanovich Urusov

Prince Alexander Ivanovich Urusov (Александр Иванович Урусов, April 2, 1843, Moscow, Russian Empire, — July 16, 1900, Moscow) was a Russian lawyer, literary critic, translator and philanthropist.

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Alexander Shenshin

Alexander Alexeyevich Shenshin (Александр Алексеевич Шеншин; 1890 – 1944) was a Russian composer.

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Alexandru Macedonski

Alexandru Macedonski (also rendered as Al. A. Macedonski, Macedonschi or Macedonsky; March 14, 1854 – November 24, 1920) was a Romanian poet, novelist, dramatist and literary critic, known especially for having promoted French Symbolism in his native country, and for leading the Romanian Symbolist movement during its early decades.

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Alexandru Robot

Alexandru Robot (born Alter Rotmann,Călinescu, p.902, in Realitatea Evreiască, Nr. 245 (1045), January–February 2006, p.13 also known as Al. Robot; Moldovan Cyrillic: Александру Робот; January 15, 1916 – ca. 1941) was a Romanian, Moldovan and Soviet poet, also known as a novelist and journalist.

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Alfred Latour

Alfred Latour (1888, Paris – 1964, Eygalières) was a French painter and engraver who also worked extensively as a graphic designer and as an advertiser.

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Alfred Stevens (painter)

Alfred Émile Léopold Stevens (11 May 182324 August 1906) was a Belgian painter, known for his paintings of elegant modern women.

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Alice (singer)

Alice, also known as Alice Visconti (born Carla Bissi, 26 September 1954, Forlì, Province of Forlì-Cesena, Italy) is an Italian singer-songwriter and pianist, active since 1971.

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All That Is Solid Melts into Air

All That Is Solid Melts into Air is an academic text written by Marshall Berman between 1971 and 1981, and published in New York City in 1982.

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Alma Strettell

Alma Gertrude Vansittart Strettell (1853–1939), was a British translator and poet known for her translations of folk songs, folk tales, and poems from Greek, Romanian, French, Provençal, German, Norwegian, and other languages.

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Aloysius Bertrand

Louis Jacques Napoléon Bertrand, better known by his pen name Aloysius Bertrand (20 April 1807 — 29 April 1841), was a French Romantic poet, playwright and journalist.

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Alphons Diepenbrock

Alphonsus Johannes Maria Diepenbrock (2 September 1862 in Amsterdam – 5 April 1921) was a Dutch composer, essayist and classicist.

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Alphonse Lemerre

Alphonse Lemerre (Canisy, Normandy, France, 1838 – Paris, France, 1912) was a 19th-century French editor and publisher, known especially for having been the first to publish many of the Parnassian poets.

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Alphonse Rabbe

Alphonse Rabbe (Alpes-de-Haute-Provence, 1784 (?) – Paris, 31 December 1829) was a French writer, historian, critic, and journalist.

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Ambasada Gavioli

Ambasada Gavioli was a nightclub in Izola, Slovenia named after its architect Gianni Gavioli.

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Amedeo Modigliani

Amedeo Clemente Modigliani (12 July 1884 – 24 January 1920) was an Italian-Jewish painter and sculptor who worked mainly in France.

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Amesoeurs (album)

Amesoeurs (French: "soulmates") is the only full-length album by Amesoeurs.

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Amir-Abbas Hoveyda

Amir-Abbas Hoveyda (Amīr `Abbās Hoveyda; 18 February 1919 – 7 April 1979) was an Iranian economist and politician who served as Prime Minister of Iran from 27 January 1965 to 7 August 1977.

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André Corthis

André Corthis, née Andrée Magdeleine Husson (15 April 1882 – 8 August 1952) was a 20th-century French writer.

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André de Richaud

André de Richaud (April 6, 1907 in Perpignan – September 29, 1968 in Montpellier) was a French poet and writer.

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André Leon Talley

André Leon Talley (born October 16, 1949) is the former American editor-at-large of Vogue magazine.

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Andrea Dworkin

Andrea Rita Dworkin (September 26, 1946 – April 9, 2005) was an American radical feminist and writer best known for her criticism of pornography, which she argued was linked to rape and other forms of violence against women.

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Andrea Zanzotto

Andrea Zanzotto (10 October 1921 – 18 October 2011) was an Italian poet.

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Andromache

In Greek mythology, Andromache (Ἀνδρομάχη, Andromákhē) was the wife of Hector, daughter of Eetion, and sister to Podes.

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Anna Sui

Anna Sui (Traditional Chinese: 蕭志美, Simplified: 萧志美, pinyin: Xiāo Zhìměi, Japanese: アナスイ) (born August 4, 1952) is an American fashion designer from Detroit.

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Anne Pigalle

Anne Pigalle is a French chanteuse (singer) and multimedia artist (writer, musician, art performer, poet, photographer and painter).

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Anthology of Black Humor

The Anthology of Black Humor (French: Anthologie de l'humour noir) is an anthology of 45 writers edited by André Breton.

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Anthony Powers

Anthony Powers (born 13 March 1953) is a British composer of classical music.

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Antoine Duléry

Antoine Duléry (born 14 November 1959 in Paris) is a French actor.

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Antoine-Félix Bouré

Antoine-Félix Bouré (8 July 1831 – 8 April 1883), known in his own time as Félix Bouré but sometimes found in modern scholarship as Antoine Bouré, was a Belgian sculptor, best known for his monumental lions.

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Antoni Lange

Antoni Lange (1863 – 17 March 1929) was a Polish poet, philosopher, polyglot (15 languages), writer, novelist, science-writer, reporter and translator.

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Antonin Artaud

Antoine Marie Joseph Artaud, better known as Antonin Artaud (4 September 1896 – 4 March 1948), was a French dramatist, poet, essayist, actor, and theatre director, widely recognized as one of the major figures of twentieth-century theatre and the European avant-garde.

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Antonio Martínez Sarrión

Antonio Martínez Sarrión (born 1939 in Albacete, Spain), poet and translator.

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Antun Gustav Matoš

Antun Gustav Matoš (13 June 1873 – 17 March 1914) was a Croatian poet, short story writer, journalist, essayist and travelogue writer.

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Anywhere Out of the Everything

Anywhere Out of the Everything is the second studio album by American hip hop producer Telephone Jim Jesus.

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AP French Literature

Advanced Placement French Literature (or AP French Literature) was an Advanced Placement course and examination offered by the College Board.

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Apollon Maykov

Apollon Nikolayevich Maykov (Аполло́н Никола́евич Ма́йков,, Moscow –, Saint Petersburg) was a Russian poet, best known for his lyric verse showcasing images of Russian villages, nature, and history.

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Apollonie Sabatier

Apollonie Sabatier (born Aglaé Joséphine Savatier; 1822–1890) was a French courtesan, salon holder, artists' muse and ''bohémienne'' in 1850s Paris.

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April 9

No description.

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Ariana Reines

Ariana Reines is an American poet, playwright, performance artist, and translator.

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Armand Godoy

Armand Godoy, (1880 Havana - 1964 Lausanne), was a Cuban Symbolist poet.

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Armand Rassenfosse

Armand Rassenfosse (6 August 1862 – 28 January 1934) was a largely self-taught Belgian graphic artist, book illustrator and painter.

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Art critic

An art critic is a person who is specialized in analyzing, interpreting and evaluating art.

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Art criticism

Art criticism is the discussion or evaluation of visual art.

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Art for art's sake

"Art for art's sake" is the usual English rendering of a French slogan from the early 19th century, "l'art pour l'art", and expresses a philosophy that the intrinsic value of art, and the only "true" art, is divorced from any didactic, moral, or utilitarian function.

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Art manifesto

An art manifesto is a public declaration of the intentions, motives, or views of an artist or artistic movement.

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Arthur Rimbaud

Jean Nicolas Arthur Rimbaud (20 October 1854 – 10 November 1891) was a French poet who is known for his influence on modern literature and arts, which prefigured surrealism.

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Arthur Symons

Arthur William Symons (28 February 186522 January 1945), was a British poet, critic and magazine editor.

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Artificial Paradises (film)

Artificial Paradises (Paraísos Artificiais) is a 2012 Brazilian drama film directed by Marcos Prado and starring Nathalia Dill, Luca Bianchi and Lívia de Bueno.

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Arturo Borja

Arturo Borja Pérez (1892 – November 13, 1912) was an Ecuadorian poet who was part of a group known as the "Generación decapitada" (Decapitated Generation).

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August 31

No description.

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Auguste Clésinger

Auguste Clésinger (Jean-Baptiste Auguste Clésinger; 22 October 1814 – 5 January 1883) was a 19th-century French sculptor and painter.

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Auguste Migette

Charles Joseph Auguste Migette (1802 – 1884) was a French artist.

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Auguste Poulet-Malassis

Paul Emmanuel Auguste Poulet-Malassis (March 16, 1825 – February 11, 1878) was a French printer and publisher who lived and worked in Paris.

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Auguste Rodin

François Auguste René Rodin (12 November 1840 – 17 November 1917), known as Auguste Rodin, was a French sculptor.

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Auguste Villiers de l'Isle-Adam

Jean-Marie-Mathias-Philippe-Auguste, comte de Villiers de l'Isle-Adam (7 November 1838 – 19 August 1889) was a French symbolist writer.

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Aurélio Buarque de Holanda Ferreira

Aurélio Buarque de Holanda Ferreira (May 3, 1910 – February 28, 1989) was a Brazilian lexicographer, philologist, translator, and writer, best known for editing the Novo Dicionário da Língua Portuguesa, a major dictionary of the Portuguese language.

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Averse Sefira

Averse Sefira was a black metal band from Austin, Texas.

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À rebours

À rebours (translated Against Nature or Against the Grain) (1884) is a novel by the French writer Joris-Karl Huysmans.

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Árpád Tóth

Árpád Tóth (14 April 1886 in Arad – 7 November 1928 in Budapest) was a Hungarian poet and translator.

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Édouard Dreyfus Gonzalez

Édouard Vincent Joseph Dreyfus González de Orbegoso, 5th count of Premio Real (1876–1941) was a French Catholic businessman of Jewish descent, a lawyer, painter and writer, who was also an amateur composer under the pseudonym of Jean Dora.

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Édouard Manet

Édouard Manet (23 January 1832 – 30 April 1883) was a French painter.

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Élisabeth Roudinesco

Élisabeth Roudinesco (Rudinescu; born 10 September 1944) is a French historian and psychoanalyst, affiliated researcher in history at Paris Diderot University, in the group « Identités-Cultures-Territoires ». She also conducts a seminar on the history of psychoanalysis at the École Normale Supérieure.

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Émile Nelligan

Émile Nelligan (December 24, 1879 – November 18, 1941) was a francophone poet from Quebec, Canada.

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Épater la bourgeoisie

or is a French phrase that became a rallying cry for the French Decadent poets of the late 19th century including Charles Baudelaire and Arthur Rimbaud.

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Épave

L'Épave (shipwreck) may refer to.

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Éponine

Éponine Thénardier, also referred to as the "Jondrette girl", is a fictional character in the 1862 novel Les Misérables by Victor Hugo.

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Étienne Carjat

Étienne Carjat (28 March 1828 in Fareins, Ain – 19 March 1906 in Paris), was a French journalist, caricaturist and photographer.

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Étienne de Voisins-Lavernière

Marius Étienne de Voisins-Lavernière (17 May 1813 – 20 January 1898) was a French landowner and politician.

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B. S. Mardhekar

Bal Sitaram Mardhekar (December 1, 1909 - March 20, 1956) was a Marathi writer who brought about a radical shift of sensibility in Marathi poetry.

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Bach: The Goldberg Variations (Glenn Gould album)

Bach: The Goldberg Variations is the 1955 debut album of Canadian classical pianist Glenn Gould.

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Barbara Wright (professor)

Barbara Wright (born 1935, née Robinson) is emerita professor of French at Trinity College, Dublin and an expert on and translator of French literature, notably Eugène Fromentin, Charles Baudelaire and Gustave Moreau and other nineteenth century writers, philosophers and artists.

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Barbu Nemțeanu

Barbu Nemțeanu (pen name of Benjamin Deutsch; October 1, 1887Ionescu I, p. 31 – May 30, 1919) was a Romanian poet, humorist and translator, active on the modernist wing of the Romanian Symbolist movement.

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Baron Isidore Justin Séverin Taylor

Isidore Justin Séverin Taylor was born in Brussels on 5 August 1789 and died in Paris on 6 September 1879.

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Bart Cassiman

Bart Cassiman (born 1961), freelance-curator, art critic and editor, is an art historian and studied press- and communication sciences at the Ghent University (1979-1984).

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Baudelaire (disambiguation)

Baudelaire most commonly refers to Charles Baudelaire (1821–1867), French poet.

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Baudelaire (surname)

Baudelaire is a French surname.

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Beat Generation

The Beat Generation was a literary movement started by a group of authors whose work explored and influenced American culture and politics in the post-World War II era.

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Belle Époque

The Belle Époque or La Belle Époque (French for "Beautiful Era") was a period of Western history.

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Belle Île

Belle-Île, Belle-Île-en-Mer, or Belle Isle (ar Gerveur in Modern Breton; Guedel in Old Breton) is a French island off the coast of Brittany in the département of Morbihan, and the largest of Brittany's islands.

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Benjamin Clementine

Benjamin Sainte-Clémentine (born 7 December 1988) is an English artist, poet, vocalist, composer, and musician.

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Benjamin Fondane

Benjamin Fondane or Benjamin Fundoianu (born Benjamin Wechsler, Wexler or Vecsler, first name also Beniamin or Barbu, usually abridged to B.; November 14, 1898 – October 2, 1944) was a Romanian and French poet, critic and existentialist philosopher, also noted for his work in film and theater.

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Berenice Wyer

Annie Berenice Crumb Wyer (born October 5, 1873) was a St. Louis, Missouri, pianist, composer, and lecturer.

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Beresford Egan

Beresford Egan (1905 - 1984) was a satirical draughtsman, painter, novelist, actor, costume designer and playwright.

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Bernard Fixot

Bernard Fixot (born 6 October 1943) is a French publisher, founder and Chairman of the board of publishing house XO Editions.

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Bibliothèque de la Pléiade

The Bibliothèque de la Pléiade ("Pleiades Library") is a French series of books which was created in 1931 by Jacques Schiffrin, an independent young editor.

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Bijou (jewellery)

A bijou (plural: bijoux) is an intricate jewellery piece incorporated into clothing, or worn by itself on the body.

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Bijoux

Bijoux may refer to.

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Birago Diop

Birago Diop (11 December 1906 – 25 November 1989) was a Senegalese poet and storyteller whose work restored general interest in African folktales and promoted him to one of the most outstanding African francophone writers.

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Bison (novel)

Buffalo is the twenty-fourth novel of Patrick Grainville, published in Éditions du Seuil on January 2, 2014.

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Black Mass

A Black Mass is a ritual characterized by the inversion of the Traditional Latin Mass celebrated by the Roman Catholic Church.

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Black Sun Press

The Black Sun Press was an English language press noted for publishing the early works of many modernist writers including Hart Crane, D. H. Lawrence, Archibald MacLeish, Ernest Hemingway, Laurence Sterne, and Eugene Jolas.

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Black Venus (short story collection)

Black Venus (also published as Saints and Strangers) is an anthology of short fiction by Angela Carter.

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Blood (band)

Blood (often stylized as ̶B̶L̶O̶O̶D̶) is a Japanese band that has been active from 2002 to 2009, returning in 2011.

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Bloody Lunatic Asylum

Bloody Lunatic Asylum is the third studio album by the Italian gothic black metal band Theatres des Vampires.

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Bo Bergman

Bo Hjalmar Bergman (6 October 1869 – 17 November 1967) was a Swedish writer, literary critic and member of the Swedish Academy, sitting in Seat 12 from 1925 until his death.

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Bonifaciu Florescu

Bonifaciu Florescu (first name also Boniface, Bonifacio, Bonifati, last name also Floresco; born Bonifacius Florescu; May 1848 – December 18, 1899) was a Romanian polygraph, the illegitimate son of writer-revolutionary Nicolae Bălcescu.

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Born Villain

Born Villain is the eighth studio album by American rock band Marilyn Manson.

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Bruce Connole

Bruce Connole (born November 6, 1958) is an American singer, songwriter, and guitarist.

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Bruce Wilshire

Bruce W. Wilshire (February 8, 1932 – January 1, 2013) was an American philosopher who taught in the philosophy department at Rutgers University, from which he retired as Professor Emeritus in 2009.

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Buck-Tick

Buck-Tick (stylized as BUCK-TICK) is a Japanese rock band, formed in Fujioka, Gunma in 1983.

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Buddhadeb Bosu

Buddhadeva Bose (also spelt Buddhadeb Bosu) (1908–1974) was an Indian Bengali writer of the 20th century.

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Byron Vazakas

Byron Vazakas (September 24, 1905, New York City - September 30, 1987, Reading, Pennsylvania) was an American poet, whose career extended from the modernist era well into the postmodernist period; nominee for the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, 1947.

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Cabine C

Cabine C (Portuguese for "Cabin C") was a short-lived Brazilian post-punk band from São Paulo.

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Calmann-Lévy

Calmann-Lévy is a French publishing house founded in 1836 by Michel Lévy (1821–1875) and his brother Kalmus "Calmann" Lévy (1819–1891), as Michel Lévy frères.

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Cambridge Literary Review

The Cambridge Literary Review (CLR) is a literary magazine published on an occasional basis.

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Cannabis (drug)

Cannabis, also known as marijuana among other names, is a psychoactive drug from the ''Cannabis'' plant intended for medical or recreational use.

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Cannabis and time perception

The effect of cannabis on time perception has been studied with inconclusive results.

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Cannabis in France

Cannabis in France is illegal for personal use, but remains one of the most popular illegal drugs.

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Cape Editions

The Cape Editions are a selection of short books, frequently in translation, issued by UK publisher Jonathan Cape from 1967–1971.

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Carla Borel

Carla Borel (born 1973) is a French-British photographer.

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Carlo Schmid (German politician)

Carlo Schmid (3 December 1896 – 11 December 1979) was a German academic and politician of the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD).

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Carlos Schwabe

Carlos Schwabe (July 21, 1866 – 22 January 1926) was a Swiss Symbolist painter and printmaker.

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Carlyle Ferren MacIntyre

Carlyle Ferren MacIntyre (July 16, 1890 - June 30, 1967) is an American poet, known for his poetry and translations of Baudelaire, Verlaine, George, Goethe and Rilke.

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Catherine Crowe

Catherine Ann Crowe, née Stevens, (20 September 1803 in Borough Green, Kent – 14 June 1876 in Folkestone), was an English novelist, story writer and playwright, who also wrote for children.

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Cesário Verde

Cesário Verde (25 February 1855 – 19 July 1886) was a 19th-century Portuguese poet.

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Champfleury

Jules François Felix Fleury-Husson (17 September 1821, Laon, Aisne – 6 December 1889, Sèvres), who wrote under the name Champfleury, was a French art critic and novelist, a prominent supporter of the Realist movement in painting and fiction.

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Charles Jacque

Charles-Emile Jacque (23 May 1813 – 7 May 1894) was a French painter of animals (animalier) and engraver who was, with Jean-François Millet, part of the Barbizon School.

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Charles Lasègue

Ernest-Charles Lasègue (5 September 1816 – 20 March 1883) was a French physician born in Paris.

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Charles Maturin

Charles Robert Maturin, also known as C. R. Maturin (25 September 1782 – 30 October 1824), was an Irish Protestant clergyman (ordained in the Church of Ireland) and a writer of Gothic plays and novels.

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Charles Méryon

Charles Méryon (23 November 1821 – 13 February 1868) was a French artist who worked almost entirely in etching, as he suffered from colour blindness.

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Charles-Joseph Traviès de Villers

Charles-Joseph Traviès de Villers, also known simply as Traviès, (21 February 1804 – 13 August 1859) was a Swiss-born French painter, lithographer, and caricaturist whose work appeared regularly in Le Charivari and La Caricature.

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Charles-Philippe de Chennevières-Pointel

Charles-Philippe, marquis de Chennevières-Pointel, known as Jean de Falaise (23 July 1820, Falaise – 1 April 1899) was a French writer and art historian.

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Charon's obol

Charon's obol is an allusive term for the coin placed in or on the mouth of a dead person before burial.

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Chartreux

The Chartreux is a rare breed of domestic cat from France and is recognised by a number of registries around the world.

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Charvet Place Vendôme

Charvet Place Vendôme, pronounced, or simply Charvet, is a French high-end shirt maker and tailor located at 28 Place Vendôme in Paris.

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Château Chasse-Spleen

Château Chasse-Spleen is a winery in the Moulis-en-Médoc appellation of the Bordeaux region of France, just north-west of Margaux.

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Chloe Aridjis

Chloe Aridjis is a London-based Mexican novelist and writer.

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Christian Holder

Christian Holder (born 18 June 1949), Trinidad Express Newspapers, 31 July 2011.

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Christian Ward

Christian Ward (born 1980) is a British poet, writer, and translator.

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Christine Buci-Glucksmann

Christine Buci-Glucksmann is a French philosopher and Professor Emeritus from University of Paris VIII specializing in the aesthetics of the Baroque, Japan and computer art.

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Christopher Isherwood

Christopher William Bradshaw Isherwood (26 August 1904 – 4 January 1986) was an English-American novelist.

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Church of Saint-Sulpice, Paris

Saint-Sulpice is a Roman Catholic church in Paris, France, on the east side of the Place Saint-Sulpice within the rue Bonaparte, in the Odéon Quarter of the 6th arrondissement.

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Ciaran Carson

Ciaran Gerard Carson (born 9 October 1948) is a Belfast, Northern Ireland-born poet and novelist.

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Cinq poèmes de Charles Baudelaire

The Cinq poèmes de Charles Baudelaire (CD 64) constitute a song cycle for voice and piano by Claude Debussy, on poems taken from Les Fleurs du mal by Charles Baudelaire.

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Clark Ashton Smith

Clark Ashton Smith (January 13, 1893 – August 14, 1961) was a self-educated American poet, sculptor, painter and author of fantasy, horror and science fiction short stories.

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Claude Esteban

Claude Esteban (26 July 1935, Paris – 10 April 2006, Paris) was a French poet.

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Claudius Jacquand

Claude Jacquand, known as Claudius (11 December 1803, Lyon – 2 April 1878, Paris) was a French painter of historical tableaus, genre scenes and religious subjects.

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Club des Hashischins

The Club des Hashischins (sometimes also spelled Club des Hashishins or Club des Hachichins, "Club of the Hashish-Eaters") was a Parisian group dedicated to the exploration of drug-induced experiences, notably with hashish.

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Collège-lycée Ampère

The Collège-lycée Ampère is a famous school located in the 2nd arrondissement of Lyon.

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Collected Works of Aleister Crowley 1905-1907

The Collected Works of Aleister Crowley 1905–1907 was originally a trilogy of books published by Aleister Crowley during his early career as student of magick.

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Colonialism

Colonialism is the policy of a polity seeking to extend or retain its authority over other people or territories, generally with the aim of developing or exploiting them to the benefit of the colonizing country and of helping the colonies modernize in terms defined by the colonizers, especially in economics, religion and health.

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Comte de Gabalis

Comte de Gabalis is a 17th-century French text by Abbé Nicolas-Pierre-Henri de Montfaucon de Villars (1635-1673).

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Comte de Lautréamont

Comte de Lautréamont was the nom de plume of Isidore Lucien Ducasse (4 April 1846 – 24 November 1870), a French poet born in Uruguay.

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Concerto delle menti

Concerto delle menti ("Concerto of minds") is a progressive rock album released in 1973 by Italian band Pholas Dactylus.

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Concours général

In France, the Concours Général is the most prestigious academic competition held every year between students of Première (11th grade) and Terminale (12th and final grade) in almost all subjects taught in both general, technological and professional high schools.

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Confessions of an English Opium-Eater

Confessions of an English Opium-Eater (1821) is an autobiographical account written by Thomas De Quincey, about his laudanum addiction and its effect on his life.

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Constantin Al. Ionescu-Caion

Constantin Al.

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Constantin Beldie

Constantin Dumitru Beldie (September 8, 1887 – June 11, 1954) was a Romanian journalist, publicist, and civil servant, famous for his libertine lifestyle and his unapologetic, sarcastic, memoirs of life in the early 20th century.

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Constantin Guys

Constantin Guys, Ernest-Adolphe-Hyacinthe-Constantin, (December 3, 1802 – December 13, 1892) was a Dutch-born Crimean War correspondent, water color painter and illustrator for British and French newspapers.

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Constantin T. Stoika

Constantin T. Stoika (February 14, 1892 – October 23, 1916) was a Romanian poet and prose writer.

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Correspondances

Correspondances is a song-cycle for soprano and orchestra written by the French composer Henri Dutilleux in 2002–2003.

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Courtney Love

Courtney Michelle Love (née Harrison; born July 9, 1964) is an American singer, songwriter, actress, and visual artist.

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Crash Love

Crash Love is the eighth studio album by the rock band AFI.

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Crass

Crass were an English art collective and punk rock band formed in 1977 who promoted anarchism as a political ideology, a way of life and a resistance movement.

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Cultural critic

A cultural critic is a critic of a given culture, usually as a whole and typically on a radical basis.

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Cultural references to absinthe

The legacy of absinthe as a mysterious, addictive, and mind-altering drink continues to this day.

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Culture of Belgium

Belgian culture involves both the aspects shared by all Belgians regardless of the language they speak and the differences between the main cultural communities: the Dutch-speaking Flemish and the French-speakers Walloons.

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Culture of Europe

The culture of Europe is rooted in the art, architecture, music, literature, and philosophy that originated from the continent of Europe.

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D. Iacobescu

D.

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Dai Wangshu

Dai Wangshu (March 5, 1905 – February 28, 1950), also Tai Van-chou, was a Chinese poet, essayist and translator active from the late 1920s to the end of the 1940s.

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Damned Women

Damned Women is a sculpture created by Auguste Rodin between 1885 and 1890 as part of his The Gates of Hell project - it appears on the upper right as the counterpart to The Fallen Caryatid.

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Dan Andersson

Dan Andersson (6 April 1888, Ludvika – 16 September 1920, Stockholm) britannica.com, 2013.

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Dandy

A dandy, historically, is a man who places particular importance upon physical appearance, refined language, and leisurely hobbies, pursued with the appearance of nonchalance in a cult of self.

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Dark romanticism

Dark Romanticism is a literary subgenre of Romanticism, reflecting popular fascination with the irrational, the demonic and the grotesque.

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David Fishelov

David Fishelov (דוד פישלוב), born June 1, 1954, is an Israeli professor of comparative literature at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

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David McFadden (poet)

David William McFadden (October 11, 1940 – June 6, 2018) was a Canadian poet, fiction writer, and travel writer.

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David Tukhmanov

David Fyodorovich Tukhmanov PAR (Дави́д Фёдорович Тухма́нов, was born on July 20, 1940, in Moscow, USSR) is a Soviet and Russian composer.

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Déodat de Séverac

Déodat de Séverac (20 July 1872 – 24 March 1921) was a French composer.

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De Profundis

De profundis refers to Psalm 130 (129 in the Vulgate), traditionally known as the De profundis ("Out of the depths") from its opening words in Latin.

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Dead Leaves (1998 film)

Dead Leaves is a 1998 road movie directed by German director Constantin Werner about a young man who travels from New York City to West Virginia with the corpse of his deceased girlfriend.

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Decadence

The word decadence, which at first meant simply "decline" in an abstract sense, is now most often used to refer to a perceived decay in standards, morals, dignity, religious faith, or skill at governing among the members of the elite of a very large social structure, such as an empire or nation state.

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Decadent movement

The Decadent Movement was a late 19th-century artistic and literary movement, centered in Western Europe, that followed an aesthetic ideology of excess and artificiality.

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Degeneration theory

Social degeneration was a widely influential concept at the interface of the social and biological sciences in the 19th century.

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Dennis Cooper

Dennis Cooper (born 1953) is an American novelist, poet, critic, editor and performance artist.

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Der Wein

"" (The Wine) is a concert aria for soprano and orchestra, composed in 1929 by Alban Berg.

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Derek Mahon

Derek Mahon (born 23 November 1941) is an Irish poet.

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Devil in popular culture

The devil appears frequently as a character in works of literature and popular culture.

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Diderik Wagenaar

Diderik Wagenaar (born May 10, 1946 in Utrecht) is a Dutch composer and musical theorist.

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Diego Medrano

Diego Medrano Fernández (Oviedo, Spain, 1978) is a Spanish poet, narrator and regular columnist of Asturian newspaper El Comercio.

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Discos Qualiton

Discos Qualiton was a record label, published by the extinct recording studio Fonema S.A. A garage experiment born in Rosario, Argentina in 1961, Qualiton would later become a major independent project influencing a generation of artists, writers, musicians, poets and filmmakers.

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Dmitry Merezhkovsky

Dmitry Sergeyevich Merezhkovsky (p; – December 9, 1941) was a Russian novelist, poet, religious thinker, and literary critic.

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Doctor Atomic

Doctor Atomic is an opera by the contemporary American composer John Adams, with libretto by Peter Sellars.

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Don't Deliver Us from Evil

Don't Deliver Us from Evil is a 1971 French film directed by Joël Séria.

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Dox (poet)

Jean Verdi Salomon Razakandrainy (1913-1978), commonly known as Dox, was a Malagasy writer and poet considered one of the most important literary figures in the country's history.

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Drei Lieder (Stockhausen)

Drei Lieder (Three Songs), for alto voice and chamber orchestra, is a song cycle by Karlheinz Stockhausen, written while he was still a conservatory student in 1950.

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Drug user

The term drug user is often used to refer to a person who consumes an illegal psychoactive substance.

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Du Fu

Du Fu (Wade–Giles: Tu Fu;; 712 – 770) was a prominent Chinese poet of the Tang dynasty.

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Duo Duo

Duo Duo or Duoduo (1951 -) is the pen name of contemporary Chinese poet, Li Shizheng (栗世征), a prominent exponent of the Chinese Misty Poets (朦胧诗).

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Dying Inside

Dying Inside is a science fiction novel by American writer Robert Silverberg.

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E. T. A. Hoffmann

Ernst Theodor Amadeus Hoffmann (commonly abbreviated as E. T. A. Hoffmann; born Ernst Theodor Wilhelm Hoffmann; 24 January 177625 June 1822) was a Prussian Romantic author of fantasy and Gothic horror, a jurist, composer, music critic, draftsman and caricaturist.

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Easter (Patti Smith Group album)

Easter is the third studio album by the Patti Smith Group, released in March 1978 on Arista Records (see 1978 in music).

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Easter Eve (short story)

"Easter Eve" (translit) is an 1886 short story by Anton Chekhov.

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Eat Me, Drink Me

Eat Me, Drink Me is the sixth studio album by American rock band Marilyn Manson.

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Edgar Allan Poe

Edgar Allan Poe (born Edgar Poe; January 19, 1809 – October 7, 1849) was an American writer, editor, and literary critic.

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Edgar Allan Poe in popular culture

Edgar Allan Poe has appeared in popular culture as a character in books, comics, film, and other media.

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Edgar Brau

Edgar Brau is an Argentine writer, stage director and artist.

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Edgar Wind

Edgar Wind (14 May 1900 – 12 September 1971) was a German-born British interdisciplinary art historian, specializing in iconology in the Renaissance era.

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Editions des Saints Peres

Editions des Saints Peres is an independent publishing house specialized in the publication of limited facsimile editions of literary manuscripts.

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Edna St. Vincent Millay

Edna St.

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Edwin Morgan (poet)

Edwin George Morgan (27 April 1920 – 17 August 2010), The Independent.

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Eldorado (poems)

Eldorado is a volume of poetry by Dutch poet J. Slauerhoff.

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Elias Abu Shabaki

Elias Abu Shabaki (also spelled Ilyas Abu Shabaka; الياس أبو شبكة, May 3, 1903 – January 27, 1947) was a Lebanese writer, poet, editor, translator and literary critic, he was one of the founders of the literary League of Ten and is considered as one of the leading figures of the Arabic Nahda Movement.

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Elie Grekoff

Elie Grekoff (11 October 1914 – 16 July 1985) was a French artist of Russian birth.

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En rade

En rade (English: Becalmed, A Haven or Stranded) is a novel by the French writer Joris-Karl Huysmans.

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Endre Ady

Endre Ady (Hungarian: diósadi Ady András Endre, archaically English: Andrew Ady, 22 November 1877 – 27 January 1919) was a turn-of-the-century Hungarian poet and journalist.

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English literature

This article is focused on English-language literature rather than the literature of England, so that it includes writers from Scotland, Wales, and the whole of Ireland, as well as literature in English from countries of the former British Empire, including the United States.

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Enid Starkie

Enid Mary Starkie CBE (18 August 1897 – 21 April 1970), was an Irish literary critic, known for her biographical works on French poets.

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Entry of the Crusaders in Constantinople

The Entry of the Crusaders in Constantinople (Entrée des Croisés à Constantinople) or The Crusaders Entering Constantinople is a large painting by Eugène Delacroix.

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Epizod

Epizod (Bulgarian:Епизод) is a Bulgarian heavy metal band formed in 1983 in Sofia.

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Equinox (novel)

Equinox is a 1973 novel by American writer Samuel R. Delany.

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Ernest Christophe

Ernest Christophe (1827 – 1892) was a French sculptor, a student of François Rude and a friend of Charles Baudelaire.

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Ernest Pinard

Pierre Ernest Pinard (10 October 1822 – 12 September 1909) was a French prosecutor and Minister of the Interior.

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Ernesto Noboa y Caamaño

Ernesto Noboa y Caamaño (August 2, 1889 – December 7, 1927) was an Ecuadorian poet and a member of the "Generación decapitada" (The Decapitated Generation).

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Ernesto Sabato

Ernesto Sabato (June 24, 1911 – April 30, 2011) was an Argentine writer, painter and physicist.

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Ernst Jünger

Ernst Jünger (29 March 1895 – 17 February 1998) was a highly decorated German soldier, author, and entomologist who became publicly known for his World War I memoir Storm of Steel.

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Eugène Boudin

Eugène Louis Boudin (12 July 18248 August 1898) was one of the first French landscape painters to paint outdoors.

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Eugène Delacroix

Ferdinand Victor Eugène Delacroix (26 April 1798 – 13 August 1863) was a French Romantic artist regarded from the outset of his career as the leader of the French Romantic school.

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Eugène Emmanuel Amaury Duval

Eugène Emmanuel Amaury Pineux Duval (16 April 1808 – 25 December 1885), better known by the pseudonym Amaury Duval, was a French painter.

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Eugène Laermans

Eugène Jules Joseph Baron Laermans (22 October 1864 – 22 February 1940) was a Belgian painter.

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Eugène Lavieille

Eugène Lavieille (November 29, 1820 in Paris – January 8, 1889 in Paris) was a French painter.

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Eugen V. Witkowsky

Eugen V. Witkowsky (Евге́ний Влади́мирович Витко́вский; born June 18, 1950) is a Russian fiction and fantasy writer, literary scholar, poet, and translator.

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Exit (Alice album)

Exit is the fourteenth studio album by Italian singer-songwriter Alice, released in 1998 on WEA/Warner Music.

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Șerban Bascovici

Șerban Bascovici (born Șerban-Vasile Bascovitz; January 1, 1891–March 19, 1968) was a Romanian poet Born in Bucharest to Gheorghe Bascovitz and his wife Ecaterina, he attended Matei Basarab High School.

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Șerban Cioculescu

Șerban Cioculescu (7 September 1902 – 25 June 1988) was a Romanian literary critic, literary historian and columnist, who held teaching positions in Romanian literature at the University of Iași and the University of Bucharest, as well as membership of the Romanian Academy and chairmanship of its Library.

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Ștefan Petică

Ștefan Petică (January 20, 1877–October 17, 1904) was a Romanian Symbolist poet, prose writer, playwright, journalist and socialist activist.

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Fabrice Luchini

Fabrice Luchini (born Robert Luchini; 1 November 1951) is a French stage and film actor.

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Familiar spirit

In European folklore and folk-belief of the Medieval and Early Modern periods, familiar spirits (sometimes referred to simply as "familiars" or "animal guides") were believed to be supernatural entities that would assist witches and cunning folk in their practice of magic.

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Fanfarlo

Fanfarlo are a London-based indie/alternative band formed in 2006 by Swedish musician Simon Balthazar.

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Fausto Fawcett

Fausto Borel Cardoso (born May 10, 1957), better known by his stage name Fausto Fawcett, is a Brazilian singer-songwriter, rhythm guitarist, lyricist, novelist, short story writer, playwright, journalist, actor and screenwriter, famous for his frequent collaborations with fellow musician Laufer and for being a major exponent of rap rock and cyberpunk literature in Brazil.

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Féerie

Féerie, sometimes translated as "fairy play", was a French theatrical genre known for fantasy plots and spectacular visuals, including lavish scenery and mechanically worked stage effects.

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Félicien Rops

Félicien Rops (7 July 1833 – 23 August 1898) was a Belgian artist, known primarily as a printmaker in etching and aquatint.

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Félix Bracquemond

Félix Henri Bracquemond (22 May 1833 – 29 October 1914) was a French painter and etcher.

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Federico Beltrán Masses

Federico Beltran Masses (September 8, 1885 - October 4, 1949) was a Spanish painter born in Cuba; the only child of Luis Beltran Fernandez Estepona, a former Spanish army officer stationed in Cuba, and Dona Mercedes Masses Olives, the daughter of a doctor from Lleida, Catalonia, who himself had married the daughter of a wealthy Spanish Cuban-landowner.

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Fei Ye

Fei Ye (born 1962) is a Chinese poet who was also involved in the Chinese democracy movement.

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Ferenc Farkas

Ferenc Farkas (15 December 1905 – 10 October 2000) was a Hungarian composer.

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Fernand Desnoyers

Fernand Desnoyers, full name Félix-Emile-Arthur Desnoyers, (10 September 1826 – 5 November 1869) was a 19th-century French writer and literary critic.

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Fernand Khnopff

Fernand Edmond Jean Marie Khnopff (12 September 1858 – 12 November 1921) was a Belgian symbolist painter.

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Fernando Pessoa

Fernando António Nogueira Pessoa (13 June 1888 – 30 November 1935), commonly known as Fernando Pessoa, was a Portuguese poet, writer, literary critic, translator, publisher and philosopher, described as one of the most significant literary figures of the 20th century and one of the greatest poets in the Portuguese language.

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Fin de siècle

Fin de siècle is a French term meaning end of the century, a term which typically encompasses both the meaning of the similar English idiom turn of the century and also makes reference to the closing of one era and onset of another.

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Flacon

A flacon (from Late Latin flasco, meaning "bottle"; cf. "flagon") is a small, often decorative, bottle.

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Flâneur

Flâneur, from the French noun flâneur, means "stroller", "lounger", "saunterer", or "loafer".

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Fleurs (Franco Battiato album)

Fleurs, also graphically rendered as Fleur(s) and FLEURs, is a studio album by Italian singer-songwriter Franco Battiato, issued in 1999.

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Fleurs de Marécage

Fleurs de Marécage (Dutch subtitle Moerasbloemen, Dutch for "Swamp Flowers") is a collection of French poems by Dutch poet J. Slauerhoff, first published in 1929.

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Flickan och kråkan

The Girl and the Crow (in Swedish: Flickan och kråkan) is a song composed by Mikael Wiehe, originally published on his album "Kråksånger" in 1981.

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Flight 714 to Sydney

Flight 714 to Sydney (Vol 714 pour Sydney; originally published in English as Flight 714) is the twenty-second volume of The Adventures of Tintin, the comics series by Belgian cartoonist Hergé.

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Forever Glam!

Forever Glam! is a greatest hits album by French singer Amanda Lear released in 2005 by Edina Music.

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François Chifflart

François-Nicolas Chifflart (21 March 1825, Saint-Omer - 19 March 1901, Paris) was a French painter, designer and engraver.

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François Debon

François Hyppolite Debon (December 2, 1807, Paris – February 29, 1872, Paris), was a French painter.

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François Joseph Heim

François Joseph Heim (16 December 1787 - 29 September 1865) was a French painter.

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François Levaillant

François Levaillant (born Vaillant, later in life as Le Vaillant, "The Valiant") (6 August 1753 – 22 November 1824) was a French author, explorer, naturalist, zoological collector, and noted ornithologist.

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François Maret

François Maret, or Frans van Ermengem, or Frans Ermengem (1893–1985), was a Belgian poet, painter and art critic.

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François Porché

François Porché (born Cognac, November 21, 1877 - died Vichy, April 19, 1944) was a French dramatist, poet and literary critic.

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Françoise Gilot

Françoise Gilot (born 26 November 1921) is a French painter, critic, and bestselling author.

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France Balantič

France Balantič (29 November 1921 – 24 November 1943) was a Slovene poet.

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Francesca Solleville

Francesca Solleville is a French singer.

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Francis Alÿs

Francis Alÿs (born 1959, Antwerp) is a Belgian-born, Mexico-based artist.

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Francis Saltus Saltus

Francis Saltus Saltus (November 23, 1849 – June 24, 1889) was an American poet.

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Francis Scarfe

Francis Scarfe (1911–1986) was an English poet, critic and novelist, who became an academic, translator and Director of the British Institute in Paris.

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Francisco Alarcón Estaba

Francisco de Asís Alarcón Estaba (born January 4, 1950 in Caracas, Venezuela) is a Venezuelan writer and poet.

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Francisco Umbral

Francisco Umbral (born Francisco Pérez Martínez) (11 May 1932 – 28 August 2007) was a Spanish journalist, novelist, biographer and essayist.

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Francization of Brussels

The Francization (or Francisation) of Brussels (Francisation de Bruxelles, Verfransing van Brussel) refers to the transformation of Brussels, Belgium, from a majority Dutch-speaking city to one that is bilingual or even multilingual, with French as both the majority language and lingua franca.

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Frank Pearce Sturm

Frank Pearce Sturm (1879–1942) was an English poet and translator, known for his 1906 translations of Baudelaire; his short poem Still-heart is a popular favourite.

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Frans Masereel

Frans Masereel (31 July 1889 – 3 January 1972) was a Flemish painter and graphic artist who worked mainly in France.

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French alexandrine

The French alexandrine (alexandrin) is a syllabic poetic meter of (nominally and typically) 12 syllables with a medial caesura dividing the line into two hemistichs (half-lines) of six syllables each.

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French art

French art consists of the visual and plastic arts (including architecture, woodwork, textiles, and ceramics) originating from the geographical area of France.

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French literature

French literature is, generally speaking, literature written in the French language, particularly by citizens of France; it may also refer to literature written by people living in France who speak traditional languages of France other than French.

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French opera

French opera is one of Europe's most important operatic traditions, containing works by composers of the stature of Rameau, Berlioz, Gounod, Bizet, Massenet, Debussy, Ravel, Poulenc and Messiaen.

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French poetry

French poetry is a category of French literature.

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French Poets and Novelists

French Poets and Novelists is a book of literary criticism by Henry James published in 1878.

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French Restoration style

The French Restoration style was predominantly Neoclassicism, though it also showed the beginnings of romanticism in music and literature.

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Friedrich Nietzsche

Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche (15 October 1844 – 25 August 1900) was a German philosopher, cultural critic, composer, poet, philologist and a Latin and Greek scholar whose work has exerted a profound influence on Western philosophy and modern intellectual history.

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Front 242

Front 242 is a Belgian electronic music group that came into prominence during the 1980s.

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G. Sutton Breiding

G.

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Gaspard de la Nuit (poetry collection)

Gaspard de la Nuit — Fantaisies à la manière de Rembrandt et de Callot (Callot) is a compilation of prose poems by Italian-born French poet Aloysius Bertrand.

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Gaston Serpette

Henri Charles Antoine Gaston Serpette (4 November 1846 – 3 November 1904) was a French composer, best known for his operettas.

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Gaston Waringhien

Gaston Waringhien (July 20, 1901 – December 20, 1991) was a French linguist, lexicographer, and Esperantist.

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Gérard de Nerval

Gérard de Nerval (22 May 1808 – 26 January 1855) was the nom-de-plume of the French writer, poet, essayist and translator Gérard Labrunie.

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Géza Frid

Portrait painting by Vilmos Aba-Novák Géza Frid (25 January 1904 – 13 September 1989) was a Hungarian–Dutch composer and pianist.

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Generación decapitada

The Generación decapitada (Spanish for "Beheaded/Decapitated Generation") was a literary group formed by four young Ecuadorian poets in the first decades of the 20th century.

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Generation of '27

The Generation of '27 (Generación del 27) was an influential group of poets that arose in Spanish literary circles between 1923 and 1927, essentially out of a shared desire to experience and work with avant-garde forms of art and poetry.

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Geo Dumitrescu

Geo Dumitrescu (born Gheorghe Dumitrescu; May 17, 1920 – September 28, 2004) was a Romanian poet and translator.

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George Cabot Lodge

George Cabot "Bay" Lodge (October 10, 1873 – August 21, 1909) was an American poet of the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

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George Catlin

George Catlin (July 26, 1796 – December 23, 1872) was an American painter, author, and traveler, who specialized in portraits of Native Americans in the Old West.

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George Sand

Amantine Lucile Aurore Dupin (1 July 1804 – 8 June 1876), best known by her nom de plume George Sand, was a French novelist and memoirist.

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Georges Brassens

Georges Brassens (22 October 1921 – 29 October 1981) was a French singer-songwriter and poet.

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Georges Lonque

Georges Lonque (Ghent, 8 November 1900 – Brussels, 3 March 1967) was a Belgian composer, music teacher, conductor and violinist.

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Georges Poulet

Georges Poulet (29 November 1902 – 31 December 1991) was a Belgian literary critic associated with the Geneva School.

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Georges Voisset

Georges Voisset (born March 15, 1948 in Lyon, France) is an Agrégé in French Literature, former Fellow of the Ecole Normale Supérieure of Paris and Professor of Comparative Literature at the University of the French West Indies and Guyane.

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Georgy Adamovich

Georgy Viktorovich Adamovich (a;, Moscow, Russian Empire — 21 February 1972, Nice, France) was a Russian poet of the acmeist school, and a literary critic, translator and memoirist.

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Georgy Ivanov

Georgii Vladimirovich Ivanov (Гео́ргий Влади́мирович Ива́нов; in Puki Estate, Seda Volost, Kovno Governorate – 26 August 1958 in Hyères, Var, France) was a leading poet and essayist of the Russian emigration between the 1930s and 1950s.

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Giovanni Macchia

Giovanni Macchia (14 November 1912 - 30 September 2001) was an Italian literary critic and essayist.

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Giovanni Raboni

Giovanni Raboni (22 January 1932 – 16 September 2004) was an Italian poet, translator and literary critic.

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Giovanni Segantini

Giovanni Segantini (15 January 1858 – 28 September 1899) was an Italian painter known for his large pastoral landscapes of the Alps.

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Giuseppe Brunelli

Giuseppe Antonio Brunelli was a contemporary Italian poet, essayist and translator residing in Florence, Italy, where he concluded his tenure at the University of Florence, teaching French Language and Literature from 1946 to 1994.

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Giuseppe Ungaretti

Giuseppe Ungaretti (8 February 1888 – 2 June 1970) was an Italian modernist poet, journalist, essayist, critic, academic, and recipient of the inaugural 1970 Neustadt International Prize for Literature.

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Glenn Danzig

Glenn Danzig (born Glenn Allen Anzalone; June 23, 1955) is an American singer, songwriter, and musician from Lodi, New Jersey.

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Glossary of French expressions in English

Around 45% of English vocabulary is of French origin, most coming from the Anglo-Norman spoken by the upper classes in England for several hundred years after the Norman Conquest, before the language settled into what became Modern English.

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Goncourt Journal

The Goncourt Journal was a diary written in collaboration by the brothers Edmond and Jules de Goncourt from 1850 up to Jules' death in 1870, and then by Edmond alone up to a few weeks before his own death in 1896.

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Goth subculture

The goth subculture is a music subculture that began in England during the early 1980s, where it developed from the audience of gothic rock, an offshoot of the post-punk genre.

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Gothic rock

Gothic rock (alternately called goth-rock or goth) is a style of rock music that emerged from post-punk in the late 1970s.

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Graba'

Ignace De Graeve (Ghent, September 24, 1940 – Bruges, January 17, 2016) was a Belgian artist, who also used the name Graba.

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Greater and lesser magic

Greater and lesser magic (known also as high and low magic or collectively Satanic magic) is a system of magic within LaVeyan Satanism.

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Grigol Robakidze

Grigol Robakidze (October 28, 1880, Sviri (West Georgia) – November 19, 1962, Geneva) was a Georgian writer, publicist, and public figure primarily known for his prose and anti-Soviet émigré activities.

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Gruppe SPUR

Gruppe SPUR was an artistic collaboration formed by the German painters Heimrad Prem, Helmut Sturm and Hans-Peter Zimmer and the sculptor Lothar Fischer in 1957.

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Guglielmo Achille Cavellini

Guglielmo Achille Cavellini (11 September 1914 – 20 November 1990), also known as GAC, was an Italian artist and art collector.

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Guillermo Uribe Holguín

Guillermo Uribe Holguín (sometimes spelled Uribe-Holguín) (17 March 1880 – 26 June 1971) was a Colombian composer and violinist and one of the most important Colombian cultural figures of his generation.

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Guillot of Paris

Guillot or Guiot of Paris was a late 13th or early 14th century French poet, author of the Le Dit des rues de Paris (dated to 1280-1300).

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Gustav-Adolf Mossa

Gustav-Adolf Mossa (28 January 1883 – 25 May 1971) was a French illustrator, playwright, essayist, curator and late Symbolist painter.

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Gustave Charpentier

Gustave Charpentier (25 June 1860 – 18 February 1956) was a French composer, best known for his opera Louise.

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Gustave Courbet

Jean Désiré Gustave Courbet (10 June 1819 – 31 December 1877) was a French painter who led the Realism movement in 19th-century French painting.

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Gustave Flaubert

Gustave Flaubert (12 December 1821 – 8 May 1880) was a French novelist.

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Guy de Montlaur

Guy Joseph Marie de Villardi comte de Montlaur (born 9 September 1918, Biarritz— died 10 August 1977, Garches) was a French painter from the Languedoc family of Montlaur.

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H. Bonciu

H.

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Han Terra

Han TeRra (한테라, born March 30, 1981) is a South Korean kayageum virtuoso and polymath in the areas of music, arts, dance, linguistics, history, and design.

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Hans Gefors

Hans Gefors (born 8 December 1952 in Stockholm) is a Swedish composer.

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Hans Irrigmann

Hans Irrigmann (3 August 1735 – 13 January 1771) was a German poet writing primarily during The Enlightenment period.

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Hans-Jürgen Schlieker

Hans-Jürgen Schlieker (April 8, 1924 – March 12, 2004) was a German abstract painter, grouped in importance with Hans Hartung, Bernard Schultze and Emil Schumacher.

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Harman Grisewood

Harman Joseph Gerard Grisewood, CBE (8 February 1906 – 8 January 1997) was an English radio actor, radio and television executive, novelist and non-fiction writer.

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Harry Crosby

Harry Crosby (June 4, 1898 – December 10, 1929) was an American heir, bon vivant, poet, and publisher who for some epitomized the Lost Generation in American literature.

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Hasan Askari

Muhammad Hasan Askari (محمد حسَن عسکری), (1919-18 January 1978) was a scholar, literary critic, writer and linguist of modern Urdu language.

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Hashish

Hashish, or hash, is a drug made from cannabis.

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Havelock Ellis

Henry Havelock Ellis, known as Havelock Ellis (2 February 1859 – 8 July 1939), was an English physician, writer, progressive intellectual and social reformer who studied human sexuality.

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Hégésippe Moreau

Hégésippe Moreau (born Pierre-Jacques Roulliot; April 8, 1810December 20, 1838) was a French lyric poet.

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Héroes del Silencio

Héroes del Silencio (translated: Heroes of Silence) (well known as Héroes or HDS) was a Spanish rock band from Zaragoza, Aragón, Spain, formed by guitarist Juan Valdivia and singer Enrique Bunbury.

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Hôtel de Lauzun

The Hôtel de Lauzun is a 17th-century hôtel particulier, or private mansion, located on the quai d'Anjou of the île Saint-Louis in the 4@th arrondissement of Paris, France.

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Heart (Amanda Lear album)

Heart is a studio album by French singer Amanda Lear, first released in 2001 by Le Marais Prod.

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Heathers: The Musical

Heathers: The Musical is a rock musical with music, lyrics, and a book by Laurence O'Keefe and Kevin Murphy and based on the 1988 cult film Heathers.

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Henri Duparc (composer)

Eugène Marie Henri Fouques Duparc (21 January 1848 – 12 February 1933) was a French composer of the late Romantic period.

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Henri Dutilleux

Henri Dutilleux (22 January 1916 – 22 May 2013) was a French composer active mainly in the second half of the 20th century.

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Henry Curwen (journalist)

Henry Curwen (1845–1892) was an English journalist and author, who became editor of The Times of India.

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Henry Furst

Henry Furst (New York, October 11, 1893 – La Spezia, August 15, 1967) was an American journalist, writer, playwright and historian.

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Hermann Cohen (Carmelite)

Hermann Cohen (also known as Augustine Mary of the Blessed Sacrament, O.C.D., Augustin-Marie du Très Saint-Sacrement, better known as Father Hermann; 10 November 1821 – 20 January 1871) was a noted German Jewish pianist, who converted to the Catholic Church.

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Hernan Bas

Hernan Bas (born 1978 in Miami, Florida, United States) is an artist based in Detroit, Michigan.

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Herwig Kipping

Herwig Kipping (born 31 March 1948) is a German film director and script writer.

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Historia de la eternidad

Historia de la eternidad (in English: A History of Eternity) is the first essay book published by Argentine author Jorge Luis Borges, in 1936 (editio princeps).

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History of cannabis

The history of cannabis and its usage by humans dates back to at least the third millennium BCE in written history, and possibly far further back by archaeological evidence.

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History of modern literature

The history of literature in the Modern period in Europe begins with the Age of Enlightenment and the conclusion of the Baroque period in the 18th century, succeeding the Renaissance and Early Modern periods.

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History of narcissism

The concept of excessive selfishness has been recognized throughout history.

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History of synesthesia research

Synesthesia is a neurological condition in which two or more bodily senses are coupled.

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Honoré Daumier

Honoré-Victorin Daumier (February 26, 1808February 10, 1879) was a French printmaker, caricaturist, painter, and sculptor, whose many works offer commentary on social and political life in France in the 19th century.

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Horses (album)

Horses is the debut studio album by American musician Patti Smith, released on December 13, 1975, on Arista Records.

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I am beautiful (Auguste Rodin)

I am beautiful, also known as The Abduction, is a sculpture by French artist Auguste Rodin, inspired in a fragment from Charles Baudelaire's collection of poems Les Fleurs du mal.

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Ida Gotkovsky

Ida Rose Esther Gotkovsky (born 26 August 1933) is a French composer and pianist.

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Ignasi Vidal

Ignasi Vidal i Molné (1904–1988) was a Spanish painter and illustrator.

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Illuminations (poetry collection)

Illuminations is an incompleted suite of prose poems by the French poet Arthur Rimbaud, first published partially in, a Paris literary review, in May–June 1886.

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Immorality

Immorality is the violation of moral laws, norms or standards.

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Impressionism

Impressionism is a 19th-century art movement characterised by relatively small, thin, yet visible brush strokes, open composition, emphasis on accurate depiction of light in its changing qualities (often accentuating the effects of the passage of time), ordinary subject matter, inclusion of movement as a crucial element of human perception and experience, and unusual visual angles.

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Impressionism (literature)

Influenced by the European Impressionist art movement, many writers adopted a style that relied on associations.

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Incipit Satan

Incipit Satan is the fifth full-length album by Norwegian black metal band Gorgoroth.

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Indian Ocean literature

The Indian Ocean is home to many literary texts, from Greco-Roman times to One Thousand and One Nights, the matrix of many narratives, which portrays Sinbad the Merchant through a fantastic and popular twist of the mind, and which is based on real details of navigation in this first ocean of globalisation.

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Individualism

Individualism is the moral stance, political philosophy, ideology, or social outlook that emphasizes the moral worth of the individual.

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Individualist anarchism

Individualist anarchism refers to several traditions of thought within the anarchist movement that emphasize the individual and their will over external determinants such as groups, society, traditions and ideological systems.

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Individualist anarchism in Europe

Individualist anarchism refers to several traditions of thought within the anarchist movement that emphasize the individual and his or her will over external determinants such as groups, society, traditions, and ideological systems.

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Innokenty Annensky

Innokentiy Fyodorovich Annensky (a; September 1, 1855 (N.S.) – December 13, 1909 (N.S.)) was a poet, critic and translator, representative of the first wave of Russian Symbolism.

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Innti

Innti was an Irish language poetry movement, associated with a journal of the same name founded in 1970 by Michael Davitt, Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill, Gabriel Rosenstock, Louis de Paor and Liam Ó Muirthile.

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Into the Pandemonium

Into the Pandemonium is the third studio album by Swiss extreme metal band Celtic Frost, released in 1987.

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Ion Minulescu

Ion Minulescu (6 January 1881 – 11 April 1944) was a Romanian avant-garde poet, novelist, short story writer, journalist, literary critic, and playwright.

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Ion Vinea

Ion Vinea (born Ioan Eugen Iovanaki, sometimes Iovanache; April 17, 1895 – July 6, 1964) was a Romanian poet, novelist, journalist, literary theorist, and political figure.

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Irony

Irony, in its broadest sense, is a rhetorical device, literary technique, or event in which what appears, on the surface, to be the case, differs radically from what is actually the case.

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IrremeDIABLE

IrremeDIABLE is the ninth studio album by the French band Misanthrope.

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Isaac Babel

Isaac Emmanuilovich Babel (p; – 27 January 1940) was a Russian-language journalist, playwright, literary translator, historian and Bolshevik revolutionary.

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Isabelle Eberhardt

Isabelle Wilhelmine Marie Eberhardt (17 February 1877 – 21 October 1904) was a Swiss explorer and author.

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Italian literature

Italian literature is written in the Italian language, particularly within Italy.

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Iwan Gilkin

Iwan Gilkin (7 January 1858 – 28 September 1924) was a Belgian poet.

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J. C. Bloem

Jakobus Cornelis (Jacques) Bloem (10 May 1887, Oudshoorn – 10 August 1966, Kalenberg) was a Dutch poet and essayist.

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J. Slauerhoff

Jan Jacob Slauerhoff (15 September 1898 – 5 October 1936), who published as J. Slauerhoff, was a Dutch poet and novelist.

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Jack Hibberd

John Charles "Jack" Hibberd (born 12 April 1940 in Warracknabeal, Victoria) is an Australian playwright and physician.

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Jacques Burtin

Jacques Burtin (born 10 November 1955) is a French composer, writer, producer and filmmaker.

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Jacques Viret

Jacques Viret (born 19 October 1943) is a contemporary French musicologist of Swiss origin.

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Jacques-Germain Chaudes-Aigues

Jacques-Germain Chaudes-Aigues (7 February 1814 – 26 January 1847) was a French journalist and writer.

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James Abbott McNeill Whistler

James Abbott McNeill Whistler (July 10, 1834 – July 17, 1903) was an American artist, active during the American Gilded Age and based primarily in the United Kingdom.

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James Chace

James Clarke Chace (October 16, 1931 – October 8, 2004) was an American historian, writing on American diplomacy and statecraft.

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James O'Barr

James O'Barr is an American graphic artist, best known as the creator of the comic book series The Crow.

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Jan Frans De Boever

Jan Frans De Boever (Ghent, Belgium, 8 June 1872 - 23 May 1949) was a Flemish Symbolist painter.

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Jan Verkade

Johannes Sixtus Gerhardus (Jan) Verkade (18 September 1868 - 19 July 1946), afterwards Willibrord Verkade O.S.B., was a Dutch Post-Impressionist and Christian Symbolist painter.

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Janez Vrečko

Janez Vrečko (born 1946) is a Slovene literary historian and theorist.

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Jardin du Luxembourg

The Jardin du Luxembourg, also known in English as the Luxembourg Gardens, is located in the 6th arrondissement of Paris, France.

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Jaroslav Vrchlický

Jaroslav Vrchlický (17 February 1853 – 9 September 1912) was one of the greatest Czech lyrical poets.

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Jason Silva

Jason Luis Silva (born February 6, 1982) is a Venezuelan American television personality, filmmaker, and public speaker.

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Jérôme Pichon

Baron Jérome-Frédéric Pichon (3 December 1812 – 26 August 1896) was a 19th-century French bibliographer and bibliophile.

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Jean Barraqué

Jean-Henri-Alphonse Barraqué (January 17, 1928August 17, 1973) was a French composer and writer on music who developed an individual form of serialism which is displayed in a small output.

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Jean Battersby

Jean Battersby, AO (28 March 1928 – 24 February 2009) was an Australian arts executive and adviser, and the founding chief executive officer of the Australian Council for the Arts in 1968.

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Jean Chaussivert

Jean Chaussivert (full name Jean-Stéphane Jacques Roger Henri Chaussivert; born 14 March 1932)W.

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Jean Cocteau House

The Jean Cocteau House was the residence of the French poet, artist, playwright and film maker Jean Cocteau (1889–1963), which he purchased with the film actor Jean Marais in 1947, and where he created many of his later works before his death in 1963.

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Jean Cras

Jean Émile Paul Cras (22 May 1879 – 14 September 1932) was a 20th-century French composer and career naval officer.

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Jean de Bosschère

Jean de Bosschère (Uccle, 5 July 1878 – Châteauroux, 17 January 1953) was a Belgian writer and painter.

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Jean de La Ville de Mirmont

Jean de La Ville de Mirmont (2 December 1886 – 28 November 1914) was a French poet who died at the age of 27 defending his country during World War I, at Verneuil.

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Jean Hélion

Jean Hélion (April 21, 1904October 27, 1987) was a French painter whose abstract work of the 1930s established him as a leading modernist.

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Jean Racine

Jean Racine, baptismal name Jean-Baptiste Racine (22 December 163921 April 1699), was a French dramatist, one of the three great playwrights of 17th-century France (along with Molière and Corneille), and an important literary figure in the Western tradition.

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Jean Starobinski

Jean Starobinski (born 17 November 1920 in Geneva, Switzerland) is a Swiss literary critic.

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Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres

Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres (29 August 1780 – 14 January 1867) was a French Neoclassical painter.

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Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot

Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot (July 16, 1796 – February 22, 1875) was a French landscape and portrait painter as well as a printmaker in etching.

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Jean-Gaspard Deburau

Jean-Gaspard Deburau (born Jan Kašpar Dvořák; July 31, 1796 – June 17, 1846), sometimes erroneously called Debureau, was a celebrated Bohemian-French mime.

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Jean-Joseph Rabearivelo

Jean-Joseph Rabearivelo (4 March 1901 or 1903 – 22 June 1937), born Joseph-Casimir Rabearivelo, is widely considered to be Africa's first modern poet and the greatest literary artist of Madagascar.

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Jean-Luc De Meyer

Jean-Luc De Meyer (born 1957 in Brussels) is a vocalist and lyricist who is best known as the lead vocalist of the Belgian EBM group Front 242.

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Jean-Luc Nancy

Jean-Luc Nancy (born 26 July 1940) is a French philosopher.

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Jean-Pierre Dantan

Jean-Pierre Dantan (28 December 1800, in Paris – 6 September 1869, in Baden-Baden), known as Dantan the Younger, was a French portrait sculptor.

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Jean-Pierre Richard

Jean-Pierre Richard (born 15 July 1922, Marseille) is a French writer and literary critic.

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Jeanne Duval

Jeanne Duval (c. 1820 – c. 1862) was a Haitian-born actress and dancer of mixed French and black African ancestry.

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Jeet Thayil

Jeet Thayil (born 13 October 1959) is an Indian poet, novelist, librettist and musician.

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Jens Lund

Jens Martin Victor Lund (18 November 1871, Copenhagen – 10 June 1924, Hellerup) was a Danish painter, designer and graphic artist.

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Jim Morrison

James Douglas Morrison (December 8, 1943 – July 3, 1971) was an American singer-songwriter and poet, best remembered as the lead vocalist of the Doors.

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Joanna Richardson

Joanna Leah Richardson (8 August 1925 – 7 March 2008) was an English writer, translator and journalist.

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João Cabral de Melo Neto

João Cabral de Melo Neto, (January 9, 1920 – October 9, 1999) was a Brazilian poet and diplomat, and one of the most influential writers in late Brazilian modernism.

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Johan Jongkind

Johan Barthold Jongkind (3 June 1819 – 9 February 1891) was a Dutch painter and printmaker.

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Johannes Edfelt

Bo Johannes Edfelt (December 21, 1904 – August 27, 1997), was a Swedish writer, poet, translator and literary critic.

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John Adams (composer)

John Coolidge Adams (born February 15, 1947) is an American composer of classical music and opera, with strong roots in minimalism.

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John Allman (poet)

John Allman (born 1935 New York City), also known as Jack Allman, is an American poet.

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John Glassco

John Glassco (December 15, 1909 – January 29, 1981) was a Canadian poet, memoirist and novelist.

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John Gray (poet)

John Gray (2 March 1866 – 14 June 1934) was an English poet whose works include Silverpoints, The Long Road and Park: A Fantastic Story.

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John Zorn

John Zorn (born September 2, 1953) is an American composer, arranger, record producer, saxophonist, and multi-instrumentalist with hundreds of album credits as performer, composer, and producer across a variety of genres, including jazz, rock, hardcore, classical, surf, metal, soundtrack, ambient, and improvised music.

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Jomí García Ascot

Jomí García Ascot (24 March 1927 – 14 August 1986) was a poet, essayist, filmmaker, director and educator.

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Jon Mirande

Jon Mirande (11 October 1925 – 28 December 1972) was a Basque writer, poet and translator.

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Jonatan Briel

Jonatan Karl Dieter Briel (9 June 1942 - 26 December 1988) was a German director, screenplay author, and actor.

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Jonathan Aldrich

Jonathan Aldrich (born 1936) is an American poet.

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Joris-Karl Huysmans

Charles-Marie-Georges Huysmans (5 February 1848 in Paris – 12 May 1907 in Paris) was a French novelist and art critic who published his works as Joris-Karl Huysmans (variably abbreviated as J. K. or J.-K.). He is most famous for the novel À rebours (1884, published in English as Against the Grain or Against Nature).

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José Luis Cuevas

José Luis Cuevas (February 26, 1934 – July 3, 2017) was a Mexican artist and was one of the first to challenge the then dominant Mexican muralism movement as a prominent member of the Generación de la Ruptura (Breakaway Generation).

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José María Eguren

José María Eguren Rodríguez (July 7, 1874, Lima – April 19, 1942, Lima) was a Peruvian writer.

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Josep Vicenç Foix

Josep Vicenç Foix i Mas (Barcelona, 28 January 1893 - 29 January 1987) was a Catalan poet, writer, and essayist in Catalan.

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Joseph Boulnois

Joseph Boulnois (28 January 1884 – 20 October 1918) was a French organist and composer.

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Joseph de Maistre

Joseph-Marie, Comte de Maistre (1 April 1753 – 26 February 1821) was a French-speaking Savoyard philosopher, writer, lawyer, and diplomat, who advocated social hierarchy and monarchy in the period immediately following the French Revolution.

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Joseph Pivato

Joseph Pivato (born February 8, 1946, in Tezze sul Brenta, Italy) is a Canadian writer and academic who first established the critical recognition of Italian-Canadian literature and changed perceptions of Canadian writing.

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Joseph Stevens (painter)

Joseph Édouard Stevens (26 November 1816 – 2 August 1892) was a Belgian animalier painter and engraver.

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Joseph Tsang Mang Kin

Joseph Tsang Mang Kin (Officially: Tsang Fan Hin Tsang Mang Kin), born 12 March 1938, is a Mauritian poet, political scientist, philosopher and biographer.

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Joshua Clover

Joshua Clover (born December 30, 1962 in Berkeley, California) is a professor at the University of California Davis.

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Journaux

Journaux is the plural of the French word Journal, a diary or newspaper.

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Journey Through the Impossible

Journey Through the Impossible (Voyage à travers l'impossible) is an 1882 fantasy play written by Jules Verne, with the collaboration of Adolphe d'Ennery.

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Journey to the East

Journey to the East is a short novel by German author Hermann Hesse.

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Jovan Dučić

Jovan Dučić (Јован Дучић,; 17 February 1871 – 7 April 1943) was a Bosnian Serb poet, writer and diplomat.

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Juhani Siljo

Juhani Siljo (3 May 1888 – 6 May 1918) was a Finnish poet and translator.

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Jules Achille Noël

Jules Achille Noël, born Louis Assez Noël (24 February 1815, Quimper - 26 March 1881, Algiers) was a French landscape and maritime painter who worked primarily in Brittany and Normandy.

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Jules Barbey d'Aurevilly

Jules-Amédée Barbey d'Aurevilly (2 November 1808 – 23 April 1889) was a French novelist and short story writer.

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Julio Mario Santo Domingo Jr.

Julio Mario Santo Domingo Braga (1958 – March 2009) was the director of the Santo Domingo Group, his family's conglomerate of more than 100 companies.

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June 1

No description.

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Junzaburō Nishiwaki

was a contemporary Japanese poet and literary critic, active in Shōwa period Japan, specializing in modernism, Dadaism and surrealism.

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Kaarlo Sarkia

Kaarlo Sarkia (11 May 1902 – 16 November 1945) was a Finnish poet and translator who was influenced by romantic poetry.

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Karel de Nerée tot Babberich

Christophe Karel Henri (Karel) de Nerée tot Babberich (18 March 1880 – 19 October 1909) was a Dutch symbolist artist who worked in the decadent and symbolist style of Aubrey Beardsley and Jan Toorop De Nerée was born in Zevenaar (The Netherlands) on Huize Babberich, the son of Frederick Nerée tot Babberich (1851–1882) and Constance van Houten (1858–1930).

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Kateb Yacine

Kateb Yacine ((August 2, 1929 or August 6, 1929 – October 28, 1989) was an Franco-Algerian writer notable for his novels and plays, both in French and Algerian Arabic dialect, and his advocacy of the Berber cause.

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Kazimiera Zawistowska

Kazimiera Zawistowska de domo Jasieńska, pseudonym Ira, (1870–1902) was a Polish poet and translator.

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Keith Burstein

Keith Burstein born 1957 as Keith Burston,(the anglicised form adopted by his father of the surname, which Burstein later dropped) is an English composer, conductor and music theorist with Russian family origins.

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Keith Waldrop

Keith Waldrop (born December 11, 1932, in Emporia, Kansas) is an American poet and academic.

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Ken'ichi Yoshida (literary scholar)

was a Japanese author and literary critic in Shōwa period Japan.

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Kenneth Slessor

Kenneth Adolphe Slessor (27 March 190130 June 1971) was an Australian poet, journalist and official war correspondent in World War II.

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Kevin Hart (poet)

Kevin John Hart (born 5 July 1954) is an Anglo-Australian theologian, philosopher and poet.

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Keyser Söze

Keyser Söze is a fictional character and the main antagonist in the 1995 film The Usual Suspects, written by Christopher McQuarrie and directed by Bryan Singer.

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King Lear (1987 film)

King Lear is a 1987 film directed by Jean-Luc Godard, an adaptation of William Shakespeare's play in the style of experimental French New Wave cinema.

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Klaus Kinski filmography

Klaus Kinski (1926 – 1991) was a German actor who acted in more than 130 films.

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Klein Constantia

Klein Constantia is a wine estate in the suburb of Constantia in Cape Town, South Africa.

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Korni Grupa

Korni Grupa (Корни Група, trans. Korni Group) was a Yugoslav rock band from Belgrade, also known as the Kornelyans, the name which they used during a short-lived foray into the international market.

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Kostas Ouranis

Kostas Ouranis (Κώστας Ουράνης, pen name of Κώστας Νιάρχος; 1890–1953) was an acclaimed Greek poet, travel writer and journalist.

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Kronos Quartet discography

The discography of the Kronos Quartet includes 43 studio albums, two compilations, five soundtracks, and 29 contributions to other artists' records.

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Kubla Khan

"Kubla Khan; or, A Vision in a Dream: A Fragment" is a poem written by Samuel Taylor Coleridge, completed in 1797 and published in 1816.

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Kythira

Kythira (Κύθηρα, also transliterated as Cythera, Kythera and Kithira) is an island in Greece lying opposite the south-eastern tip of the Peloponnese peninsula.

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L'art des femmes

L'art des femmes is the fourth studio album by French pop singer Jeanne Mas, released in 1990.

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L'Artiste

L’Artiste was a weekly illustrated review published in Paris from 1831 to 1904, supplying "the richest single source of contemporary commentary on artists, exhibitions and trends from the Romantic era to the end of the nineteenth century.".

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L'Étranger

L'Étranger may refer to.

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L'Origine du monde

("The Origin of the World") is a picture painted in oil on canvas by the French artist Gustave Courbet in 1866.

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La chute de la maison Usher

La chute de la maison Usher is the French translation of the title of Edgar Allan Poe's tale The Fall of the House of Usher (1839).

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La chute de la maison Usher (opera)

La chute de la maison Usher (The Fall of the House of Usher) is an unfinished opera in one act (divided into two scenes) by Claude Debussy to his own libretto, based on Edgar Allan Poe's short story "The Fall of the House of Usher".

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La Fanfarlo

La Fanfarlo is a work by French poet Charles Baudelaire, first published in January 1847.

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La Femme Piège

La Femme piège, or The Woman Trap, is a science fiction graphic novel from 1986 written and illustrated by the Yugoslavian born cartoonist and storyteller Enki Bilal.

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La Légende des siècles

La Légende des siècles (The Legend of the Ages) is a collection of poems by Victor Hugo, conceived as an immense depiction of the history and evolution of humanity.

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La Sanie des siècles – Panégyrique de la dégénérescence

La Sanie des siècles – Panégyrique de la dégénérescence (which roughly translates as "The sanies of the centuries – Ode to degeneration", "sanies" being "a thin greenish foul-smelling discharge from a wound, ulcer, etc., containing pus and blood" according to the Collins English Dictionary) is the debut album by French black metal band Peste Noire.

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Lady Lazarus (novel)

Lady Lazarus is the first novel by O. Henry Award-winning writer Andrew Foster Altschul, published by Harcourt in 2008.

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Lady Sybil Grant

Lady Sybil Myra Caroline Grant (née Primrose; 1879–1955) was a British writer and artist.

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Lambic

Lambic is a type of beer brewed in the Pajottenland region of Belgium southwest of Brussels and in Brussels itself at the Cantillon Brewery.

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Last Words of the Emperor Marcus Aurelius

The Last Words of the Emperor Marcus Aurelius is an 1844 painting by the French artist Eugène Delacroix, now in the Museum of Fine Arts of Lyon.

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Latvian literature

Latvian literature refers to the body of works written by Latvian authors.

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Laurent Tailhade

Laurent Tailhade (16 April 1854 – 2 November 1919) was a French satirical poet, anarchist polemicist, essayist, and translator, active in Paris in the 1890s and early 1900s.

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LaVeyan Satanism

LaVeyan Satanism is a religion founded in 1966 by the American occultist and author Anton Szandor LaVey.

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Lawrence Ferlinghetti

Lawrence Monsanto Ferlinghetti (born March 24, 1919) is an American poet, painter, socialist activist, and the co-founder of City Lights Booksellers & Publishers.

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Léo Ferré

Léo Ferré (24 August 1916 – 14 July 1993) was a French-born Monégasque poet and composer, and a dynamic and controversial live performer, whose career in France dominated the years after the Second World War until his death.

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Léo Ferré chante Baudelaire

Léo Ferré chante Baudelaire (English: "Léo Ferré sings Baudelaire") is an album by Léo Ferré, released in 1967 by Barclay Records.

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Léon Cladel

Léon Cladel (Montauban March 22, 1834 – July 21, 1892 Sèvres) was a French novelist.

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Léon Orthel

Léon Orthel (4 October 1905, Roosendaal – 6 September 1985, The Hague) was a Dutch composer, pianist and teacher.

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Lőrinc Szabó

Lőrinc Szabó de Gáborján (gáborjáni Szabó Lőrinc; Miskolc, 31 March 1900 – Budapest, 3 October 1957) was a Hungarian poet and literary translator.

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Le Désir de peindre

"Le Désir de peindre" ("The Desire to Paint") is a prose poem written by Charles Baudelaire.

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Le Divan du Monde

Le Divan du Monde ('The Divan of the World') is a converted theatre, now functioning as a concert space, located at 75 rue des Martyrs, in the 18th arrondissement, in the Pigalle neighborhood of Paris.

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Le Parnasse contemporain

Le Parnasse contemporain ("The Contemporary Parnassus", e.g., the contemporary poetry scene) is composed of three volumes of poetry collections, published in 1866, 1871 and 1876 by the editor Alphonse Lemerre, which included a hundred French poets, such as Leconte de Lisle, Théodore de Banville, Heredia, Gautier, Catulle Mendès, Baudelaire, Sully Prudhomme, Mallarmé, François Coppée, Charles Cros, Léon Dierx, Louis Ménard, Verlaine, Villiers de L'Isle-Adam and Anatole France.

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Le Secret (EP)

Le Secret (French for "The Secret") is an EP by French band Alcest, released in May 2005 through Drakkar Productions.

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Le Sommeil

Le Sommeil (translated in English variously as The Sleepers and Sleep) is an eroticDorothy M. Kosinski,, Artibus et Historiae, Vol.

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Le Spleen de Paris

Le Spleen de Paris, also known as Paris Spleen or Petits Poèmes en prose, is a collection of 50 short prose poems by Charles Baudelaire.

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Le temps l'horloge

Le temps l'horloge (Time and the Clock) is a song cycle for soprano and orchestra, by the French composer Henri Dutilleux.

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Leconte de Lisle

Charles Marie René Leconte de Lisle (22 October 1818 – 17 July 1894) was a French poet of the Parnassian movement.

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Leo Smit (Dutch composer)

Leopold "Leo" Smit (14 May 1900 – 30 April 1943) was a Dutch composer, murdered during The Holocaust at the Sobibor extermination camp.

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Leonor Fini

Leonor Fini (1907–1996) was an Argentinian surrealist painter, designer, illustrator, and author, known for her depictions of powerful women.

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Les Chansons d'Aragon

Les Chansons d'Aragon (English: "Songs of Aragon") is an album by Léo Ferré, released in 1961 by Barclay Records.

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Les Derniers Jours de Charles Baudelaire

Les Derniers Jours de Charles Baudelaire ("the last days of Charles Baudelaire") is a 1988 novel by the French writer Bernard-Henri Lévy, about the life of the poet Charles Baudelaire.

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Les Fleurs du mal

Les Fleurs du mal (italic) is a volume of French poetry by Charles Baudelaire.

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Les Fleurs du mal (Léo Ferré album)

Les Fleurs du mal (English: "The Flowers of Evil") is an album by Léo Ferré, released in 1957 by Odeon Records.

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Les Fleurs du Mal (Sopor Aeternus & the Ensemble of Shadows album)

Les Fleurs du Mal – Die Blumen des Bösen (French and The flowers of evil) is the ninth album by darkwave band Sopor Aeternus & the Ensemble of Shadows, and was released in 2007.

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Les Fleurs du mal (suite et fin)

Les Fleurs du mal (suite et fin) (English: "The Flowers of Evil (last and final)") is an album by Léo Ferré, posthumously released in 2008 by La Mémoire et la Mer.

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Les Litanies de Satan

"Les Litanies de Satan" ("The Litanies of Satan") is a poem by Charles Baudelaire, published as part of Les Fleurs du mal.

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Les Misérables

Les Misérables is a French historical novel by Victor Hugo, first published in 1862, that is considered one of the greatest novels of the 19th century.

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Les Paradis artificiels

Les Paradis Artificiels (Artificial Paradises) is a book by French poet Charles Baudelaire, first published in 1860, about the state of being under the influence of opium and hashish.

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Les Whitten

Les Whitten (February 21, 1928 – December 2, 2017) was an American investigative reporter at the Washington Merry-Go-Round under Jack Anderson, as well as translator of French poetry by Baudelaire and influential novelist of Horror and Science Fiction books.

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Lesbian

A lesbian is a homosexual woman.

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Lesbian erotica

Lesbian erotica deals with depictions in the visual arts of lesbianism, which is the expression of female-to-female sexuality.

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Lettrism

Lettrism is a French avant-garde movement, established in Paris in the mid-1940s by Romanian immigrant Isidore Isou.

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Lev Shestov

Lev Isaakovich Shestov (Лев Исаа́кович Шесто́в, 1866 – 1938), born Yeguda Leib Shvartsman (Иегуда Лейб Шварцман), was a Russian existentialist philosopher, known for his "Philosophy of Despair".

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LGBT in Canada

While LGBT people live in both large and small communities throughout Canada, the largest and most prominent LGBT communities are located in major metropolitan cities such as Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver and Ottawa.

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Liao Yiwu

Liao Yiwu (also known as Lao Wei) (born 16 June 1958 in Sichuan), is a Chinese author, reporter, musician, and poet.

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Libertine

A libertine is one devoid of most moral or sexual restraints, which are seen as unnecessary or undesirable, especially one who ignores or even spurns accepted morals and forms of behaviour sanctified by the larger society.

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Library of Friedrich Nietzsche

The German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche owned an extensive private library, which has been preserved after his death.

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Limit-experience

A limit-experience (expérience limite) is a type of action or experience which approaches the edge of living in terms of its intensity and its seeming impossibility.

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List of art critics

This incomplete list of art critics enumerates persons who had or have a significant part of their known creative output in the form of art criticism, which consists mostly of the written discussion and aesthetic evaluation of works of art.

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List of authors by name: B

List of authors by name: A – B – C – D – E – F – G – H – I – J – K – L – M – N – O – P – Q – R – S – T – U – V – W – X – Y – Z.

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List of burials at Montparnasse Cemetery

No description.

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List of Catholic authors

The authors listed on this page should be limited to those who identify as Catholic authors in some form.

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List of cemeteries in France

This is a list of cemeteries in France.

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List of Charvet customers

Charvet Place Vendôme or simply Charvet is a French high-end bespoke and ready-to-wear shirtmaker, located at 28 Place Vendôme in Paris.

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List of compositions by Alban Berg

The following is an incomplete list of the compositions of Alban Berg.

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List of compositions by Emmanuel Chabrier

This is a list of compositions by the French composer Emmanuel Chabrier (1841–1894).

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List of compositions by Ernest Chausson

This is a list of compositions by Ernest Chausson.

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List of compositions by Gabriel Fauré

The following is a partial list of compositions by Gabriel Fauré.

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List of compositions by John Corigliano

This is a list of compositions by John Corigliano sorted by genre, date of composition, title, and scoring.

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List of compositions by Louis Vierne

Below is a sortable list of compositions by Louis Vierne.

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List of compositions by Swan Hennessy

This is a list of compositions by Swan Hennessy (1866–1929).

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List of compositions by Vincent d'Indy

This is a list of compositions by Vincent d'Indy.

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List of cultural icons of France

This List of cultural icons of France is a list of links to potential cultural icons of France.

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List of Desert Island Discs episodes (1971–80)

The BBC Radio 4 programme Desert Island Discs invites castaways to choose eight pieces of music, a book (in addition to the Bible - or a religious text appropriate to that person's beliefs - and the Complete Works of Shakespeare) and a luxury item that they would take to an imaginary desert island, where they will be marooned indefinitely.

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List of dodecaphonic and serial compositions

No description.

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List of essayists

This is a list of essayists—people notable for their essay-writing.

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List of French people

French people of note include.

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List of French-language authors

Chronological list of French language authors (regardless of nationality), by date of birth.

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List of French-language poets

List of poets who have written in the French language.

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List of How I Met Your Mother characters

The American sitcom How I Met Your Mother premiered on CBS on September 19, 2005.

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List of Latin phrases (A)

Additional references.

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List of modernist poets

This is a list of major poets of the Modernist movement.

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List of names in A Biographical Dictionary of Modern Rationalists

Joseph McCabe published A Biographical Dictionary of Modern Rationalists in 1920 (London: Watts & Co.). Most (though not all) of the individuals therein were later also included in A Biographical Dictionary of Ancient, Medieval and Modern Freethinkers (1945).

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List of Penguin Classics

This is a list of books published as Penguin Classics.

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List of people from Brussels

This is a list of notable people from Brussels.

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List of people on the postage stamps of France

This is a list of people on stamps of France.

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List of people with major depressive disorder

This is a list of notable people who have, or have had, major depressive disorder.

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List of poetry collections

A poetry collection is often a compilation of several poems by one poet to be published in a single volume or chapbook.

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List of poets

This is an alphabetical list of internationally notable poets.

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List of premature obituaries

A premature obituary is an obituary published whose subject is not actually deceased at the time of publication.

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List of Red Meat characters

Red Meat is a weekly comic strip created by Max Cannon.

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List of Romantic poets

The six best-known English authors are, in order of birth and with an example of their work.

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List of songs based on poems

This is a list of poems that have been set to music at a later date.

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List of songs recorded by Mylène Farmer

This is a comprehensive list of songs by French-Canadian singer-songwriter Mylène Farmer, in alphabetical order.

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List of songs that retell a work of literature

This is a list of songs that retell, in whole or in part, a work of literature.

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List of syphilis cases

Mental illness caused by late-stage syphilis was once a common form of dementia.

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List of translators

This is primarily a list of notable translators.

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List of winners of the National Book Award

These authors and books have won the annual National Book Awards, awarded to American authors by the National Book Foundation based in the United States.

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List of years in literature

This page gives a chronological list of years in literature (descending order), with notable publications listed with their respective years and a small selection of notable events.

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List of years in poetry

This page gives a chronological list of years in poetry (descending order).

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Literary criticism

Literary criticism (or literary studies) is the study, evaluation, and interpretation of literature.

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Literary modernism

Literary modernism, or modernist literature, has its origins in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, mainly in Europe and North America, and is characterized by a very self-conscious break with traditional ways of writing, in both poetry and prose fiction.

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Loches

Loches is a commune in the Indre-et-Loire department in central France.

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Lolita

Lolita is a 1955 novel written by Russian American novelist Vladimir Nabokov.

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Lollapalooza

Lollapalooza is an annual music festival featuring popular alternative rock, heavy metal, punk rock, hip hop, and electronic music bands and artists, dance and comedy performances, and craft booths.

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Louis Aguettant

Louis Aguettant (3 April 1871 – 10 March 1931) was a French musicologist, writer and teacher of French literature.

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Louis Dewis

Louis Dewis (1872–1946) was the pseudonym of Belgian Post-Impressionist painter Louis Dewachter, who was also an innovative and highly successful businessman.

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Louis Janmot

Anne-François-Louis Janmot (21 May 1814 – 1 June 1892) was a French painter and poet.

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Louis Philippe style

The style of architecture and design under King Louis Philippe I (1830-1848) was a more eclectic development of French neoclassicism, incorporating elements of neo-Gothic and other styles.

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Louis Pierre Henriquel-Dupont

Louis Pierre Henriquel-Dupont (Paris 13 June 1797 – 20 January 1892 Paris) was a French engraver.

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Louise Hervieu

Louise Hervieu (26 October 1878 – 11 September 1954) was a French writer, artist, painter, draftsman, and lithographer.

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Luca Francesconi

Luca Francesconi (born 17 March 1956 in Milan) is an Italian composer.

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Ludovic Dauș

Ludovic Dauș (– November 17, 1954) was a Romanian novelist, playwright, poet and translator, also known for his contributions as a politician and theatrical manager.

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Luis Cernuda

Luis Cernuda (born Luis Cernuda Bidón September 21, 1902 – November 5, 1963) was a Spanish poet, a member of the Generation of '27.

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Luncheon in the Studio

Luncheon in the Studio (or The Luncheon) is an 1868 oil painting by Édouard Manet.

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Lured

Lured is a 1947 film noir directed by Douglas Sirk and starring George Sanders, Lucille Ball, Charles Coburn, and Boris Karloff.

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Lust

Lust is a craving, it can take any form such as the lust for sexuality, lust for money or the lust for power.

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Luxe, Calme et Volupté

Luxe, Calme et Volupté is an oil painting by the French artist Henri Matisse.

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Luz Elisa Borja Martínez

Luz Elisa Borja Martínez (15 May 1903 – 10 July 1927) was an Ecuadorian poet, pianist, painter, and sculptor.

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Lycée Louis-le-Grand

The Lycée Louis-le-Grand is a prestigious secondary school located in Paris.

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Lycée Saint-Louis

The lycée Saint-Louis is a secondary education establishment located in the 6th arrondissement of Paris, in the Latin Quarter.

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Lyon School

The Lyon School is a term for a group of French artists which gathered around Paul Chenavard.

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Lyric poetry

Lyric poetry is a formal type of poetry which expresses personal emotions or feelings, typically spoken in the first person.

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Lyric Suite (Berg)

The Lyric Suite is a six-movement work for string quartet written by Alban Berg between 1925 and 1926 using methods derived from Arnold Schoenberg's twelve-tone technique.

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Madeleine Dior

Marie Madeleine Juliette Martin, who was born in Angers, France, in 1879 and died in Granville (French department of Manche) in 1931, was the wife of the industrialist Maurice Dior.

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Malay Roy Choudhury

Malay Roy Choudhury (born 29 October 1939) is a Bengali poet, playwright, short story writer, essayist and novelist who founded the Hungryalist movement in the 1960s.

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Malediction and Prayer

Malediction and Prayer is a live performance album by avant-garde musician Diamanda Galás, released on 8 May 1998 by Asphodel and Mute Records.

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Manlio Sgalambro

Manlio Sgalambro (9 December 1924 – 6 March 2014) was an Italian philosopher and writer, born in Lentini.

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Manuel Orazi

Emmanuel Joseph Raphaël Orazi, known as Manuel Orazi was an Italian art nouveau illustrator and poster artist.

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Marcel Raymond

Marcel Raymond (December 20, 1897 in Geneva – November 28, 1981 in Geneva) was a Swiss literary critic who specialized in French literature.

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Marcel Schwob

Mayer André Marcel Schwob, known as Marcel Schwob (23 August 1867 – 26 February 1905), was a Jewish French symbolist writer best known for his short stories and his literary influence on authors such as Jorge Luis Borges and Roberto Bolaño.

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Margarita Luti

Margarita Luti (also Margherita Luti or La Fornarina, "the baker's daughter") was the mistress and model of Raphael.

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Maria (play)

The play Maria, a portrait of the sordid underbelly of Soviet society during the Russian Civil War, was written by Isaac Babel during the mid-1930s.

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Maria Mercè Marçal

Maria Mercè Marçal i Serra (November 13, 1952 – July 5, 1998) was a Catalan poet, professor, writer and translator.

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Maria Teresa Pelegrí i Marimón

Maria Teresa Pelegrí i Marimón (1907–1995) was a Spanish composer.

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Marie-Claire Bancquart

Marie-Claire Bancquart (born 21 July 1932) is a contemporary French poet, essayist, professor emerita and literary critic.

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Mariette Lydis

Mariette Lydis (1887–1970) was an Austrian-Argentine painter.

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Mario Mendoza Zambrano

Mario Mendoza Zambrano (born in 1964, Bogotá, Colombia) is a writer, professor and Colombian journalist.

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Mark-Anthony Turnage

Mark-Anthony Turnage CBE (born 10 June 1960) is an English composer of classical music.

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Marquis de Sade

Donatien Alphonse François, Marquis de Sade (2 June 1740 – 2 December 1814), was a French nobleman, revolutionary politician, philosopher, and writer, famous for his libertine sexuality.

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Marshall Berman

Marshall Howard Berman (November 24, 1940 – September 11, 2013) was an American philosopher and Marxist humanist writer.

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Martin van Maële

Maurice François Alfred Martin van Miële (12 October 1863 – 5 September 1926), better known by his pseudonym Martin van Maële, was a French illustrator of early 20th century literature.

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Mary Hanford Ford

Mary Hanford Ford (November 1, 1856 – February 2, 1937) was an American lecturer, author, art and literature critic and a leader in the women's suffrage movement.

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Mary Reid Kelley

Mary Reid Kelley (born 1979) is an American artist based in upstate New York.

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Mason Ruffner

Mason Ruffner (born 1953) is an American blues and rock singer, guitarist and songwriter.

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Masque of the Red Death (album)

Masque of the Red Death is an anthology album by avant-garde musician Diamanda Galás, released on 1 December 1988 by Mute Records.

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Mateiu Caragiale

Mateiu Ion Caragiale (also credited as Matei or Matheiu; Mateiŭ is an antiquated version;Sorin Antohi,, in Tr@nsit online, Institut für die Wissenschaften vom Menschen, Nr. 21/2002 – January 17, 1936) was a Romanian poet and prose writer, best known for his novel Craii de Curtea-Veche, which portrays the milieu of boyar descendants before and after World War I. Caragiale's style, associated with Symbolism, the Decadent movement of the fin de siècle, and early modernism, was an original element in the Romanian literature of the interwar period.

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Matthias Kadar

Matthias Kadar (born 1977), composer, was born in Paris of Hungarian-German parents.

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Maurice Bowra

Sir Cecil Maurice Bowra CH, FBA (8 April 1898 – 4 July 1971) was an English classical scholar, literary critic and academic, known for his wit.

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Maurice Ravel

Joseph Maurice Ravel (7 March 1875 – 28 December 1937) was a French composer, pianist and conductor.

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Maurice Rollinat

Maurice Rollinat (December 29, 1846 in Châteauroux, Indre – October 26, 1903 in Ivry-sur-Seine) was a French poet.

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Mauricio Rosenmann Taub

Mauricio Rosenmann Taub (born 1932), a native of Santiago, is a Chilean composer, writer and poet.

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Mayra Dias Gomes

Mayra Dias Gomes (born December 15, 1987) is a Brazilian author, reporter, and media personality.

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Màrius Torres

Màrius Torres (1910 in Lleida – 1942 in Sant Quirze Safaja) was a Catalan poet, first published by fellow writer Joan Sales in Mexico.

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Mário de Sá-Carneiro

Mário de Sá-Carneiro (May 19, 1890 – April 26, 1916) was a Portuguese poet and writer.

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Märk hur vår skugga

Märk hur vår skugga (Mark how our shadow) is one of the best-known of the 1790 Fredman's Epistles, where it is No.

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Meanings of minor planet names: 18001–19000

055 | 18055 Fernhildebrandt || || Fern C. Hildebrandt (born 1927) instilled and cultivated an interest in astronomy in codiscoverer Gary Hug at a very early age.

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Medardo Ángel Silva

Medardo Ángel Silva Deleg (born June 8, 1898 at Guayaquil; died June 10, 1919 at the same city) was an Ecuadorian poet and a member of the Generación decapitada.

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Meeraji

Meeraji (May 25, 1912 – November 3, 1949) born Sanaullah Sani Dar Meeraji was an eminent Urdu poet.

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Melt! (Siouxsie and the Banshees song)

"Melt!" is a song by English post-punk band Siouxsie and the Banshees.

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Metz

Metz (Lorraine Franconian pronunciation) is a city in northeast France located at the confluence of the Moselle and the Seille rivers.

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Michael Edward Edgerton

Michael Edward Edgerton (born October 31, 1961 in Racine, Wisconsin) is an American composer and Associate Professor of music composition & theory at the Guangxi Arts University.

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Michael Gielen

Michael Andreas Gielen (born 20 July 1927) is an Austrian conductor and composer.

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Michael Hamburger

Michael Hamburger (22 March 1924 – 7 June 2007) was a noted British translator, poet, critic, memoirist and academic.

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Michel Bulteau

Michel Bulteau is a French poet, essayist, occasional musician and experimental filmmaker, born on 8 October 1949 in Arcueil.

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Michel Butor

Michel Butor (14 September 1926 – 24 August 2016) was a French writer.

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Michel Houellebecq

Michel Houellebecq (born Michel Thomas; 26 February 1956) is a French author, filmmaker, and poet.

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Michelle Handelman

Michelle Handelman (born 1960 in Chicago, Illinois) is an American video installation artist, filmmaker, photographer, performance artist, writer and professor.

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Michizō Tachihara

was a Japanese poet and architect.

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Miguel Ángel Coria

Miguel Ángel Coria Varela (born 24 October 1937 – 24 February 2016) was a Spanish composer of classical music.

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Mihai Codreanu

Mihai Codreanu (July 25, 1876 – October 23, 1957) was a Romanian poet, particularly noted for his sonnets.

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Military art

The genre of military art is art with a military subject matter, regardless of its style or medium.

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Milutin Bojić

Milutin Bojić (Милутин Бојић; –) was a Serbian poet, theatre critic, playwright, and soldier.

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Mindlag Project

Mindlag Project is a French metal band, created in 1999 by the Martinez brothers in Vitrolles, near Marseilles The band has released 4 albums: Karybda (2002), Skylla (2004), De Charybde en Scylla… (2006) and Mindlag Project (2009) The band is currently signed on the label M Office records, a subsidiary of Pervade Productions.

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Mircea Demetriade

Mircea Constantin Demetriade (also rendered as Demetriad, Dimitriade, Dimitriadi, or Demitriadi; September 2, 1861 – September 11, 1914) was a Romanian poet, playwright and actor, one of the earliest animators of the local Symbolist movement.

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Missak Manouchian

Missak Manouchian (Western Միսաք Մանուշեան;, 1 September 1906 – 21 February 1944) was a French-Armenian poet and communist activist.

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MMXII (album)

MMXII ("2012" in Roman numerals) is the fourteenth studio album by English rock band Killing Joke, released on 2 April 2012 by record label Spinefarm and distributed worldwide by Universal Music Group.

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Modernism

Modernism is a philosophical movement that, along with cultural trends and changes, arose from wide-scale and far-reaching transformations in Western society during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

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Modernism: The Lure of Heresy

Modernism: The Lure of Heresy is a 2007 book about Modernism by Peter Gay, in which the author discusses art-forms including literature, painting, architecture, music, cinema and sculpture.

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Modernity

Modernity, a topic in the humanities and social sciences, is both a historical period (the modern era), as well as the ensemble of particular socio-cultural norms, attitudes and practices that arose in the wake of Renaissance, in the "Age of Reason" of 17th-century thought and the 18th-century "Enlightenment".

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Montparnasse

Montparnasse(French) is an area of Paris, France, on the left bank of the river Seine, centred at the crossroads of the Boulevard du Montparnasse and the Rue de Rennes, between the Rue de Rennes and boulevard Raspail.

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Montparnasse Cemetery

Montparnasse Cemetery (Cimetière du Montparnasse) is a cemetery in the Montparnasse quarter of Paris, part of the city's 14th arrondissement.

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Motiejus Gustaitis

Motiejus Gustaitis (Мотеюс Густайтис, 27 February 1870 – 23 December 1927) was a Lithuanian Symbolist poet, who used numerous pseudonyms (among them Balandis, Bendrakelionis, Embė, G. M., K. M. G.). He was also a translator and educator, as well as Catholic priest.

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Motojirō Kajii

was a Japanese author in the early Shōwa period known for his poetic short stories.

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Murdoch Burnett

Murdoch Maclean Burnett (9 October 1953 – 20 September 2015) was a Canadian poet, performance artist, editor, and community activist.

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Musa Ćazim Ćatić

Musa Ćazim Ćatić (12 March 1878 – 6 April 1915) was a prominent Bosniak Muslim poet of the Bosnian Renaissance at the turn of the 20th century.

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Musée Rodin

The Musée Rodin in Paris, France, is a museum that was opened in 1919, dedicated to the works of the French sculptor Auguste Rodin.

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Music based on the works of Oscar Wilde

This is an incomplete list of music based on the works of Oscar Wilde.

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Music in the Tuileries

Music in the Tuileries is an 1862 painting by Édouard Manet.

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My Life to Live

My Life to Live (Vivre sa vie: film en douze tableaux; To Live Her Life: A Film in Twelve Scenes) is a 1962 French New Wave drama film directed by Jean-Luc Godard.

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My Secret History

My Secret History is a novel by Paul Theroux published in June 1989 by Putnam Adult in the US and Hamish Hamilton in the UK.

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Mylène Farmer

Mylène Jeanne Gautier (born 12 September 1961), known professionally as Mylène Farmer, is a Canadian-born French singer, songwriter, occasional actress, writer, and entrepreneur.

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N. D. Cocea

N.

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Nadar

Gaspard-Félix Tournachon (6 April 1820 – 20 March 1910), known by the pseudonym Nadar, was a French photographer, caricaturist, journalist, novelist, and balloonist (or, more accurately, proponent of manned flight).

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Napoleon Crossing the Alps

Napoleon Crossing the Alps (also known as Napoleon at the Saint-Bernard Pass or Bonaparte Crossing the Alps) is the title given to the five versions of an oil on canvas equestrian portrait of Napoleon Bonaparte painted by the French artist Jacques-Louis David between 1801 and 1805.

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National poet

A national poet or national bard is a poet held by tradition and popular acclaim to represent the identity, beliefs and principles of a particular national culture.

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Nazand Begikhani

Nazand Begikhani is a contemporary British writer, poet and academic researcher of Kurdish origin, and an active advocate of human rights.

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Négritude

Négritude is a framework of critique and literary theory, developed mainly by francophone intellectuals, writers, and politicians of the African diaspora during the 1930s.

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Ned Rorem

Ned Rorem (born October 23, 1923) is an American composer and diarist.

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Negative capability

Negative capability was a phrase first used by Romantic poet John Keats in 1817 to characterise the capacity of the greatest writers (particularly Shakespeare) to pursue a vision of artistic beauty even when it leads them into intellectual confusion and uncertainty, as opposed to a preference for philosophical certainty over artistic beauty.

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Neo-Grec

Néo-Grec was a Neoclassical revival style of the mid-to-late 19th century that was popularized in architecture, the decorative arts, and in painting during France's Second Empire, or the reign of Napoleon III (1852–1870).

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Nepenthe

Nepenthe (νηπενθές) is a fictional medicine for sorrow, literally an anti-depressant – a "drug of forgetfulness" mentioned in ancient Greek literature and Greek mythology, depicted as originating in Egypt.

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Neue Deutsche Todeskunst

Neue Deutsche Todeskunst (NDT, translated as "New German Death Art") is a musical genre that developed in Germany in the late 1980s.

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New Directions Publishing

New Directions Publishing Corp. is an independent book publishing company that was founded in 1936 by James Laughlin and incorporated in 1964. Its offices are located at 80 Eighth Avenue in New York City.

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Nicholas Moore

Nicholas Moore (16 November 1918 – 26 January 1986) was an English poet, associated with the New Apocalyptics in the 1940s, whose reputation stood as high as Dylan Thomas’s.

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Nick Awde

Nick Awde Hill (born 29 December 1961 in London, England) is a British writer, artist, singer-songwriter and critic.

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Nicolae Davidescu

Nicolae Davidescu (October 24, 1888 – June 12, 1954) was a Romanian symbolist poet and novelist.

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Night (Michelangelo)

Night is a sculpture in marble (155x150 cm, maximum length 194 cm diagonally) by the Italian Renaissance sculptor Michelangelo Buonarroti.

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Night in paintings (Western art)

The depiction of night in paintings is common in Western art.

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Nikos Fokas

Nikos Fokas (Νίκος Φωκάς) is a Greek poet, essayist and translator.

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Nikos Kavvadias

Nikos Kavvadias (Νίκος Καββαδίας; January 11, 1910 in Nikolsk-Ussuriysky – February 10, 1975 in Athens) was a Greek sailor, poet and writer; he used his travels around the world as a sailor, and life at sea and its adventures, as powerful metaphors for the escape of ordinary people outside the boundaries of reality.

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Niranjan Bhagat

Niranjan Narhari Bhagat (18 May 1926 – 1 February 2018) was an Indian Gujarati language poet and commentator who won the 1999 Sahitya Akademi Award for Gujarati language for his critical work Gujarati Sahiyta – Purvardha Uttarardha.

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No one likes us, we don't care

"No one likes us, we don't care" is a football chant which originated with the supporters of Millwall Football Club in the late seventies.

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Nocturne in Black and Gold – The Falling Rocket

Nocturne in Black and Gold – The Falling Rocket is a c. 1875 painting by James Abbott McNeill Whistler held in the Detroit Institute of Arts.

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Nocturno (Roy Brown album)

Nocturno is a studio album from Puerto Rican singer Roy Brown with the band Radio Pirata.

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Nydia Lamarque

Nydia Lamarque (1906–1982) was an Argentine poet.

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O Florida, Venereal Soil

"O Florida, Venereal Soil" is a poem from Wallace Stevens's first book of poetry, Harmonium.

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Obscenity

An obscenity is any utterance or act that strongly offends the prevalent morality of the time.

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Octave Penguilly L'Haridon

Octave Penguilly L'Haridon (18 April 1811 - 3 November 1872) was a French painter known for his works depicting Breton landscape, myths and history.

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Octave Uzanne

Octave Uzanne (14 September 1851 – 31 October 1931) was a 19th-century French bibliophile, writer, publisher, and journalist.

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Odalisque with Slave

Odalisque with Slave (French: L'Odalisque à l'esclave) is an 1839 painting by Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres commissioned by Charles Marcotte.

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Of Cabbages and Kings (EP)

Of Cabbages and Kings is the eponymously titled EP by Of Cabbages and Kings, released by Purge/Sound League on 1987.

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Oleg Haslavsky

Oleg Haslavsky (born 8 July 1948 in Taganrog, Soviet Union) is a Russian poet and translator.

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Olga Orozco

Olga Orozco, 1960 Olga Orozco (1920–1999) (real name Olga Noemí Gugliotta) was an Argentine poet born in Toay, La Pampa.

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Olympia (Manet)

Olympia is a painting by Édouard Manet, first exhibited at the 1865 Paris Salon, which shows a nude woman ("Olympia") lying on a bed being brought flowers by a servant.

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Omar Abu Risha

Omar Abu-Riche (عمر أبو ريشة) (10 April 1910 – 15 July 1990) was an influential Syrian poet known for his pioneering works.

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Ondes Martenot

The ondes Martenot ("Martenot waves"), also known as the ondium Martenot, Martenot and ondes musicales, is an early electronic musical instrument invented in 1928 by Maurice Martenot.

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Only Lovers Left Alive

Only Lovers Left Alive is a 2013 internationally co-produced vampire film written and directed by Jim Jarmusch, starring Tilda Swinton, Tom Hiddleston, Mia Wasikowska, Anton Yelchin, Jeffrey Wright, Slimane Dazi and John Hurt.

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Orhan Veli Kanık

Orhan Veli Kanık or Orhan Veli (13 April 1914, Beykoz, İstanbul – 14 November 1950, İstanbul) was a Turkish poet.

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Orties (band)

Orties is a French band composed of twin sisters, Kincy and Antha.

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Outline of poetry

The following outline is provided as an overview of and introduction to poetry: Poetry – a form of art in which language is used for its aesthetic qualities, in addition to, or instead of, its apparent meaning.

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Ovid

Publius Ovidius Naso (20 March 43 BC – 17/18 AD), known as Ovid in the English-speaking world, was a Roman poet who lived during the reign of Augustus.

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Ovid among the Scythians

Ovid among the Scythians (1859 and 1862) is the title of two oil paintings by French artist Eugène Delacroix.

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P. Lankesh

P.

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Paintings of Abanindranath Tagore

Paintings of Abanindranath Tagore is a book on Abanindranath Tagore's paintings by art historian R. Siva Kumar.

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Pale Flower

is a 1964 Japanese film noir directed by Masahiro Shinoda.

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Pamela Harrison (composer)

Pamela Harrison (28 November 1915 – 28 August 1990) was an English pianist, music teacher and composer.

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Pantoum

The pantoum is a poetic form derived from the pantun, a Malay verse form: specifically from the pantun berkait, a series of interwoven quatrains.

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Paris

Paris is the capital and most populous city of France, with an area of and a population of 2,206,488.

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Paris during the Second Empire

During the Second French Empire, the reign of Emperor Napoleon III (1852–1870), Paris was the largest city in continental Europe and a leading center for finance, commerce, fashion, and the arts.

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Paris under Louis-Philippe

Paris during the reign of King Louis-Philippe (1830-1848) was the city described in the novels of Honoré de Balzac and Victor Hugo.

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Pascal Obispo

Pascal Michel Obispo (born 8 January 1965) is a French singer-songwriter.

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Pascal Pia

Pascal Pia (15 August 1903, Paris – 27 September 1979, Paris), born Pierre Durand, was a French writer, journalist, illustrator and scholar.

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Patrick van Deurzen

Patrick van Deurzen (Eindhoven, 27 January 1964) is a Dutch composer.

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Patti Smith

Patricia Lee "Patti" Smith (born December 30, 1946) is an American singer-songwriter, poet, and visual artist who became an influential component of the New York City punk rock movement with her 1975 debut album Horses.

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Paul Bénichou

Paul Bénichou (19 September 1908 – 14 May 2001) was a French writer, intellectual, critic, and literary historian.

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Paul Celan

Paul Celan (23 November 1920 – c. 20 April 1970) was a Romanian-born German language poet and translator.

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Paul Chenavard

Paul-Marc-Joseph Chenavard (9 December 1808 – 1895, Paris) was a French painter.

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Paul Verlaine

Paul-Marie Verlaine (30 March 1844 – 8 January 1896) was a French poet associated with the Decadent movement.

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Pavel Samiec

Pavel Samiec (born 1984) is a Czech composer and accordionist.

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Pedro Balmaceda

Pedro Balmaceda Toro (1868 – June 1, 1889) was a Chilean writer and journalist, considered the promotor of the Modernismo school in Latin America.

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Pedro Salinas

Pedro Salinas y Serrano (27 November 1891 in Madrid – 4 December 1951 in Boston) was a Spanish poet, a member of the Generation of '27, as well as a university teacher, scholar and literary critic.

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Penguin Great Ideas

Penguin Great Ideas is a series of largely non-fiction books published by Penguin Books.

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Pentti Holappa

Pentti Vihtori Holappa (11 August 1927 – 10 October 2017) was a Finnish poet, writer and politician.

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Percy Mansell Jones

Percy Mansell Jones (11 April 1889 - 24 January 1968) was a Welsh Professor of French.

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Perpessicius

Perpessicius (pen name of Dumitru S. Panaitescu, also known as Panait Șt. Dumitru, D. P. Perpessicius and Panaitescu-Perpessicius; October 22, 1891 – March 29, 1971) was a Romanian literary historian and critic, poet, essayist and fiction writer.

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Pessimism

Pessimism is a mental attitude.

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Peste Noire

Peste Noire, taking their name from the Black Plague, is a black metal band from La Chaise-Dieu, France.

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Pete Doherty

Peter Doherty (born 12 March 1979) is an English musician, songwriter, actor, poet, writer, and artist.

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Peter Gizzi

Peter Gizzi (born 1959 in Alma, Michigan) is an American poet, essayist, editor and teacher.

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Peter Quennell

Sir Peter Courtney Quennell CBE (9 March 1905 – 27 October 1993) was an English biographer, literary historian, editor, essayist, poet, and critic.

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Phantom 2040

Phantom 2040 is a French-American animated series loosely based on the comic strip hero The Phantom, created by Lee Falk.

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Philippe de Montebello

Philippe de Montebello (born May 16, 1936 in Paris) is a museum director.

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Philippe Léotard

Philippe Léotard (Ange Philippe Paul André Léotard-Tomasi; 28 August 1940 – 25 August 2001) was a French actor, poet, and singer.

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Philippe Rebeyrol

Philippe Rebeyrol (1917–2013) was a French diplomat.

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Philosophy of psychedelics

Philosophy of psychedelics is the philosophical investigation of the psychedelic experience.

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Phryne

Phryne (Φρύνη) (born c. 371 BC) was an ancient Greek courtesan (hetaira), from the fourth century BC.

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Pierre Boulez

Pierre Louis Joseph Boulez CBE (26 March 1925 – 5 January 2016) was a French composer, conductor, writer and founder of institutions.

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Pierre Capdevielle (musician)

Pierre Capdevielle (1 February 1906 – 9 July 1969) was a French conductor, composer, and music critic.

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Pierre de Bréville

Pierre Onfroy de Bréville (21 February 1861 – 24 September 1949) was a French composer.

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Pierre Dupont

Pierre Dupont (April 23, 1821 – July 25, 1870), French songwriter, the son of a blacksmith, was born in Lyon.

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Pierre Félix Masseau

Pierre Félix Masseau (17 March 1869 – 1937), known professionally as Fix-Masseau, was a noted French sculptor and father of poster artist Pierre Fix-Masseau.

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Pierre Martory

Pierre Martory (December 1, 1920 – October 5, 1998) was a French poet whose influence on New York School poets was quiet but profound.

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Pierre Molinier

Pierre Molinier (April 13, 1900 – March 3, 1976) was a French painter, photographer and "maker of objects".

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Pierre Puget

Pierre Puget (16 October 1620 – 2 December 1694) was a French painter, sculptor, architect and engineer.

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Pierre-Jules Hetzel

Pierre-Jules Hetzel (January 15, 1814 – March 17, 1886) was a French editor and publisher.

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Pierre-Paul Prud'hon

Pierre-Paul Prud'hon (April 4, 1758 – February 16, 1823) was a French Romantic painter and draughtsman best known for his allegorical paintings and portraits.

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Pierrot

Pierrot is a stock character of pantomime and commedia dell'arte whose origins are in the late seventeenth-century Italian troupe of players performing in Paris and known as the Comédie-Italienne; the name is a diminutive of Pierre (Peter), via the suffix -ot. His character in contemporary popular culture—in poetry, fiction, and the visual arts, as well as works for the stage, screen, and concert hall—is that of the sad clown, pining for love of Columbine, who usually breaks his heart and leaves him for Harlequin.

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Poète maudit

A poète maudit (accursed poet) is a poet living a life outside or against society.

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Poems in Prose (Wilde collection)

Poems in Prose is the collective title of six prose poems published by Oscar Wilde in The Fortnightly Review (July 1894).

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Poetry

Poetry (the term derives from a variant of the Greek term, poiesis, "making") is a form of literature that uses aesthetic and rhythmic qualities of language—such as phonaesthetics, sound symbolism, and metre—to evoke meanings in addition to, or in place of, the prosaic ostensible meaning.

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Point Counter Point

Point Counter Point is a novel by Aldous Huxley, first published in 1928.

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Point de suture

Point de Suture is the seventh studio album by French singer-songwriter Mylène Farmer, and her 14th album overall.

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Poperinge

Poperinge (also spelled Poperinghe in the past) is a municipality located in the Belgian province of West Flanders, Flemish Region, and has a history going back to medieval times.

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Poppy Z. Brite

Billy Martin (born May 25, 1967), known professionally as Poppy Z. Brite, is an American author.

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Portrait of Comtesse d'Haussonville

Portrait of Comtesse d'Haussonville is an 1845 oil on canvas painting by the French Neoclassical artist Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres.

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Portrait painting

Portrait painting is a genre in painting, where the intent is to depict a human subject.

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Portuguese literature

Portuguese literature is, generally speaking, literature written in the Portuguese language, particularly by citizens of Portugal; it may also refer to literature written by people living in Portugal, Brazil, Angola and Mozambique, as well as other Portuguese-speaking countries.

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Postcolonial literature

Postcolonial literature is the literature of countries that were colonised, mainly by European countries.

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Préludes (Debussy)

Claude Debussy's Préludes are 24 pieces for solo piano, divided into two books of 12 preludes each.

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Priamel

A priamel is a literary and rhetorical device found throughout Western literature and beyond, and consisting of a series of listed alternatives that serve as foils to the true subject of the poem, which is revealed in a climax.

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Program music

Program music or programme music is a type of art music that attempts to musically render an extra-musical narrative.

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Prose poetry

Prose poetry is poetry written in prose instead of using verse but preserving poetic qualities such as heightened imagery, parataxis and emotional effects.

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Prosper Mérimée

Prosper Mérimée (28 September 1803 – 23 September 1870) was an important French writer in the school of Romanticism, and one of the pioneers of the novella, a short novel or long short story.

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Prostitution in Impressionist painting

Prostitution was a very wide-spread phenomenon in nineteenth-century Paris and became a common subject in the art of the period.

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Proust Questionnaire

The Proust Questionnaire is a questionnaire about one's personality.

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Psalm 130

Psalm 130 (Vulgate numbering: Psalm 129) is the 130th psalm of the Book of Psalms, one of the Penitential psalms.

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Psychogeography

Psychogeography is an exploration of urban environments that emphasizes playfulness and "drifting".

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Qu’est-ce Pour Nous

Qu’est-ce Pour Nous is the fifth studio album by Echo Orbiter.

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R. J. Dent

R J Dent is an English writer of fiction and non-fiction.

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Rachilde

Rachilde was the pen name and preferred identity of novelist and playwright Marguerite Vallette-Eymery (February 11, 1860 – April 4, 1953).

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Radu D. Rosetti

Radu D. Rosetti or Rossetti (December 13Constantin Ciopraga, Literatura română între 1900 și 1918, pp. 296–297. Iași: Editura Junimea, 1970 or December 18,Călinescu, p. 593 1874 – 1964) was a Romanian poet, playwright, and short story writer, also distinguished as an attorney and activist.

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Ragpicker

A Rag-picker, or Chiffonnier, is term for someone who makes a living by rummaging through refuse in the streets to collect material for salvage.

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Ramón López Velarde

Ramón López Velarde (June 15, 1888 – June 19, 1921) was a Mexican poet.

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Ransom (disambiguation)

Ransom is the practice of holding a prisoner to extort money or property to secure their release, or it can refer to the sum of money involved.

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Red Meat

Max Cannon's Red Meat is an independent comic strip begun in 1989.

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René Char

René Char (14 June 1907 – 19 February 1988) was a 20th-century French poet and member of the French Resistance.

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René Galand

René Marie Galand (Reun ar C'halan in Breton) (January 27, 1923 - May 28, 2017) was a writer and Professor of French.

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René Laforgue

René Laforgue (5 November 18946 March 1962) was a French psychiatrist and psychoanalyst.

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René Leibowitz

René Leibowitz (17 February 1913 – 29 August 1972) was a Polish, later naturalised French, composer, conductor, music theorist and teacher.

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Renzo Novatore

Abele Rizieri Ferrari (May 12, 1890 – November 29, 1922), better known by the pen name Renzo Novatore, was an Italian individualist anarchist, illegalist and anti-fascist poet, philosopher and militant, now mostly known for his posthumously published book Toward the Creative Nothing (Verso il nulla creatore) and associated with ultra-modernist trends of futurism.

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Revolutions of 1848

The Revolutions of 1848, known in some countries as the Spring of Nations, People's Spring, Springtime of the Peoples, or the Year of Revolution, were a series of political upheavals throughout Europe in 1848.

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Richard Herne Shepherd

Richard Herne Shepherd (1842–1895) was an English bibliographer.

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Richard Howard

Richard Joseph Howard (born October 13, 1929; adopted as Richard Joseph Orwitz) is an American poet, literary critic, essayist, teacher, and translator.

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Richard L. Tierney

Richard Louis Tierney (born August 7, 1936) is an American writer, poet and scholar of H. P. Lovecraft.

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Richard Wagner

Wilhelm Richard Wagner (22 May 181313 February 1883) was a German composer, theatre director, polemicist, and conductor who is chiefly known for his operas (or, as some of his later works were later known, "music dramas").

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Rituals (Rotting Christ album)

Rituals is the twelfth full-length album by Greek extreme metal band Rotting Christ.

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River Lethe in popular culture

In Classical Greek, Lethe (Λήθη) literally means "forgetfulness" or "concealment" and is related to the Greek word for "truth": a-lethe-ia (αλήθεια), meaning "un-forgetfulness" or "un-concealment".

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Roadmarks

Roadmarks is a science fantasy novel by American author Roger Zelazny, written during the late 1970s and published in 1979.

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Robert Desnos

Robert Desnos (4 July 1900 – 8 June 1945) was a French surrealist poet who played a key role in the Surrealist movement of his day.

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Robert Lowell

Robert Traill Spence Lowell IV (March 1, 1917 – September 12, 1977) was an American poet.

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Roberto Calasso

Roberto Calasso (born 30 May 1941 in Florence) is an Italian writer and publisher.

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Rock 'n' Roll Suicide

"Rock 'n' Roll Suicide" is a song by David Bowie, originally released as the closing track on the album The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars in June 1972.

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Rodolphe Bresdin

Rodolphe Bresdin was a French draughtsman and engraver, born in Le Fresne-sur-Loire on 12 August 1822, who died in Sèvres on 11 January 1885.

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Roland Bocquet

Roland Bocquet (3 June 1878 – 16 October 1956) was a British composer, pianist and teacher who for most of his career was based in the city of Dresden, and is chiefly associated with the composition of German Lieder.

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Romanticism

Romanticism (also known as the Romantic era) was an artistic, literary, musical and intellectual movement that originated in Europe toward the end of the 18th century, and in most areas was at its peak in the approximate period from 1800 to 1850.

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Rosemary Tonks

Rosemary Tonks (17 October 1928 – 15 April 2014) was an English poet and author.

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Roy Campbell (poet)

Ignatius Royston Dunnachie Campbell, better known as Roy Campbell, (2 October 1901 – 23 April 1957) was a South African poet and satirist.

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Rozz Williams

Rozz Williams (born Roger Alan Painter; November 6, 1963 – April 1, 1998) was an American vocalist, musician, artist, and poet most known for his work with the bands Christian Death, Shadow Project (with musician Eva O), and with the industrial project Premature Ejaculation.

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Rudolf Kassner

Rudolf Kassner (1873 – 1 April 1959) was an Austrian writer, essayist, translator and cultural philosopher.

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Rue de Seine

Rue de Seine is a street in the 6th arrondissement of Paris.

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Russian symbolism

Russian symbolism was an intellectual and artistic movement predominant at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th century.

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Saint of the Pit

Saint of the Pit is the fourth album by American avant-garde artist Diamanda Galás, released on 17 November 1986 by record label Mute.

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Saint-Preux

Saint-Preux (born 1950) is a French composer of contemporary classical music which also combines elements from popular music and electronic music.

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Salimullah Khan

Salimullah Khan (সলিমুল্লাহ খান; born 18 August 1958) is a Bangladeshi writer, thinker, critic, and public intellectual.

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Salon (Paris)

The Salon (Salon), or rarely Paris Salon (French: Salon de Paris), beginning in 1667 was the official art exhibition of the Académie des Beaux-Arts in Paris.

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Salon de la Rose + Croix

The Salon de la Rose + Croix was a series of six art and music salons hosted by Joséphin Péladan in 1890s Paris.

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Salon des Refusés

The Salon des Refusés, French for "exhibition of rejects", is generally an exhibition of works rejected by the jury of the official Paris Salon, but the term is most famously used to refer to the Salon des Refusés of 1863.

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Sam Spiegel (actor)

Sam Spiegel (also known as "Sam Hervé Spiegel") is a French actor.

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Samuel Loveman

Samuel E. Loveman (January 14, 1887 – May 14, 1976) was an American poet, critic, and dramatist probably best known for his connections with writers H.P. Lovecraft and Hart Crane.

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Sappho

Sappho (Aeolic Greek Ψαπφώ, Psappho; c. 630 – c. 570 BC) was an archaic Greek poet from the island of Lesbos.

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Sarrasine

Sarrasine is a novella written by Honoré de Balzac.

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Sasha Lazard

Dominique "Sasha" Lazard is an American classical crossover singer.

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Satanic School

The Satanic School was a name applied by Robert Southey to a class of writers headed by Byron and Shelley, because, according to him, their productions were "characterized by a Satanic spirit of pride and audacious impiety." The term was, therefore, initially coined in Southey's A Vision of Judgement (1821) as one of opprobrium and moral condemnation.

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Scapigliatura

Scapigliatura is the name of an artistic movement that developed in Italy after the Risorgimento period (1815–1871).

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Screamworks: Love in Theory and Practice

Screamworks: Love in Theory and Practice, Chapters 1−13 is the seventh studio album by Finnish gothic rock band HIM.

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Selected Essays, 1917-1932

Selected Essays, 1917-1932 is a collection of prose and literary criticism by T. S. Eliot.

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Sensory overload

Sensory overload occurs when one or more of the body's senses experiences over-stimulation from the environment.

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Serge Gainsbourg

Serge Gainsbourg (born Lucien Ginsburg;; 2 April 1928 – 2 March 1991) was a French singer, songwriter, pianist, film composer, poet, painter, screenwriter, writer, actor, and director.

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Serge Gainsbourg N° 4

Serge Gainsbourg N° 4 is the fourth album by French musician Serge Gainsbourg, released in 1962.

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Sergio Witz

Sergio Witz Rodríguez (born 1962 in Campeche, Campeche) is a Mexican poet.

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Serio Oriento-Okcidento

Serio Oriento-Okcidento (East-West Series) is a publication series initiated by the Universal Esperanto Association, which aims to contribute to the "Program of UNESCO for the study and mutual appreciation of cultures." In the series, particularly important and representative works of world literature are translated into Esperanto.

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Sexual Personae

Sexual Personae: Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson is a 1990 work about sexual decadence in Western literature and the visual arts by scholar Camille Paglia, in which the author addresses major artists and writers such as Donatello, Sandro Botticelli, Leonardo da Vinci, Edmund Spenser, William Shakespeare, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Lord Byron, Emily Brontë, and Oscar Wilde.

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Shannon Bramer

Shannon Bramer (born 1973) is a Canadian poet.

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She (Angel)

"She" is episode 13 of season 1 in the television show Angel.

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Shumona Sinha

Shumona Sinha, other spelling Sumana Sinha; (Bengali: সুমনা সিনহা, Calcutta, June 27, 1973) is a French writer from West Bengal, India, who lives in Paris.

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Sigbjørn Obstfelder

Sigbjørn Obstfelder (21 November 1866 – 29 July 1900) was a 19th-century Norwegian writer and poet.

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Sima Pandurović

Simeon "Sima" Pandurović (Сима Пандуровић; 14 April 1883 – 27 August 1960) was a Serbian poet, part of the Symbolist movement in European poetry at the time.

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Simbolul

Simbolul (Romanian for "The Symbol") was a Romanian literary and art magazine, published in Bucharest between October and December 1912.

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Société Libre des Beaux-Arts

The Société Libre des Beaux-Arts ("Free Society of Fine Arts") was an organization formed in 1868 by Belgian artists to react against academicism and to advance Realist painting and artistic freedom.

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Sociology of literature

The sociology of literature is a subfield of the sociology of culture.

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Sofia Karlsson (singer)

Sofia Karlsson (born 25 March 1975 in Enskede, Sweden) is a Swedish folk singer.

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Solange Knopf

Solange Knopf (born 1957, Brussels, Belgium) is an artist who often work atop pages of books and Baudelaire's poetry.

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Sonnet

A sonnet is a poem in a specific form which originated in Italy; Giacomo da Lentini is credited with its invention.

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Sonnets to Orpheus

The Sonnets to Orpheus (Die Sonette an Orpheus) are a cycle of 55 sonnets written in 1922 by the Bohemian-Austrian poet Rainer Maria Rilke (1875–1926).

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Sophia Parnok

Sophia Parnok (София Яковлевна Парно́к, 30 July 1885 O.S./11 August 1885 (N. S.) – 26 August 1933) was a Russian poet, journalist and translator.

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Sophia Wallace

Sophia Wallace (born 1978) is an American conceptual artist and photographer.

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Source Tags & Codes

Source Tags & Codes is the third studio album by American rock band …And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead.

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Spanish gallery

The Spanish gallery, also called Spanish museum was a gallery of Spanish painting created by French King Louis Philippe I in 1838, shown in the Louvre, then dismantled in 1853.

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Spanish Modernist literature

Spanish Modernist literature is the literature of Spain written during the Modernism (beginning of the 20th century) as the arts evolved and opposed the previous Realism.

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Spells and Philtres

Spells and Philtres is a collection of poems by Clark Ashton Smith.

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Spirits of the Dead

Spirits of the Dead (Tre passi nel delirio, Histoires extraordinaires) is an "omnibus" film comprising three segments.

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Spleen

The spleen is an organ found in virtually all vertebrates.

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Spleen (disambiguation)

The spleen is an organ in the human body.

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Spleen and Ideal

Spleen and Ideal is the second studio album by Australian musical act Dead Can Dance.

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Srpska književna zadruga

The '''Srpska književna zadruga''' (Serbian-Cyrillic: Српска књижевна задруга; English: Serbian Literary Cooperative) is Serbia's second oldest still existing publishing house after Matica srpska.

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St. John's College (Annapolis/Santa Fe)

St.

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Stanisław Korab-Brzozowski

Stanisław Korab-Brzozowski (1876 - 1901 in Warsaw) Polish poet and translator, brother of a poet Wincenty Korab-Brzozowski and son of a romantic bard Karol Brzozowski.

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Stars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand

Stars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand (1984) is a science fiction novel by Samuel R. Delany.

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Stéphane Mallarmé

Stéphane Mallarmé (18 March 1842 – 9 September 1898), whose real name was Étienne Mallarmé, was a French poet and critic.

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Stefan George

Stefan Anton George (12 July 18684 December 1933) was a German symbolist poet and a translator of Dante Alighieri, William Shakespeare, and Charles Baudelaire.

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Stephan Roll

Stephan Roll (pen name of Gheorghe Dinu, also credited as Stéphane, Stefan or Ștefan Roll; June 5, 1904 – May 14, 1974) was a Romanian poet, editor, film critic, and communist militant.

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Stephen Rodefer

Stephen Rodefer (November 20, 1940 – August 22, 2015) was an American poet and painter who lived in Paris and London.

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Steve Moore (playwright)

Steve Moore is an American playwright born in Chicago, Illinois.

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Steven Gerber

Steven Roy Gerber (September 28, 1948 – May 28, 2015) was an American composer of classical music.

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Stylianos Alexiou

Stylianos Alexiou (Στυλιανός Αλεξίου, 13 February 1921 – 12 November 2013) was an archaeologist, philologist and university professor.

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Sue Lenier

Susan Jennifer Lenier (born 9 October 1957) is an English writer.

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Surrealist Manifesto

Three Surrealist Manifestos were issued during the Surrealist movement, in 1924 and 1929.

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Suspiria de Profundis

Suspiria de profundis (a Latin phrase meaning "sighs from the depths") is one of the best-known and most distinctive literary works of the English essayist Thomas De Quincey.

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Swan Hennessy

(Edward) Swan Hennessy (24 November 1866 – 26 October 1929) was an Irish-American composer and pianist who lived much of his life in Paris.

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Symbolism (arts)

Symbolism was a late nineteenth-century art movement of French, Russian and Belgian origin in poetry and other arts.

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Symbolist Manifesto

The Symbolist Manifesto (French: Le Symbolisme) was published on 18 September 1886Lucie-Smith, Edward. (1972) Symbolist Art.

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Symbolist movement in Romania

The Symbolist movement in Romania, active during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, marked the development of Romanian culture in both literature and visual arts.

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Sympathy for the Devil

"Sympathy for the Devil" is a samba rock song by the Rolling Stones, written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards.

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Symphony in White, No. 1: The White Girl

Symphony in White, No.

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Symphony in White, No. 3

Symphony in White, No.

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Synesthesia

Synesthesia is a perceptual phenomenon in which stimulation of one sensory or cognitive pathway leads to automatic, involuntary experiences in a second sensory or cognitive pathway.

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Synesthesia in literature

Synesthesia is a neurological condition in which one or more sensory modalities become linked.

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Syphilis

Syphilis is a sexually transmitted infection caused by the bacterium Treponema pallidum subspecies pallidum.

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Szidi Tobias

Szidi Tobias (born 28 May 1967) is a Slovak actress and musician of Hungarian ancestry.

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T. Winter-Damon

T.

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Tabes dorsalis

Tabes dorsalis, also known as syphilitic myelopathy, is a slow degeneration (specifically, demyelination) of the neural tracts primarily in the dorsal columns (posterior columns) of the spinal cord (the portion closest to the back of the body) & dorsal roots.

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Takako Takahashi

was a Japanese author.

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Take Me to the Pilot

"Take Me to the Pilot" is a rock song performed by British musician Elton John.

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Talk (Paul Kelly album)

Talk is the debut album by Australian rock group Paul Kelly and the Dots and was originally released on 30 March 1981 by Mushroom Records and re-released in 1990.

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Tatsuji Miyoshi

was a Japanese poet, literary critic, and literary editor active during the Shōwa period of Japan.

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Tattler (Chinese periodical)

Tattler (语丝) (Pinyin Yǔsī, "Language Thread") was an important Chinese weekly journal founded in 1924 and very influential in the establishment of the new literature in China.

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Tản Đà

Nguyễn Khắc Hiếu (阮克孝), pen name Tản Đà (chữ Hán: 傘沱, 19 May 1889 - 7 June 1939) was a Vietnamese poet.

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Tõnu Õnnepalu

Tõnu Õnnepalu (born 13 September 1962), also known by the pen names Emil Tode and Anton Nigov, is an Estonian poet, author and translator.

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Tendance

Tendance (French for Trend) is a reissue of French singer Amanda Lear's studio album Heart.

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Terence Sellers

Terence Sellers (1952-2016) was a New York-based writer deeply involved in the Downtown Arts Scene.

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Théâtre des Mathurins

The théâtre des Mathurins, also called Les Mathurins, is a Parisian theatre located 36, rue des Mathurins in the 8th arrondissement of Paris established in 1897.

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Théophile Gautier

Pierre Jules Théophile Gautier (30 August 1811 – 23 October 1872) was a French poet, dramatist, novelist, journalist, and art and literary critic.

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Thơ mới

New Poetry Movement (Vietnamese: Phong-trào Thơ-mới) was a literary movement in 1930s colonial Vietnam, abandoning the stylized forms of Chinese-influenced poetry in chu Nom for free verse in Latin-alphabet quoc ngu.

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The Absinthe Drinker (Manet painting)

The Absinthe Drinker (French: Le Buveur d'absinthe) is an early painting by Édouard Manet, c.1859, considered to be his first major painting and first original work.

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The Art of Struggle

The Art of Struggle is a 1996 poetry collection by the French writer Michel Houellebecq.

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The Birthday Party (band)

The Birthday Party (originally known as The Boys Next Door) were an Australian post-punk band, active from 1978 to 1983.

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The Blind Leading the Blind

The Blind Leading the Blind, Blind, or The Parable of the Blind (De parabel der blinden) is a painting by the Netherlandish Renaissance artist Pieter Bruegel the Elder, completed in 1568.

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The City of Dreaming Books

The City of Dreaming Books (original title: Die Stadt der Träumenden Bücher) is the fourth novel in the Zamonia series written and illustrated by German author Walter Moers, but the third to be translated into English by John Brownjohn.

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The Death of Adonis (Rodin)

The Death of Adonis is a white marble sculpture.

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The Death of Marat

The Death of Marat (La Mort de Marat or Marat Assassiné) is a 1793 painting by Jacques-Louis David of the murdered French revolutionary leader Jean-Paul Marat.

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The Equinox

The Equinox (subtitle: "The Review of Scientific Illuminism") is a series of publications in book form that serves as the official organ of the A∴A∴, a magical order founded by Aleister Crowley (although material is often of import to its sister organization, Ordo Templi Orientis).

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The Eyes of Stanley Pain

The Eyes of Stanley Pain is an album by Download.

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The Flowers of Evil (manga)

is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Shūzō Oshimi.

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The Gold-Bug

"The Gold-Bug" is a short story by Edgar Allan Poe published in 1843.

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The Greatest Frenchman

Le Plus Grand Français de tous les temps ("The Greatest Frenchman of all Time") was a France 2 show of early 2005, based on an original series of Great Britons on the BBC.

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The Hasheesh Eater

The Hasheesh Eater (1857) is an autobiographical book by Fitz Hugh Ludlow describing the author's altered states of consciousness and philosophical flights of fancy while he was using a cannabis extract.

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The Hound

"The Hound" is a short story written by H. P. Lovecraft in September 1922 and published in the February 1924 issue of Weird Tales.

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The Imp of the Perverse

The Imp of the Perverse is a metaphor for the urge to do exactly the wrong thing in a given situation for the sole reason that it is possible for wrong to be done.

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The Insufferable Gaucho

The Insufferable Gaucho (El Gaucho Insufrible, 2003) is a collection of five short stories and two essays by the Chilean author Roberto Bolaño (1953–2003).

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The Litanies of Satan

The Litanies of Satan is the debut album by American avant-garde artist Diamanda Galás, released in the United Kingdom by Y Records in 1982; it was released in her home country in 1989.

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The Maiden Kissed by the Ghost

The Maiden Kissed by the Ghost (known by the artist as Le baiser du fantôme et la demoiselle or Le Rêve) is an 1880 sculpture by the French artist Auguste Rodin.

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The Man of the Crowd

"The Man of the Crowd" is a short story by American writer Edgar Allan Poe about a nameless narrator following a man through a crowded London.

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The Mask of Sanity

The Mask of Sanity: An Attempt to Clarify Some Issues About the So-Called Psychopathic Personality is a book written by American psychiatrist Hervey M. Cleckley, first published in 1941, describing Cleckley's clinical interviews with patients in a locked institution.

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The Mystery of Marie Rogêt

"The Mystery of Marie Rogêt", often subtitled A Sequel to "The Murders in the Rue Morgue", is a short story by Edgar Allan Poe written in 1842.

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The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket

The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket (1838) is the only complete novel written by American writer Edgar Allan Poe.

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The Painter's Studio

The Painter's Studio: A real allegory summing up seven years of my artistic and moral life (L'Atelier du peintre) is an 1855 oil on canvas painting by Gustave Courbet.

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The Papelipolas

Los Papelípolas or The Papelipolas was a group of artists from Huila Department, in the Republic of Colombia arising in the year 1958.

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The Penguin Encyclopedia of Horror and the Supernatural

The Penguin Encyclopedia of Horror and the Supernatural is a reference work on horror fiction in the arts, edited by Jack Sullivan.

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The Philosophy of Composition

"The Philosophy of Composition" is an 1846 essay written by American writer Edgar Allan Poe that elucidates a theory about how good writers write when they write well.

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The Pit and the Pendulum

"The Pit and the Pendulum" is a short story written by Edgar Allan Poe and first published in 1842 in the literary annual The Gift: A Christmas and New Year's Present for 1843.

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The Princesse de Broglie

The Princesse de Broglie is an oil on canvas painting by the French Neoclassical artist Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres.

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The Raven

"The Raven" is a narrative poem by American writer Edgar Allan Poe.

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The Razor's Edge

The Razor's Edge is a novel by W. Somerset Maugham.

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The Rime of the Ancient Mariner in popular culture

The Rime of the Ancient Mariner has been referenced in various works of popular culture.

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The Salt Roads

The Salt Roads is a novel by Canadian-Jamaican writer Nalo Hopkinson.

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The Shadows' Madame

The Shadows' Madame was the debut album for Cadaveria.

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The Shape of a City

The Shape of a City (La Forme d'une ville) is a 1985 book by the French writer Julien Gracq.

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The Spanish Singer

The Spanish Singer is an 1860 oil painting on canvas by the French painter Édouard Manet, conserved since 1949 at the Metropolitan Museum of Art of New York.

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The Spiritual Hunt

The Spiritual Hunt (La Chasse spirituelle) is a prose poem purportedly written by French writer Arthur Rimbaud, claimed to be his masterpiece by his friend and lover Paul Verlaine.

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The Swan (Baudelaire)

Le Cygne ("The Swan") is a poem by Baudelaire published in the section "Tableaux Parisiens" (Parisian scenes) of Les Fleurs du mal (The Flowers of Evil).

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The Symbolist Movement in Literature

The Symbolist Movement in Literature, first published in 1899, and with additional material in 1919, is a work by Arthur Symons largely credited with bringing French Symbolism to the attention of Anglo-American literary circles.

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The Valpinçon Bather

The Valpinçon Bather (Fr: La Grande Baigneuse) is an 1808 painting by the French Neoclassical artist Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres (1780–1867), held in the Louvre since 1879.

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The Waste Land

The Waste Land is a long poem by T. S. Eliot, widely regarded as one of the most important poems of the 20th century and a central work of modernist poetry.

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Theodor W. Adorno

Theodor W. Adorno (born Theodor Ludwig Wiesengrund; September 11, 1903 – August 6, 1969) was a German philosopher, sociologist, and composer known for his critical theory of society.

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Thomas De Quincey

Thomas Penson De Quincey (15 August 17858 December 1859) was an English essayist, best known for his Confessions of an English Opium-Eater (1821).

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Tin Ujević

Augustin Josip "Tin" Ujević (5 July 1891 – 12 November 1955) was a Croatian poet, considered by many to be the greatest poet in 20th century Croatian literature.

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Tom Hubbard

Tom Hubbard FCLIP (born 1950) was the first librarian of the Scottish Poetry Library and is the author, editor or co-editor of over thirty academic and literary works.

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Tom Sleigh

Tom Sleigh is an American poet, dramatist, essayist and academic, who lives in New York City.

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Tourism in Réunion

Tourism is an important part of the economy of Réunion, an island and French overseas departement in the Indian Ocean.

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Tout un monde lointain...

Tout un monde lointain... (A whole distant world...) is a concertante work for cello and orchestra composed by Henri Dutilleux between 1967 and 1970 for Mstislav Rostropovich.

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Tout-Paris

Le Tout-Paris ("everyone in Paris") is a French expression referring to the fashionable and affluent elite of the city, who frequent fashionable events and places, and establish trends in upper-class culture.

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Tracy Denean Sharpley-Whiting

Tracy Denean Sharpley-Whiting (born 1967) is a feminist scholar and Gertrude Conaway Vanderbilt Distinguished Professor of French in the Department of French and Italian at the Vanderbilt University College of Arts and Science.

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Traian Demetrescu

Traian Rafael Radu Demetrescu (also known under his pen name Tradem or, occasionally, as Traian Demetrescu-Tradem; December 5, 1866 – April 17, 1896) was a Romanian poet, novelist and literary critic, considered one of the first symbolist authors in local literature.

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Translation studies

Translation studies is an academic interdiscipline dealing with the systematic study of the theory, description and application of translation, interpreting, and localization.

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Tristan Corbière

Tristan Corbière (18 July 1845 – 1 March 1875), born Édouard-Joachim Corbière, was a French poet born in Coat-Congar, Ploujean (now part of Morlaix) in Brittany, where he lived most of his life before dying of tuberculosis at the age of 29.

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Tristan Tzara

Tristan Tzara (born Samuel or Samy Rosenstock, also known as S. Samyro; – 25 December 1963) was a Romanian and French avant-garde poet, essayist and performance artist.

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Trois mélodies, Op. 7 (Fauré)

Trois mélodies is a set of mélodies for solo voice and piano, by Gabriel Fauré.

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Tudor Arghezi

Tudor Arghezi (21 May 1880 – 14 July 1967) was a Romanian writer, best known for his quite unique contribution to poetry and children's literature.

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Twentieth-century English literature

This article is focused on English-language literature rather than the literature of England, so that it includes writers from Scotland, Wales, and the whole of Ireland, as well as literature in English from former British colonies.

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Uładzimir Žyłka

Uladzimir Zhylka (27 May 1900 in Makaszy near Nesvizh, Belarus (then Russian Empire) – 1 March 1933; Уладзімір Жылка) was a Belarusian poet.

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Uma Outra Estação

Uma Outra Estação (Portuguese for Yet Another Season) is the eighth and last studio album by Brazilian rock band Legião Urbana.

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Under the Volcano

Under the Volcano is a novel by English writer Malcolm Lowry (1909–1957) published in 1947.

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Une saison en enfer (album)

Une saison en enfer (English: A Season in Hell) is Léo Ferré's last studio album.

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United States obscenity law

United States obscenity law deals with the regulation or suppression of what is considered obscenity.

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Uys Krige

Mattheus Uys Krige (4 February 1910 – 10 August 1987) was a South African writer of novels, short stories, poems and plays in both Afrikaans and English.

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Vadim Shershenevich

Vadim Gabrielevich Shershenevich (Вадим Габриэлевич Шершеневич) (1893–1942) was a Russian poet.

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Valerian Gaprindashvili

Valerian Gaprindashvili (ვალერიან გაფრინდაშვილი) (December 21, 1888 – January 31, 1941) was a Georgian poet and translator whose early, Symbolist, poetry was of much influence on development of Georgian metaphor and verse.

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Vasile Pogor

Vasile V. Pogor (Francized Basile Pogor; August 20, 1833 – March 20, 1906) was a Moldavian, later Romanian poet, philosopher, translator and liberal conservative politician, one of the founders of Junimea literary society.

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Vasyl Stefanyk

Vasyl Semenovych Stefanyk (Василь Семенович Стефаник; May 14, 1871 – December 7, 1936) was an influential Ukrainian modernist writer and political activist.

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Veedon Fleece

Veedon Fleece is the eighth studio album by Northern Irish singer-songwriter Van Morrison, released in October 1974 (see 1974 in music).

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Veno Taufer

Veno Taufer (born 19 February 1933) is a Slovenian poet, essayist, translator and playwright.

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Venus Anadyomene (Ingres)

Venus Anadyomene is a painting by the French painter Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres.

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Verlaine et Rimbaud

Verlaine et Rimbaud (English: "Verlaine and Rimbaud") is an album by Léo Ferré.

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Vers libre

Vers libre is an open form of poetry that abandons consistent meter patterns, rhyme, or other forms of musical pattern.

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Vicent Andrés Estellés

Vicent Andrés Estellés (4 September 1924 in Burjassot, Valencia – 27 March 1993 in Valencia) was a Spanish journalist and poet.

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Victor Hugo

Victor Marie Hugo (26 February 1802 – 22 May 1885) was a French poet, novelist, and dramatist of the Romantic movement.

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Victoria Francés

Victoria Francés (born October 25, 1982) is a Spanish illustrator.

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Ville Valo

Ville Hermanni Valo (born 22 November 1976) is a Finnish singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist, best known as the lead vocalist and main songwriter of the Finnish gothic rock band HIM.

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Virgilije Nevjestić

Virgilije Nevjestić (22 November 1935 - 25 August 2009) was a Croatian graphic artist, painter and poet who lived in Paris.

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Visit to Godenholm

Visit to Godenholm is a 1952 novella by the German writer Ernst Jünger.

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Visor från vinden

Visor från vinden (Songs from the loft) is the Swedish singer Sofia Karlsson's third studio album as a solo artist.

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Vladimir Colin

Vladimir Colin (pen name of Jean Colin; May 1, 1921 – December 6, 1991) was a Romanian short story writer and novelist.

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Vladislav Petković Dis

Vladislav Petković Dis (Владислав Петковић Дис; born Vladislav Petković; 12 March 1880 – 16 May/29 May 1917) was a Serbian poet, part of the impressionism movement in European poetry, known as Moderna/Symbolism in Serbia.

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Voyage

Voyage(s) or The Voyage may refer to.

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Walid Soliman (writer)

Walid Soliman is writer, essayist and translator, born on April 11, 1975 in Tunis, Tunisia.

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Wallace Stevens

Wallace Stevens (October 2, 1879 – August 2, 1955) was an American Modernist poet.

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Wallace Thurman

Wallace Henry Thurman (August 16, 1902 - December 22, 1934) was an American novelist active during the Harlem Renaissance.

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Walter Benjamin

Walter Bendix Schönflies Benjamin (15 July 1892 – 26 September 1940) was a German Jewish philosopher, cultural critic and essayist.

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Walter Fabian

Walter Fabian (24 August 1902 - 15 February 1992) was a German socialist politician, journalist and translator.

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Walter Lowenfels

Walter Lowenfels (May 10, 1897 – July 7, 1976) was an American poet, journalist, and member of the Communist Party USA.

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Walter Pater

Walter Horatio Pater (4 August 1839 – 30 July 1894) was an English essayist, literary and art critic, and fiction writer, regarded as one of the great stylists.

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Walter Scott

Sir Walter Scott, 1st Baronet (15 August 1771 – 21 September 1832) was a Scottish historical novelist, playwright, poet and historian.

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Wang Li (linguist)

Wang Li (IPA: /wɑŋ' li:/; 10 August 1900 – 3 May 1986) was a Chinese linguist, educator, translator and poet, described as "the founder of Chinese Linguistics".

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Włodzimierz Słobodnik

Włodzimierz Słobodnik (September 19, 1900 in Novoukrainka – July 10, 1991 in Warsaw) was a Polish poet, translator of French, Russian, and Soviet literature, a satirist, and the author of numerous books for young adults.

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Weird fiction

Weird fiction is a subgenre of speculative fiction originating in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

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Weltende (Jakob van Hoddis)

Weltende is a poem by the German poet Jakob van Hoddis, the anagrammatic pseudonym of Hans Davidsohn (1887-1942).

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Weltschmerz

Weltschmerz (from the German, literally world-pain, also world weariness) is a term coined in the 1830s by the German author Jean Paul and denotes the kind of feeling experienced by someone who believes that physical reality can never satisfy the demands of the mind.

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White tie

White tie, also called full evening dress or a dress suit, is the most formal evening dress code in Western high fashion.

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Wilhelm Levick

Wilhelm Veniaminovich Levick (Вильге́льм Вениами́нович Ле́вик; December 31, 1906 (13 January 1907) in Kiev – September 16, 1982 in Moscow) was a Russian poet, translator, literary critic and artist.

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William Franke (philosopher)

William Franke is an American academic and philosopher, professor of Comparative Literature at Vanderbilt University (formerly and concomitantly Professor Catedrático and Head of Philosophy and Religions at the University of Macau, 2013-2016).

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William Holmes Crosby Jr.

William Holmes Crosby (December 1, 1914 – January 15, 2005) is considered by many to be one of the founding fathers of modern hematology.

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Woodburytype

A Woodburytype is both a printing process and the print that it produces.

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Works based on Faust

Faust has inspired artistic and cultural works for over four centuries.

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Wormwood (magazine)

Wormwood: Writings about fantasy, supernatural and decadent literature is a magazine of literature and literary criticism, edited by Mark Valentine, and published semi-annually since 2003 by Tartarus Press.

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Writer

A writer is a person who uses written words in various styles and techniques to communicate their ideas.

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Writers in Paris

For centuries Paris has been the home and frequently the subject matter of the most important novelists, poets, and playwrights in French literature, including Moliere, Voltaire, Balzac, Victor Hugo and Zola and Proust.

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Yaron Margolin

Yaron Margolin (born June 5, 1954) (Hebrew: ירון מרגולין) is an Israeli dancer and choreographer.

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Yehuda Vizan

Yehuda Vizan (Hebrew: יהודה ויזן, born 1985 in Yehud) is an Israeli poet, editor, translator and critic.

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Yves Brayer

Yves Brayer (18 November 1907 – 29 May 1990) was a French painter known for his paintings of everyday life.

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Zbigniew Bieńkowski

Zbigniew Bieńkowski (31 August 1913, in Warsaw — 23 February 1994) was a Polish poet, literary critic, translator and essayist.

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Zenon Przesmycki

Zenon Przesmycki (pen name Miriam; Radzyń Podlaski, 22 December 1861 – 17 October 1944, Warsaw), was a Polish poet, translator and art critic of the literary period of Młoda Polska, who studied law in Italy, France and England; and in 1887–1888 served as the editor-in-chief of the Warsaw magazine Życie (Life) – an influential first ever publication on modernism in Poland.

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Zviad Gamsakhurdia

Zviad Gamsakhurdia (ზვიად გამსახურდია, tr. Zviad K'onst'ant'ines dze Gamsakhurdia; Звиа́д Константи́нович Гамсаху́рдия, tr. Zviad Konstantinovich Gamsakhurdiya; March 31, 1939 – December 31, 1993) was a Georgian politician, dissident, scholar, and writer who became the first democratically elected President of Georgia in the post-Soviet era.

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1821

No description.

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1821 in France

Events from the year 1821 in France.

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1821 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1821.

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1821 in poetry

— words chiselled onto the tombstone of John Keats, at his request Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).

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1857 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1857.

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1857 in poetry

Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).

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1858 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1858.

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1858 in poetry

Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).

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1860 in poetry

Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).

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1861 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1861.

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1862 in poetry

-- first stanza of Julia Ward Howe's Battle Hymn of the Republic conceived as both poem and lyrics to a popular tune and first published in February in The Atlantic Monthly Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).

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1864 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1864.

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1864 in poetry

Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).

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1866 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1866.

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1866 in poetry

Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).

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1867

No description.

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1867 in France

Events from the year 1867 in France.

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1867 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1867.

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1867 in poetry

Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).

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1868 in poetry

Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).

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1869 in poetry

Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).

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1895 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1895.

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1996 in poetry

Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).

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19th century

The 19th century was a century that began on January 1, 1801, and ended on December 31, 1900.

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19th-century French art

19th-century French art was made in France or by French citizens during the following political regimes: Napoleon Bonaparte's Consulate (1799-1804) and Empire (1804-1814), the Restoration under Louis XVIII and Charles X (1814-1830), the July Monarchy under Louis Philippe d'Orléans (1830-1848), the Second Republic (1848-1852), the Second Empire under Napoleon III (1852-1871), and the first decades of the Third Republic (1871-1940).

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19th-century French literature

19th-century French literature concerns the developments in French literature during a dynamic period in French history that saw the rise of Democracy and the fitful end of Monarchy and Empire.

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2006 in poetry

Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).

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2009 in poetry

Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).

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2012 Man Booker Prize

The 2012 Booker Prize for Fiction was awarded on 16 October 2012.

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20th-century French literature

20th-century French literature is literature written in French from 1900 to 1999.

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Redirects here:

Baudelaire, Baudelaire, Charles, Baudelaire, Charles Pierre, Beaudelaire, Charles Pierre Baudelaire, Charles-Pierre Baudelaire.

References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Baudelaire

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