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French literature

Index 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. [1]

668 relations: A Monkey in Winter, Abdülhak Hâmid Tarhan, Abdellah Taïa, Abe Akira, Académie Goncourt, Adolphe d'Ennery, Adolphe Favre, Adolphe-Marie Hardy, Ahlspiess, Airwolf, Aix-Marseille University, Akademgorodok, Akane Hotta, Akiya Takahashi, Alain Bosquet, Alain Farah, Alain-Fournier, Alan Raitt, Albanian literature, Albert A. Boyajian, Albert Schinz, Alexis Bouvier, Alfredo Bryce, Ali Bader, Ali Douagi, Alice Attie, Allan Bloom, Aloysius Bertrand, Amable Bapaume, Amélie Sarn, American poetry, Amis et Amiles, Ana Lydia Vega, Anastas Al-Karmali, Angela Alioto, Angelika Nussberger, Ann Jefferson, Anna Marie Cseh, Anne Dacier, Anne-Lisa Amadou, Anti-Justine, Antigone Kefala, Anton Bacalbașa, Antoni Lange, Antonio Machado, Antun Maqdisi, AP French Literature, Aphrodite: mœurs antiques, Armand Durantin, Armen Dorian, ..., Armenia–France relations, Arnold Weinstein (scholar), Around the World in Eighty Days, Arpiar Arpiarian, Art critic, Arthur Augustus Tilley, Arthur L. Carter, Asha Pande, Asian literature, Asma al-Assad, Attila József, À rebours, Étienne Manac'h, Ōmi Komaki, Štefan Žáry, Baccalauréat, Baccalauréat littéraire, Barbara Wright (professor), Barbara Wright (translator), Basil Zaharoff, Battle of Roncevaux Pass, Beechwood Bunny Tales, Belgian literature, Belinda Jack, Benjamin Fondane, Benjamin W. Wells, Betool Khedairi, Beverly Matherne, Bhumibol Adulyadej, Bianca Beauchamp, Bibliothèque de l'Arsenal, Blanche Knopf, Books in France, Brodeck's Report, Brooke Shields, Byzantine literature, Camille Jullian, Candide, Cao Văn Viên, Carl Joachim Hambro (philologist), Carlos Alvarado-Larroucau, Catherine Cusset, Catherine Enjolet, Cathy Silak, Catriona Seth, Cénacle, Celia Ross, Chanson de geste, Charles Athanase Walckenaer, Charles Augustin Sainte-Beuve, Charles Baudelaire, Charles Canivet, Charles Joret, Charles Maingon, Charles Monnard, Charles Porée, Charles Ruas, Charlotte Mandell, Charlotte Rampling, Charlotte, Lady Campbell-Bannerman, Cherubina de Gabriak, Chocolates for Breakfast, Choe Yun, Christine Montross, Chun Yung-woo, City of Sydney Library, Colette Khoury, Colin Davis (philosopher), Colin Keith Gray, Collection Blanche, Comédie larmoyante, Comparative literature, Comparison of Dewey and Library of Congress subject classification, Comte de Lautréamont, Constantin Beldie, Contemporary French literature, Crepitus (mythology), Crusade cycle, Culture of Asia, Culture of France, Culture of Syria, D. Iacobescu, Daigaku Horiguchi, Daniel Oster, Daniel Sloate, Daphne Woodward, Daria Galateria, David Gascoyne, Debra H. Sowell, Decadence, Degenerate art, Denis Dodart, Derrick de Kerckhove, Diana Panton, Diane Setterfield, Dima Wannous, Discrimination against the homeless, Dmitry Merezhkovsky, Dominique Barbéris, Don Harrán, Donald Adamson, Dumitru Țepeneag, Ebrahim Pourdavoud, Education in Haiti, Education in Vietnam, Edvard Kocbek, Edward Fitzgibbon, Edward Shils, Edwidge Danticat, Ehud Olmert, Einosuke Akiya, Elaine Benes, Elena Văcărescu, Elspeth Kennedy, Emma of Waldeck and Pyrmont, Emmanuel Halperin, Entre les murs (novel), Enuig, Enzo Giudici, Epithalamium, Eric Daman, Eric Gans, Erwin J. Haeberle, Esther K. Chae, Ethel Anderson, Eugène Ionesco, Eugène Rambert, Eugène Woestyn, Ștefan Baciu, Faith Salie, Fantastique, Farzaneh Milani, Fatin al-Murr, Fausta Garavini, Fereydoon Motamed, Fermina Márquez, Fiction Monthly, Film (film), Fleur-de-lis, Ford Madox Ford, François de Vendôme, Vidame de Chartres, François Ricard, François-René de Chateaubriand, Françoise Mallet-Joris, Françoise Meltzer, Francesco Orlando (critic), Francis Leo Lawrence, Francisco Serrano (poet), Francophile, Francophone literature, Frankfurt Book Fair, Frans Timmermans, Frantz Funck-Brentano, Franz-Hessel-Preis, Frédéric-Louis Colin, French Argentines, French art, French Forum, French poetry, French Poets and Novelists, French science fiction, French Studies, French Studies Bulletin, Friedrich Wilhelm Gotter, Fumiko Enchi, Fyodor Batyushkov, Fyodor Burdin, Fyodor Kokoshkin, Gaston Bouatchidzé, Geneviève Hasenohr, Geoffrey Brereton, Georg Büchner, George Haven Putnam, George Saintsbury, George Stambolian, George Ticknor, Georges Voisset, Gheorghe Asachi, Giuseppe Brunelli, Giuseppe Scaraffia, Goli Ameri, Goncourt brothers, Gorka Aulestia Txakartegi, Graham Robb, Green Knight, Guillaume de Dole, H. P. Lovecraft, Ha Gil-jong, Haakon Chevalier, Hamza Abu Faris, Han Myeong-sook, Hanan Qassab Hassan, Hannah Fielding, Hans Aaraas, Hasan Askari, Hồ Văn Trung, Hôtel de Massa, Heading South, Hempfield High School, Hendrik Brugmans, Henri Mondor, Henrietta (novel), Henryka Łazowertówna, Hidekazu Yoshida, Hidemi Kon, Hideo Kobayashi, Hippolyte Taine, Hisashi Inoue, Histoire littéraire de la France, History Detectives, History of French-era Tunisia, Horror fiction, Huỳnh Sanh Thông, Ina Rilke, Indignation (film), Infanta Elena, Duchess of Lugo, Irving Babbitt, Isabel, Princess Imperial of Brazil, Isidora Sekulić, Israeli literature, Italian literature, Jack Vaughn, Jacqueline Hennessy, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, Jacques Claude Demogeot, Jacques Lusseyran, Jaegwon Kim, Jaime Martínez Tolentino, James Matisoff, Jane Gallop, Jason Saul, Jean Aziz, Jean Chapelain, Jean Racine, Jean Roemer, Jean Roudaut, Jean Rousset, Jean Starobinski, Jean Vauquelin de la Fresnaye, Jean-Baptiste Dureau de la Malle, Jean-Charles Laveaux, Jean-Charles-Julien Luce de Lancival, Jean-Michel Raimond, Jean-Paul Goujon, Jean-Pierre LaFouge, Jean-Yves Mollier, Jim Morrison, Jirō Osaragi, Joan Nathan, Joanna Pruess, Jocelyn Godefroi, Jocelyne François, John Andrews (historical writer), John Goldkamp, John Jolliffe (librarian), John Kennedy College, John Rodker, Joke Smit, Jonathan M. Weiss, José Manuel Losada, Joseph McLellan, Joseph S. O'Leary, Journal des débats, Jovan Skerlić, Judith Woodsworth, Juliana Jendo, Julie Van Dusen, Julio Cortázar, Julio Mario Santo Domingo Jr., Jun Ishikawa, Junya Sato, K. Ludwig Pfeiffer, Kamel Daoud, Kansuke Yamamoto (artist), Karin Helmstaedt, Katarina Marinčič, Kate Beckinsale, Kazuo Okamatsu, Kazutami Watanabe, Keith Botsford, Ken'ichi Yoshida (literary scholar), Khmer Rouge, Khmer Rouge rule of Cambodia, Khurshid Mahmud Kasuri, Kingdom of Cambodia (1953–70), Kiyoshi Jinzai, Kosugi Tengai, Kristin Ross, Kunio Tsuji, Kurts Fridrihsons, Kyoko Nakajima, L'après-midi d'un faune (poem), L'Esprit Créateur, L'Instant X, La Bandera (novel), La Fontaine's Fables, Lakewood Township, New Jersey, Language poets, Langues d'oïl, Laurence de Cambronne, Lazăr Șăineanu, Léon Gautier, Léon Halévy, Le Monde's 100 Books of the Century, Le Sexe qui parle, Lee Garim, Lee Seong-bok, Lee Yoon-hyung, Leila Hatami, Lenore (ballad), Les Orientales, Les Rencontres d'Aubrac, Liam Ó Muirthile, Librairie Avant-Garde (Mount Wutai Branch), Library of Congress Classification, Library of Congress Classification:Class P -- Language and Literature, Linda Gaboriau, Lire (magazine), List of Cambridge International Examinations Advanced Level subjects, List of Columbia College people, List of digital library projects, List of European literatures, List of foreign recipients of the Ordre des Palmes Académiques, List of French artists, List of French novelists, List of French-language authors, List of French-language poets, List of geological features on Ariel, List of geological features on Triton, List of Japanese-language poets, List of literary awards, List of literary movements, List of modernist writers, List of novelists by nationality, List of people from Rhode Island, List of people from Wrocław, List of University of Zimbabwe people, List of university professors at Columbia University, List of Walt Disney Animation Studios films, List of Waseda University people, List of Worthing inhabitants, List of York University people, Literature by country, Lolita, Lolita (1997 film), Lolita Séchan, Lou Andreas-Salomé, Louis XIV of France, Louis-Fernand Flutre, Lucien-Anatole Prévost-Paradol, Lycée Français de Sofia, Lycée International de Saint-Germain-en-Laye, Lycée Lyautey (Casablanca), Lydia Davis, Maciej Żurowski, Madeleine Patin, Mal du siècle, Malcolm Bowie, Mansour Fadlallah Azzam, Marcel Janco, Marcel Paquet, Marcel Raymond, Margaret Diesendorf, Margaret Mary Vojtko, Marian Engel, Marian Hobson, Markus Hediger, Marquis de Custine, Martha Farnsworth Riche, Martine Beck, Massacre of Lwów professors, Mastermind (TV series), Masuji Ibuse, Maud de Boer-Buquicchio, Maurice Barrès, May Menassa, May Telmissany, May Ziade, Mário de Andrade, Meiji Gakuin University, Metamorphoses, Michael Showalter, Michel Deguy, Michel Murat, Michel Paul Guy de Chabanon, Michelle Yim, Mihail Sebastian, Ministry of Culture (France), Mira Schor, Mirapolis, Misto Treska, Mitsuo Nakamura, Mohamed Toihiri, Mohammed Ali Bey al-Abed, Mohtaram Eskandari, Moi, Antoine de Tounens, roi de Patagonie, Monie Tung, Monique Wittig, Mount Laurel, New Jersey, Nakae Chōmin, Naomi Schor, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Nguyen Manh Tuong, Nicolas Mary, Nicolas-Edme Rétif, Nikola Andrić, Nikos Kavvadias, Nil volentibus arduum, Nina Rootes, Nineteenth-Century French Studies, Ninon de l'Enclos, Nippon Decimal Classification, Noah Charney, Noboru Tanaka, Noor-ol-Hoda Mangeneh, Notes on Novelists, Nouveau roman, Novel sequence, Ola Raknes, Ook Chung, Orgasm, Osamu Dazai, Oscar Conti, Oskar Davičo, Ottoman Empire, Our Lady of the Flowers, Outline of France, Oxford Companions, Palacký University, Paolo Marinou-Blanco, Paolo Poli, Papel volante, Park Ynhui, Parnassianism, Pascal Rambert, Paul Adam (French novelist), Paul Feinman, Paul Gagné (translator), Paul-Jacques Bonzon, Père Goriot, Pe Maung Tin, Perpessicius, Peter Hallward, Peter Mieg, Petr Herel, Philippe de Tarrazi, Philippe Djian, Phillip Osborne, Pierre Autin-Grenier, Pierre Capelle, Pierre Fallon, Pierre Sprey, Pierre-Claude Nivelle de La Chaussée, Plutarch, Pramatha Chaudhuri, Predrag Matvejević, Prix Alain-Fournier, Prix de Flore, Prix Goncourt, Qory Sandioriva, R. N. Whybray, Radovan Lukavský, Ralph Manheim, Rasha Rizk, Rei Nakanishi, René Girard, René Pomeau, Renee Richetts, Restoration literature, Reviving Toru Dutt, Revue d'Histoire littéraire de la France, Rhyme royal, Richard Wolffe, Rid Grachev, Robert Baldick, Robert Marleau, Robert Picht, Robert Stam, Roger Knight, Roger Le Moine, Roger Shattuck, Roger Viry-Babel, Roman d'Alexandre, Ronald E. Asher, Ronald Syme, Roncevaux Terra, Royds Hall School, Russian literature, Ruth Sato, Ruzha Lazarova, Sabine Chaouche, Sadaf Foroughi, Sair Tjerita Siti Akbari, Sally Price, Sandrine Veysset, Sanssouci, Sarah Kay, Sayyid Qutb, SCEGGS Darlinghurst, Scottie Thompson, Secondary education in France, Seewoosagur Ramgoolam, Sergey Kuznetsov (writer), Sevasti Kallisperi, Shahrzad (Reza Kamal), Sharon R. Long, Shaun Whiteside, Shōhei Ōoka, Shigehiko Hasumi, Shimon Peres, Siegfried van Praag, Silvina Bullrich, Simon Harel, Simone Philip Kamel, Société des gens de lettres, Sorbonne University, Stuart Symington, SubStance, Suheir Atassi, Susana Chou, Sylvère Lotringer, Syrian literature, Tadeusz Boy-Żeleński, Tajar Zavalani, Takako Takahashi, Takashi Tachibana, Tama Cemetery, Tania Boteva-Malo, Tariq Ramadan, Tatsuhiko Shibusawa, Tatsuji Miyoshi, Teruo Yajima, Théophile Gautier, Thérèse-Adèle Husson, The Bad Life, The Boy and the Blind Man, The Class (2008 film), The College Preparatory School, The Miller School of Albemarle, The Muse’s Tragedy, The Paratrooper's Prayer, The Song of Roland, The Story of Civilization, The Woman of the Port (1934 film), Thomas Elsaesser, Timeline of Zionism, Tina Holmes, Tjhit Liap Seng, Toby Alone, Tomo Akikawabaya, Transgressive fiction, Translators Association of China, Tristan Tzara, Troubadour, Turkish literature, Umm Kulthum, Unanimism, Under Fire (Barbusse novel), Unholy Love, University of Delaware Press, University of Virginia College of Arts and Sciences, UPRM College of Arts and Sciences, Vagina loquens, Vajiravudh, Valérie Mangin, Valerian Pidmohylny, Vasile Pogor, Vasily Trediakovsky, Vernon Rosario, Very Short Introductions, Victor Brombert, Victor de Laprade, Victor Hanzeli, Vietnam National University, Ho Chi Minh City, Vigdís Finnbogadóttir, Viola Klein, Virelai, Virginia Pérez-Ratton, Vladimir Colin, Warren Motte, Waseda University, Welsh mythology, Wendy Artin, Western canon, Wiener Moderne, Wisława Szymborska, Women in France, Writers in Paris, Xavier de Maistre, Yasuharu Hasebe, Yūji Kinoshita, Yehoshua Kenaz, Yehuda Lancry, Yehudit Harari, Yi In-seong, Yoshinori Kobayashi, Yousuf Hussain Khan, Ysopet, Yung Lean, Yves Beauchemin, Yves Navarre, Zheng Yonghui, Zhou Kexi, 1892 in poetry, 1958 in poetry, 1959 in poetry, 1960 in poetry, 1961 in poetry, 1962 in poetry, 1963 in poetry, 1964 in poetry, 1965 in poetry, 1968 in poetry, 1981 in poetry, 1982 in poetry, 1988 in poetry, 19th-century French literature, 2002 in poetry. 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A Monkey in Winter

A Monkey in Winter is a 1959 novel by the French writer Antoine Blondin.

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Abdülhak Hâmid Tarhan

Abdülhak Hâmid Tarhan (born Abdülhak Hâmid; January 2, 1852 – April 12, 1937) was an early 20th-century Turkish playwright and poet.

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Abdellah Taïa

Abdellah Taïa (عبد الله الطايع; born 1973) is a Moroccan writer and filmmaker who writes in the French language and has been based in Paris since 1998.

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Abe Akira

was a contemporary Japanese author.

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Académie Goncourt

The Société littéraire des Goncourt (Goncourt Literary Society), usually called the académie Goncourt (Goncourt Academy), is a French literary organization based in Paris.

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Adolphe d'Ennery

Adolphe Philippe d'Ennery or Dennery (17 June 181125 January 1899) was a French playwright and novelist.

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Adolphe Favre

Adolphe Alphonse Favre (1 May 1808 – 15 January 1886) was a 19th-century French playwright, journalist, poet and novelist.

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Adolphe-Marie Hardy

Adolphe-Marie Hardy (23 May 1868 in Dison – 19 June 1954 in Laeken) was a Belgian writer first published in 1888.

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Ahlspiess

The Ahlspiess (or awl pike) was a thrusting spear developed and used primarily in Germany and Austria from the 15th to 16th centuries.

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Airwolf

Airwolf is an American television series that ran from 1984 until 1987.

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Aix-Marseille University

Aix-Marseille University (AMU; Aix-Marseille Université; formally incorporated as Université d'Aix-Marseille) is a public research university located in Provence, southern France.

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Akademgorodok

Coordinates: Akademgorodok (p, "Academic Town" or "Academic City") is a part of the Sovetsky District of the city of Novosibirsk, Russia, located 30 km south of the city center and about 10 km west of the Science town Koltsovo.

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Akane Hotta

is a Japanese model and tarento.

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Akiya Takahashi

is a Japanese art historian and a founding director of the Mitsubishi Ichigokan Museum, Tokyo.

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Alain Bosquet

Alain Bosquet, born Anatoliy Bisk (Анато́лий Биск) (March 28, 1919, Odessa – 8 March 1998, Paris), was a French poet.

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Alain Farah

Alain Farah is a Canadian writer and academic.

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Alain-Fournier

Alain-Fournier was the pseudonym of Henri-Alban Fournier (3 October 1886 – 22 September 1914 Secrétariat Général pour l'Administration), a French author and soldier.

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Alan Raitt

Alan William Raitt, (21 September 1930 – 2 September 2006) was a British scholar of French literature, specialising in nineteenth-century French literature.

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Albanian literature

Albanian literature stretches back to the Middle Ages and comprises those literary texts and works written in the Albanian language.

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Albert A. Boyajian

Albert A. Boyajian (Ալբերտ Բոյաջյան, born June 4, 1940, Aleppo, Syria) is an American business leader and activist for Armenian causes.

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Albert Schinz

Albert Schinz (1870 – December 19, 1943) was an American French and philosophical scholar, editor, and professor of French literature.

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Alexis Bouvier

Alexis Bouvier (15 January 1836 –18 May 1892) was a 19th-century French novelist and playwright.

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Alfredo Bryce

Alfredo Bryce Echenique (born February 19, 1939) is a Peruvian writer born in Lima.

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Ali Bader

Ali Bader(Arabic علي بدر: is an Iraqi novelist, poet, critic, regarded as the most significant writer to emerge in Arabic world, in the last decade. author of fourteen works of fiction, and several works of non-fiction. His best-known works include Papa Sartre, The Tobacco Keeper, The Running after the Wolves, and The Sinful Woman, several of which have won awards. His novels are quite unlike any other fictions in Arabic world of our day, as they blend character study, social criticism, philosophical reflection, and explicit language. Bader was born in Baghdad, where he studied western philosophy and French literature. He now lives in Brussels. In addition to his work as an author, he is also an Arabic media journalist.

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Ali Douagi

Ali Douagi, or Ali el-Du'aji, (علي الدوعاجي) (January 4, 1909 – May 27, 1949) was a Tunisian literary and cultural icon who is considered to be one of the pioneers of modern Tunisian literature.

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Alice Attie

Alice Attie (born in 1950) is a visual artist and published poet from New York City.

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Allan Bloom

Allan David Bloom (September 14, 1930 – October 7, 1992) was an American philosopher, classicist, and academician.

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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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Amable Bapaume

Amable Bapaume (26 March 1825 – 7 July 1895) was a 19th-century French novelist, journalist and playwright.

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Amélie Sarn

Amélie Sarn-Cantin (born 4 March 1970) is a French author, comic book writer and translator.

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American poetry

American poetry, the poetry of the United States, arose first as efforts by colonists to add their voices to English poetry in the 17th century, well before the constitutional unification of the thirteen colonies (although before this unification, a strong oral tradition often likened to poetry existed among Native American societies).

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Amis et Amiles

Amis et Amiles is an old French romance based on a widespread legend of friendship and sacrifice.

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Ana Lydia Vega

Ana Lydia Vega (born Dec. 6, 1946, Santurce, Puerto Rico) is a Puerto Rican writer.

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Anastas Al-Karmali

Al-Ab Anastas Mari Al-Karmali (الأب أنستاس الكرملي), Anastas the Carmelite, or Père Anastase-Marie de Saint-Élie (5 August 1866 – January 7, 1947), a Lebanese Christian priest and linguist who made important contributions in Arabic linguistics and philology.

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Angela Alioto

Angela Alioto (born October 20, 1949) is an American attorney, politician, member of the Secular Franciscan Order, and founder of the Knights of Saint Francis at the Porziuncola Nuova.

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Angelika Nussberger

Angelika Helene Anna Nußberger (born 1 June 1963 in Munich) is a German professor of law and scholar of slavic studies, and has been the judge in respect of Germany at the European Court of Human Rights since 1 January 2011; since 2017 she is the Court’s Vice-President.

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Ann Jefferson

Ann Margaret Jefferson, (born 3 November 1949) is a British scholar of French literature.

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Anna Marie Cseh

Anna Marie Cseh - in Hungarian: Cseh Anna Mária- (born 17 September 1977 in Budapest) is a Hungarian stage and film actress and former fashion model.

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Anne Dacier

Anne Le Fèvre Dacier (born 1647? died 17 August 1720), better known during her lifetime as Madame Dacier, was a French scholar, translator, commentator and editor of the classics, including the Iliad and the Odyssey.

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Anne-Lisa Amadou

Anne-Lisa Amadou (4 March 1930 – 19 March 2002) was a Norwegian literary researcher.

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Anti-Justine

Anti-Justine is a French pornographic novel by Nicolas-Edme Rétif (also known as Rétif de la Bretonne; 1734-1806) published in 1798.

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Antigone Kefala

Antigone Kefala (born 28 May 1935) is a contemporary Australian poet and prose-writer of Greek-Romanian heritage.

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Anton Bacalbașa

Anton Costache Bacalbașa (commonly known as Toni or Tony Bacalbașa, pen names Rigolo, Wunderkind,, Paul D. Popescu,, in Ziarul Prahova, February 11, 2012 Jus., Wus., Zig. etc.; Victor Durnea,, in Cultura, Nr. 312, February 2011 February 21, 1865 – October 1, 1899) was a Romanian political journalist, humorist and politician, chiefly remembered for his antimilitaristic series Moș Teacă.

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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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Antonio Machado

Antonio Machado, in full Antonio Cipriano José María y Francisco de Santa Ana Machado y Ruiz (26 July 1875 – 22 February 1939), was a Spanish poet and one of the leading figures of the Spanish literary movement known as the Generation of '98.

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Antun Maqdisi

Antun Maqdisi, also written as Antoun/Anton Maqdesi/Muqaddasi/Moqaddasi (1914 – January 5, 2005; Yabrud) was a Syrian philosopher, politician and human rights activist.

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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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Aphrodite: mœurs antiques

Aphrodite: mœurs antiques ("Aphrodite: ancient morals") is an 1896 French-language novel by Pierre Louÿs.

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Armand Durantin

Anne-Adrien-Armand Durantin, also called Armand de Villevert, (4 April 1818 – 30 December 1891) was a 19th-century French playwright and novelist.

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Armen Dorian

Armen Dorian (Արմէն Տօրեան; 28 January 1892 – 1915) was a renowned Armenian poet, teacher, and editor who lived in the Ottoman Empire.

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Armenia–France relations

Franco-Armenian relations have existed since the French and the Armenians established contact in the Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia In the 1100s.

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Arnold Weinstein (scholar)

Arnold Louis Weinstein (born July 8, 1940) is an American literary scholar.

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Around the World in Eighty Days

Around the World in Eighty Days (Le tour du monde en quatre-vingts jours) is an adventure novel by the French writer Jules Verne, published in 1873.

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Arpiar Arpiarian

Arpiar Arpiarian (Արփիար Արփիարեան) (December 21, 1851 – February 12, 1908) was an influential 19th-century Armenian writer, the pioneer of realism in Armenian literature and a political activist.

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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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Arthur Augustus Tilley

Arthur Augustus Tilley (1 December 1851 – 4 December 1942) was an academic of the University of Cambridge.

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Arthur L. Carter

Arthur L. Carter (born December 24, 1931 in New York City) is an American investment banker, publisher, and artist.

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Asha Pande

Dr.

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Asian literature

Asian literature is the literature produced in Asia.

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Asma al-Assad

Asma al-Assad (أسماء الأسد, Levantine pronunciation:;, أسماء فواز الأخرس:; born 11 August 1975) is the First Lady of Syria.

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Attila József

Attila József (11 April 1905 – 3 December 1937) was a Hungarian poet of the 20th century.

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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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Étienne Manac'h

Étienne Manac'h (later known as Étienne Manoël Manac'h; February 3, 1910 in Plouigneau, Brittany – 1992) was a French career diplomat and author.

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Ōmi Komaki

was the pen-name of a scholar and translator of French literature in Taishō and Shōwa period Japan.

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Štefan Žáry

Štefan Žáry (December 12, 1918 in Poniky – August 25, 2007 in Bratislava) was a Slovak poet, prosaist, translator and essayist; author of erotic lyric poetry, patriotic and anti-war poems, reminiscential prose.

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Baccalauréat

The baccalauréat, often known in France colloquially as bac, is an academic qualification that French students take after high school.

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Baccalauréat littéraire

The Baccalauréat littéraire (en: literary Baccalaureate) is a diploma of one of the three streams of the French General Baccalauréat.

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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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Barbara Wright (translator)

Barbara Winifred Wright (13 October 1915 – 3 March 2009) was an English translator of modern French literature.

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Basil Zaharoff

Basil Zaharoff, GCB, GBE (Βασίλειος Zαχαρίας Ζαχάρωφ; October 6, 1849 – November 27, 1936), was a Greek arms dealer and industrialist.

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Battle of Roncevaux Pass

The Battle of Roncevaux Pass (French and English spelling, Roncesvalles in Spanish, Orreaga in Basque) in 778 saw a large force of Basques ambush a part of Charlemagne's army in Roncevaux Pass, a high mountain pass in the Pyrenees on the present border between France and Spain, after his invasion of the Iberian Peninsula.

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Beechwood Bunny Tales

Beechwood Bunny Tales (La Famille Passiflore) is a series of children's books written by French author Geneviève Huriet and illustrated by Loïc Jouannigot.

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Belgian literature

Because Belgium is a multilingual country,Dutch, French and German are legally the three official languages in Belgium, see: Belgian literature is divided into two main linguistic branches following the two most prominently spoken languages in the country - Dutch and French.

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Belinda Jack

Belinda Jack is Fellow and Tutor in French literature and Language at Christ Church, Oxford at the University of Oxford, Professor of Rhetoric at Gresham College and the author of books such as The Woman Reader and George Sand: A Woman's Life Writ Large.

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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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Benjamin W. Wells

Benjamin Willis Wells (31 January 1856 – 1923) was a United States scholar and editor.

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Betool Khedairi

Betool Khedairi (born 27 November 1965 in Baghdad, Iraq) is a novelist born to an Iraqi father and Scottish mother.

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Beverly Matherne

Beverly Matherne (born March 15, 1946 in Louisiana) is an American writer and poet.

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Bhumibol Adulyadej

Bhumibol Adulyadej (ภูมิพลอดุลยเดช;;; see full title below; 5 December 1927 – 13 October 2016), conferred with the title King Bhumibol the Great in 1987, was the ninth monarch of Thailand from the Chakri dynasty as Rama IX.

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Bianca Beauchamp

Bianca Stéphanie Beauchamp (born October 14, 1977) is a Canadian fetish model, known for her glamour, erotic and latex fetish modelling.

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Bibliothèque de l'Arsenal

The Bibliothèque de l'Arsenal (Library of the Arsenal, founded 1757) in Paris has been part of the Bibliothèque nationale de France since 1934.

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Blanche Knopf

Blanche Wolf Knopf (July 30, 1894 – June 4, 1966) was the president of Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. and wife of publisher Alfred Knopf, with whom she established the firm in 1915.

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Books in France

As of 2017, five firms in France rank among the world's biggest publishers of books in terms of revenue:, Groupe Albin Michel,, Hachette Livre (including Éditions Grasset), and Martinière Groupe (including Éditions du Seuil).

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Brodeck's Report

Brodeck's Report (Le Rapport de Brodeck) is a 2007 novel by the French writer Philippe Claudel.

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Brooke Shields

Brooke Christa Shields (born May 31, 1965) is an American actress and model.

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Byzantine literature

Byzantine literature is the Greek literature of the Middle Ages, whether written in the territory of the Byzantine Empire or outside its borders.

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Camille Jullian

Camille Jullian (15 March 1859 – 12 December 1933) was a French historian, philologist, archaeologist and historian of French literature, student of Fustel de Coulanges, whose posthumous work he published.

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Candide

Candide, ou l'Optimisme, is a French satire first published in 1759 by Voltaire, a philosopher of the Age of Enlightenment.

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Cao Văn Viên

Cao Văn Viên (December 21, 1921 – January 22, 2008) was one of only two, South Vietnamese 4 star Army Generals in the history of the Army of the Republic of Vietnam during the Vietnam War.

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Carl Joachim Hambro (philologist)

Carl Joachim Hambro (7 June 1914 – 19 February 1985) was a Norwegian novelist, journalist, essayist, translator and Romance philologist.

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Carlos Alvarado-Larroucau

Carlos Alvarado-Larroucau is an Argentine-born French author, born in Argentina in 1964.

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Catherine Cusset

Catherine Cusset (born in Paris in 1963) is a French novelist and the author of The Story of Jane (Simon and Schuster, 2001) and twelve other novels published by Éditions Gallimard between 1990 and 2018.

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Catherine Enjolet

Catherine Enjolet (born in Paris) is a French novelist and essayist.

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Cathy Silak

Cathy R. Silak (born May 25, 1950) is the dean of the Corncodia University School of Law in Boise, Idaho.

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Catriona Seth

Catriona Jane Seth, FBA (born 30 August 1964) is a British scholar of French literature and the history of ideas.

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Cénacle

Cénacle is the name given to a Parisian literary group of varying constituency that began about 1826 to gather around Charles Nodier.

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Celia Ross

Celia Ross is the former president of Algoma University in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario.

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Chanson de geste

The chanson de geste, Old French for "song of heroic deeds" (from gesta: Latin: "deeds, actions accomplished"), is a medieval narrative, a type of epic poem that appears at the dawn of French literature.

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Charles Athanase Walckenaer

Baron Charles Athanase Walckenaer (25 December 1771 – 28 April 1852) was a French civil servant and scientist.

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Charles Augustin Sainte-Beuve

Charles Augustin Sainte-Beuve (23 December 1804, in Boulogne-sur-Mer – 13 October 1869, in Paris) was a literary critic of French literature.

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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.

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Charles Canivet

Charles-Alfred Canivet (Valognes, 10 February 1839 – Valognes, 1911) was a 19th-century French poet, journalist, novelist, and storyteller.

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Charles Joret

Charles Joret (14 October 1839, Formigny – 27 December 1914, Paris) was a French literary historian, philologist and botanical author.

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Charles Maingon

Charles Maingon is a Canadian judoka and retired university professor who won gold in the -70 kg category of the 1969 Canadian National Judo Championships.

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Charles Monnard

Charles Monnard (17 January 1790, in Bern – 13 January 1865, in Bonn) was a Swiss historian.

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Charles Porée

Charles Porée (4 September 1675 – 11 January 1741) was a French priest, Jesuit, educator, orator, poet and homme de lettres.

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Charles Ruas

Charles Ruas is an American author, particularly known for his work as an interviewer, literary and art critic, and translator.

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Charlotte Mandell

Charlotte Mandell (born 1968) is an American literary translator.

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Charlotte Rampling

Tessa Charlotte Rampling, (born 5 February 1946) is an English actress, model and singer, known for her work in European arthouse films in English, French, and Italian.

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Charlotte, Lady Campbell-Bannerman

Sarah Charlotte, Lady Campbell-Bannerman (née Bruce; 1832 – 30 August 1906) was the wife of British Prime Minister Henry Campbell-Bannerman.

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Cherubina de Gabriak

Cherubina de Gabriak (a) was a literary pseudonym of Elisaveta Ivanovna Dmitrieva (a; March 31, 1887 – December 5, 1928), possibly together with Maximilian Voloshin.

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Chocolates for Breakfast

Chocolates for Breakfast is a 1956 American novel written by Pamela Moore.

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Choe Yun

Ch'oe Hyon-mu (born 1953), better known by her pen name Ch'oe Yun (This is the author's preferred Romanization per LTI Korea) is a South Korean writer and professor of French literature.

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Christine Montross

Christine Elaine Montross (born 1973) is an American medical doctor and writer.

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Chun Yung-woo

Chun Yung-woo (born January 27, 1952 in Miryang, Gyeongsangnam-do, South Korea) served 33 years as a diplomat in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of South Korea including as the National Security Advisor in the Security Department in the Office of the President of the Republic of Korea.

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City of Sydney Library

The City of Sydney Library is a network of eight branch libraries and two 'library links', located within the City of Sydney Council administrational area.

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Colette Khoury

Colette Khoury (Arabic: كوليت خوري) (also written as Kulit Khuri, Colette al al-Khuri, Colette Khuri) is a Syrian novelist and poet, born in 1931, who is also the granddaughter of former Syrian Prime Minister Faris al-Khoury.

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Colin Davis (philosopher)

Colin Davis (born 1960) is professor of French at Royal Holloway, University of London.

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Colin Keith Gray

Colin Keith Gray is a Canadian actor, writer and film director.

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Collection Blanche

The Collection Blanche is the great series of French literature of the éditions Gallimard.

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Comédie larmoyante

Comédie larmoyante was a genre of French drama of the 18th century.

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Comparative literature

Comparative literature is an academic field dealing with the study of literature and cultural expression across linguistic, national, and disciplinary boundaries.

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Comparison of Dewey and Library of Congress subject classification

This is a conversion chart showing how the Dewey Decimal and Library of Congress Classification systems organize resources by concept, in part for the purpose of assigning call numbers.

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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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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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Contemporary French literature

This article is about French literature from the year 2000 to the present day.

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Crepitus (mythology)

Crepitus is an alleged Roman god of flatulence.

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Crusade cycle

The Crusade cycle is an Old French cycle of chansons de geste concerning the First Crusade and its aftermath.

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Culture of Asia

The culture of Asia encompasses the collective and diverse customs and traditions of art, architecture, music, literature, lifestyle, philosophy, politics and religion that have been practiced and maintained by the numerous ethnic groups of the continent of Asia since prehistory.

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Culture of France

The culture of Paris,in France and of the French people has been shaped by geography, by profound historical events, and by foreign and internal forces and groups.

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Culture of Syria

Syria is a traditional society with a long cultural history.

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D. Iacobescu

D.

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Daigaku Horiguchi

was a poet and translator of French literature in Taishō and Shōwa period Japan.

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Daniel Oster

Daniel Oster (1938–1999) was a French writer.

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Daniel Sloate

Daniel Sloate (January 27, 1931 – April 10, 2009) was a Canadian translator, poet and playwright.

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Daphne Woodward

Daphne Woodward was a translator of French literature into the English language.

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Daria Galateria

Daria Galateria is an Italian writer and professor.

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David Gascoyne

David Gascoyne (10 October 1916 – 25 November 2001) was an English poet associated with the Surrealist movement.

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Debra H. Sowell

Debra Hickenlooper Sowell is a dance historian and professor of humanities and theater history at Southern Virginia University.

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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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Degenerate art

Degenerate art (Entartete Kunst) was a term adopted in the 1920s by the Nazi Party in Germany to describe modern art.

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Denis Dodart

Denis Dodart was a French physician, naturalist and botanist, who was born in 1634 in Paris and died on 5 November 1707 in the same city.

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Derrick de Kerckhove

Derrick de Kerckhove (born 1944) is the author of The Skin of Culture and Connected Intelligence and Professor in the Department of French at the University of Toronto, Canada.

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Diana Panton

Diana Panton is a Canadian jazz vocalist.

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Diane Setterfield

Diane Setterfield (born 22 August 1964) is a British author whose 2006 debut novel, The Thirteenth Tale, became a ''New York Times'' No. 1 best-seller.

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Dima Wannous

Dima Wannous (ديمة ونوس) (born 1982) is a Syrian writer and translator.

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Discrimination against the homeless

Discrimination against the homeless is the act of treating the homeless, or those perceived to be homeless, unfavorably.

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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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Dominique Barbéris

Dominique Barberis, born in 1958, is a French novelist, author of literary studies and university professor, specialist in stylistics and writing workshops.

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Don Harrán

Don Harran (also spelled Harrán, Hebrew דון הרן; born 22 April 1936, died 15 June 2016) was professor of Musicology at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

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Donald Adamson

Dr Donald Adamson (born 30 March 1939) is a British literary scholar, author and historian.

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Dumitru Țepeneag

Dumitru Țepeneag (also known under the pen names Ed Pastenague and Dumitru Tsepeneag; b. February 14, 1937) is a contemporary Romanian novelist, essayist, short story writer and translator, who currently resides in France.

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Ebrahim Pourdavoud

Ebrāhim Pourdāvoud (February 9, 1885 - November 17, 1968) (ابراهیم پورداوود) was born in Rasht, Iran, to a mother who was the daughter of a clergyman and a father who was a reputable merchant and landlord.

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Education in Haiti

The Haitian Educational System yields the lowest total rate in the education realm of the Western Hemisphere.

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Education in Vietnam

Education in Vietnam is a state-run system of public and private education run by the Ministry of Education and Training.

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Edvard Kocbek

Edvard Kocbek (27 September 1904 – 3 November 1981) was a Slovenian poet, writer, essayist, translator, member of Christian Socialists in the Liberation Front of the Slovene Nation and Slovene Partisans.

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Edward Fitzgibbon

Edward Fitzgibbon (1803–1857), was an Irish writer, using the pseudonym Ephemera.

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Edward Shils

Edward Shils (1 June or July 1910 – 23 January 1995) was a Distinguished Service Professor in the Committee on Social Thought and in Sociology at the University of Chicago and an influential sociologist.

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Edwidge Danticat

Edwidge Danticat (born January 19, 1969) is a Haitian-American novelist and short story writer.

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Ehud Olmert

Ehud Olmert (אֶהוּד אוֹלְמֶרְט,; born 30 September 1945) is an Israeli politician and lawyer.

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Einosuke Akiya

is a Japanese Buddhist leader.

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Elaine Benes

Elaine Marie Benes is a fictional character on the American television sitcom Seinfeld (1989–1998), played by Julia Louis-Dreyfus.

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Elena Văcărescu

Elena Văcărescu or Hélène Vacaresco (September 21, 1864 in Bucharest – February 17, 1947 in Paris) was a Romanian-French aristocrat writer, twice a laureate of the Académie française.

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Elspeth Kennedy

Elspeth Mary Kennedy, MA, DPhil, FSA (6 August 1921 – 10 March 2006) was a British academic and a prominent medievalist.

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Emma of Waldeck and Pyrmont

Emma of Waldeck and Pyrmont (2 August 1858 – 20 March 1934) was Queen consort of the Netherlands and Grand Duchess consort of Luxembourg by marriage to King-Grand Duke William III.

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Emmanuel Halperin

Emmanuel Halperin (עמנואל הלפרין; born 1943) is an Israeli journalist, Television Presenter, and editor.

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Entre les murs (novel)

Entre les Murs (Between the walls) is a work of contemporary fiction by French writer François Bégaudeau.

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Enuig

The enuig, enueg or enuech ("complaint, vexation") is a genre of lyric poetry practised by the troubadours.

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Enzo Giudici

Enzo Giudici (Mussomeli, September 24, 1920 – Rome, October 4, 1985) was an Italian academic, specialising in French Renaissance literature, particularly Louise Labé and Maurice Scève.

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Epithalamium

An epithalamium (Latin form of Greek ἐπιθαλάμιον epithalamion from ἐπί epi "upon," and θάλαμος thalamos nuptial chamber) is a poem written specifically for the bride on the way to her marital chamber.

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Eric Daman

Eric Daman is a costume designer, fashion model, television personality, and author from New York City.

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Eric Gans

Eric Lawrence Gans (born August 21, 1941) is an American literary scholar, philosopher of language, and cultural anthropologist.

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Erwin J. Haeberle

Erwin J. Haeberle (born 30 March 1936) is a German social scientist and sexologist.

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Esther K. Chae

Esther Chae is a Korean-American actress and writer.

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Ethel Anderson

Ethel Campbell Louise Anderson (née Mason) (16 March 1883 – 4 August 1958) was an early twentieth century Australian poet, essayist, novelist and painter.

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Eugène Ionesco

Eugène Ionesco (born Eugen Ionescu,; 26 November 1909 – 28 March 1994) was a Romanian-French playwright who wrote mostly in French, and one of the foremost figures of the French Avant-garde theatre.

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Eugène Rambert

Eugène Rambert (April 6, 1830 – November 21, 1886), was a Swiss author and poet.

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Eugène Woestyn

Abuffard Eugène Augustin Woestyn (Orléans, 1813 - Paris, 18 April 1861) was a 19th-century French playwright, librettist, poet, journalist, chansonnier and writer.

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Ștefan Baciu

Ștefan Aurel Baciu (Estêvão Baciu, Esteban Baciu; October 29, 1918 – January 6, 1993) was a Romanian and Brazilian poet, novelist, publicist and academic who lived his later life in Hawaii.

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Faith Salie

Faith Coley Salie (born April 14, 1971) is an American journalist, writer, actor, comedian and television and radio host.

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Fantastique

Fantastique is a French term for a literary and cinematic genre that overlaps with science fiction, horror, and fantasy.

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Farzaneh Milani

Farzaneh Milani (born c. 1947) is an Iranian-American scholar and author.

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Fatin al-Murr

Faten el-Murr (Arabic: فاتن المرّ) (born 1969) is a Lebanese academic and writer.

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Fausta Garavini

Fausta Garavini (born 1938, Bologna, Italy) is an Italian writer and translator.

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Fereydoon Motamed

Fereydoon Motamed (also known as Amir Fereydoun Motamed, Amir Fereydoon Motamed or Fereydoon H. Motamed), (1917 born in Tehran, Iran – 1993 death in Charlottesville, Virginia), was an internationally known professor and linguist, winner of the Louis de Broglie award, from the Académie française, and recipient of literary award "Le Grand Prix Littéraire d'Iran" from Writer's Association of French Language.

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Fermina Márquez

Fermina Márquez is a short novel in twenty chapters written by French writer Valery Larbaud.

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Fiction Monthly

The Fiction Monthly was a Chinese literary journal published by the Commercial Press in Shanghai.

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Film (film)

Film is a 1965 short film written by Samuel Beckett, his only screenplay.

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Fleur-de-lis

The fleur-de-lis/fleur-de-lys (plural: fleurs-de-lis/fleurs-de-lys) or flower-de-luce is a stylized lily (in French, fleur means "flower", and lis means "lily") that is used as a decorative design or motif, and many of the Catholic saints of France, particularly St. Joseph, are depicted with a lily.

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Ford Madox Ford

Ford Madox Ford (born Ford Hermann Hueffer; 17 December 1873 – 26 June 1939) was an English novelist, poet, critic and editor whose journals, The English Review and The Transatlantic Review, were instrumental in the development of early 20th-century English literature.

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François de Vendôme, Vidame de Chartres

François de Vendôme, Vidame de Chartres (1522 – 22 December 1560), was a successful soldier and glamorous courtier who figures in accounts of the brilliant but decadent French court of the period.

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François Ricard

François Ricard (born June 4, 1947 in Shawinigan, Quebec) at The Canadian Encyclopedia.

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François-René de Chateaubriand

François-René (Auguste), vicomte de Chateaubriand (4 September 1768 – 4 July 1848), was a French writer, politician, diplomat and historian who founded Romanticism in French literature.

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Françoise Mallet-Joris

Françoise Lilar (6 July 1930 – 13 August 2016), pen name Françoise Mallet-Joris, was a Belgian author.

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Françoise Meltzer

Françoise Meltzer (born 1947) is a professor of Philosophy of Religion at the University of Chicago Divinity School.

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Francesco Orlando (critic)

Francesco Orlando (July 2, 1934 – June 22, 2010) was an Italian literary critic, essayist and university professor specialized in French literature.

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Francis Leo Lawrence

Francis Leo Lawrence (August 25, 1937 – April 16, 2013)>Lawrence, Francis L. Leadership in Higher Education: Views from the Presidency (New Brunswick, New Jersey: Transaction Publishers, 2006), 345.

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Francisco Serrano (poet)

Francisco Serrano (born June 27, 1949) is a Mexican poet and writer whose multiple works also include opera librettos and publications in collaboration with painters.

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Francophile

A Francophile (Gallophile) is a person who has a strong affinity towards any or all of the French language, French history, French culture or French people.

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Francophone literature

Francophone literature is literature written in the French language.

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Frankfurt Book Fair

The Frankfurt Book Fair (FBF; Frankfurter Buchmesse) is the world's largest trade fair for books, based both on the number of publishing companies represented, and the number of visitors.

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Frans Timmermans

Franciscus Cornelis Gerardus Maria Timmermans (born 6 May 1961) is a Dutch politician and diplomat serving as the First Vice-President of the European Commission and European Commissioner for Better Regulation, Interinstitutional Relations, the Rule of Law and the Charter of Fundamental Rights since 2014.

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Frantz Funck-Brentano

Frantz Funck-Brentano (15 June 1862 – 13 June 1947) was a French historian and librarian.

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Franz-Hessel-Preis

Franz-Hessel-Preis or Franz Hessel Prize for Contemporary Literature is a literary prize of France and Germany for French and German authors.

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Frédéric-Louis Colin

Frédéric-Louis Colin (1835 in Bourges, France – 27 November 1902, in Montreal) was a French-Canadian Sulpician priest.

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French Argentines

French Argentines (Franco-Argentins, franco-argentinos) refers to Argentine citizens of full or partial French ancestry, or persons born in France who reside in Argentina.

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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 Forum

French Forum is a peer-reviewed academic journal.

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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 science fiction

French science fiction is a substantial genre of French literature.

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French Studies

French Studies is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for French Studies.

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French Studies Bulletin

The French Studies Bulletin: A Quarterly Supplement is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for French Studies.

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Friedrich Wilhelm Gotter

Friedrich Wilhelm Gotter (3 September 1746 – 18 March 1797) was a German poet and dramatist.

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Fumiko Enchi

was the pen-name of Fumiko Ueda, one of the most prominent Japanese women writers in the Shōwa period of Japan.

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Fyodor Batyushkov

Fyodor Dmitrievich Batyushkov (Фёдор Дмитриевич Батюшков, September 7, 1857, Kosma village, Tver Governorate, Russian Empire, - March 19, 1920, Petrograd, Soviet Russia) was a Russian philologist, editor (Kosmopolis, 1897-1898; Mir Bozhy, 1902-1906), literary critic, theatre and literary historian.

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Fyodor Burdin

Fyodor Alexeyevich Burdin (Фёдор Алексеевич Бурдин, April 11, 1827 in Moscow, Russian Empire – February 24, 1887 in Moscow) was a Russian actor, best remembered for his parts in the Alexandrinsky Theatre productions of plays by his best friend Alexander Ostrovsky, whose rise to fame had a lot to do with Burdin's enthusiasm about the playwright's work, his connections in high places and considerable entrepreneurial talents.

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Fyodor Kokoshkin

Fyodor Fyodorovich Kokoshkin Фёдор Фёдорович Кокошкин; 1 May 1775, Moscow, Russian Empire, — 21 September 1838, Moscow) was a Russian dramatist and playwright, Moscow government official and theatre entrepreneur, the first director of the Moscow troupe of the Imperial Theatres, in 1823—1831. Several of his poems (including "On Napoleon's Retreat", 1812) appeared in Vestnik Evropy, Syn Otechestva and Amphion. He authored several original comedies (among them Little Demon on Vacation, 1818, and The Bringing Up or Here's Your Dowry, 1824), as well as numerous re-workings of the popular French vaudevilles, to be produced by the Imperial Theatres in Russia. Among his better-known translations was that of Molière's The Misanthrope (1816). A staunch champion of classicism in Russian literature, he favoured 'artiness' which many of his contemporaries ridiculed as lifeless pomposity, and was one of the major detractors of Alexander Griboyedov and his Woe from Wit. Kokoshkin either tutored or provided crucial help for several future stars of the mid-19th century Russian theatre stars, including Mikhail Shchepkin and Sergey Shumsky. He avidly promoted the salon culture in Moscow, wrote plays for amateur performances, participated in them, and was the leader of an artistic group which included Mikhail Zagoskin, Mikhail Dmitriyev, Alexander Pisarev, Sergey Aksakov and Alexander Shakhovskoy. His grandson Fyodor Fyodorovich Kokoshkin, Jr. (1871-1918) was one of the founders of Russian Constitutional Democratic Party.

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Gaston Bouatchidzé

Gaston Bouatchidzé (გასტონ ბუაჩიძე) (born October 21, 1935) is a Georgian-French writer and translator.

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Geneviève Hasenohr

Geneviève Hasenohr (born 3 July 1942) is a French philologist and prolific scholar of medieval and Renaissance French literature.

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Geoffrey Brereton

Geoffrey Brereton (1906 – 1979) was a scholar and critic of French literature and Spanish literature.

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Georg Büchner

Karl Georg Büchner (17 October 1813 – 19 February 1837) was a German dramatist and writer of poetry and prose, considered part of the Young Germany movement.

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George Haven Putnam

George Haven Putnam A.M., Litt.D. (April 2, 1844 – February 27, 1930) was an American publisher, soldier, and writer.

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George Saintsbury

George Edward Bateman Saintsbury, FBA (23 October 1845 – 28 January 1933), was an English writer, literary historian, scholar, critic and wine connoisseur.

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George Stambolian

George Stambolian (born April 10, 1938 – December 22, 1991, New York City) was an American educator, writer, and editor of Armenian descent.

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George Ticknor

George Ticknor (August 1, 1791 – January 26, 1871) was an American academician and Hispanist, specializing in the subject areas of languages and literature.

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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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Gheorghe Asachi

Gheorghe Asachi (surname also spelled Asaki; March 1, 1788 – November 12, 1869) was a Moldavian, later Romanian prose writer, poet, painter, historian, dramatist and translator.

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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 Scaraffia

Giuseppe Scaraffia is an Italian writer and professor.

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Goli Ameri

Goli Ameri (گلی عامری; née Goli Yazdi; born September 26, 1956) is an American diplomat and businesswoman.

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Goncourt brothers

The Goncourt brothers were Edmond de Goncourt (1822–96) and Jules de Goncourt (1830–70), both French naturalism writers who, as collaborative sibling authors, were inseparable in life.

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Gorka Aulestia Txakartegi

Gorka Aulestia Txakartegi (born Ondarroa, Biscay, Spain on 11 December 1932) is Spanish Basque literary historian and lexicographer.

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Graham Robb

Graham Macdonald Robb FRSL (born Manchester) is a British author and French literary critic.

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Green Knight

The Green Knight is a character of the 14th-century Arthurian poem Sir Gawain and the Green Knight and the related medieval work The Greene Knight.

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Guillaume de Dole

Guillaume de Dole (also known as (Le) Roman(s) de la Rose, or Guillaume de Dole) is an Old French narrative romance by Jean Renart.

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H. P. Lovecraft

Howard Phillips Lovecraft (August 20, 1890 – March 15, 1937) was an American writer who achieved posthumous fame through his influential works of horror fiction.

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Ha Gil-jong

Ha Gil-jong (April 13, 1941 - February 28, 1979) was a South Korean film director, screen writer and translator.

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Haakon Chevalier

Haakon Maurice Chevalier (Lakewood Township, New Jersey, September 10, 1901 – July 4, 1985) was an American author, translator, and professor of French literature at the University of California, Berkeley best known for his friendship with physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer, whom he met at Berkeley, California in 1937.

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Hamza Abu Faris

Hamza Abu Faris (حمزة أبوفارس), is a Libyan scholar and politician who was born in Msallata on 13 January 1946.

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Han Myeong-sook

Han Myeong-sook (born March 24, 1944; 한명숙) was the Prime Minister of South Korea from April 2006 to March 2007.

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Hanan Qassab Hassan

Hanan Qassab Hassan (حنان قصاب حسن) (b. Damascus, January 1, 1952) is a prominent Syrian writer and academic.

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Hannah Fielding

Hannah Fielding is an award-winning contemporary Romance fiction writer.

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Hans Aaraas

Hans Aaraas (1919–1998) was a Norwegian literary researcher.

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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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Hồ Văn Trung

Hồ Văn Trung (1885–1958) was a Vietnamese writer.

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Hôtel de Massa

The Hôtel de Massa is an 18th-century hôtel particulier, or large townhouse, at 38 rue du Faubourg Saint Jacques in the 14th arrondissement of Paris.

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Heading South

Heading South (Vers le sud) is a 2005 French-Canadian drama film directed by Laurent Cantet and based on three short stories by Dany Laferrière.

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Hempfield High School

Hempfield High School is a public senior high school located in Landisville, Pennsylvania, United States.

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Hendrik Brugmans

Hendrik Brugmans (13 December 1906 in Amsterdam – 12 March 1997 in Bruges) also known as Hendrik Bupatis was the son of historian Hajo Brugmans and Maria Keizer.

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Henri Mondor

Henri Mondor (20 May 1885, Saint-Cernin, Cantal – 6 April 1962) was a French physician, surgeon, and a historian of French literature and medicine.

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Henrietta (novel)

Henrietta is an 18th-century novel by Scottish author Charlotte Lennox.

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Henryka Łazowertówna

Henryka Łazowertówna (in full Henryka Wanda Łazowertówna); also Henryka Lazowert, or incorrectly Lazawert, (June 19, 1909, Warsaw – August 1942, Treblinka extermination camp) was a Polish lyric poet.

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Hidekazu Yoshida

was a Japanese music critic and literary critic, active in Shōwa and Heisei Japan.

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Hidemi Kon

was a literary critic and essayist active in Japan during the Shōwa period.

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Hideo Kobayashi

was a Japanese author, who established literary criticism as an independent art form in Japan.

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Hippolyte Taine

Hippolyte Adolphe Taine (21 April 1828 – 5 March 1893) was a French critic and historian.

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Hisashi Inoue

was a leading Japanese playwright and writer of comic fiction.

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Histoire littéraire de la France

Histoire littéraire de la France is an enormous history of French literature initiated in 1733 by Dom Rivest and the Benedictines of St. Maur but it was abandoned in 1763 after the publication of volume XII.

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History Detectives

History Detectives is a documentary television series on PBS.

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History of French-era Tunisia

The History of French-era Tunisia commenced in 1881 with the French protectorate and ended in 1956 with Tunisian independence.

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Horror fiction

Horror is a genre of speculative fiction which is intended to, or has the capacity to frighten, scare, disgust, or startle its readers or viewers by inducing feelings of horror and terror.

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Huỳnh Sanh Thông

Huỳnh Sanh Thông (Saigon, July 15, 1926 – November 15, 2008) was a Vietnamese American scholar and translator.

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Ina Rilke

Ina Rilke is an award-winning translator who specializes in translating Dutch literature and French literature into English.

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Indignation (film)

Indignation is a 2016 American drama film written, produced, and directed by James Schamus.

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Infanta Elena, Duchess of Lugo

Infanta Elena, Duchess of Lugo (Elena María Isabel Dominica de Silos de Borbón y de Grecia; born 20 December 1963) is the first child and elder daughter of King Juan Carlos I of Spain and Queen Sofía of Spain, and third in the line of succession to the Spanish throne.

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Irving Babbitt

Irving Babbitt (August 2, 1865 – July 15, 1933) was an American academic and literary critic, noted for his founding role in a movement that became known as the New Humanism, a significant influence on literary discussion and conservative thought in the period between 1910 and 1930.

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Isabel, Princess Imperial of Brazil

Dona Isabel (29 July 1846 – 14 November 1921), nicknamed "the Redemptress", was the heiress presumptive to the throne of the Empire of Brazil, bearing the title of Princess Imperial.

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Isidora Sekulić

Isidora Sekulić (Исидора Секулић, 16 February 1877 – 5 April 1958) was a Serbian prose writer, novelist, essayist, polyglot and art critic.

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Israeli literature

Israeli literature is literature written in the State of Israel by Israelis.

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Italian literature

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

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Jack Vaughn

Jack Hood Vaughn (August 18, 1920 – October 29, 2012) was the second Director of the United States Peace Corps succeeding Sargent Shriver.

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Jacqueline Hennessy

Jacqueline Hennessy (born November 25, 1968) is a Canadian journalist, television host, and occasional actress.

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Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis

Jacqueline Lee Kennedy Onassis (born Bouvier; July 28, 1929 – May 19, 1994) was the wife of the 35th President of the United States, John F. Kennedy, and the First Lady of the United States from 1961 until his assassination in 1963.

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Jacques Claude Demogeot

Jacques Claude Demogeot (5 July 18081894) was a French man of letters.

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Jacques Lusseyran

Jacques Lusseyran (19 September 1924 – 27 July 1971) was a French author and political activist.

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Jaegwon Kim

Jaegwon Kim (born September 12, 1934) is a Korean-American philosopher who is now an emeritus professor at Brown University, but who also taught at several other leading American universities.

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Jaime Martínez Tolentino

Jaime Martínez Tolentino (born January 10, 1943 in Salinas, Puerto Rico) is a Puerto Rican writer.

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James Matisoff

James A. Matisoff (Chinese name: 马蒂索夫 Mǎdìsuǒfū or 马提索夫 Mǎtísuǒfū; born July 14, 1937) is a professor emeritus of Linguistics at the University of California, Berkeley and noted authority on Tibeto-Burman languages and other languages of mainland Southeast Asia.

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Jane Gallop

Jane Anne Gallop (born May 4, 1952) is an American professor who since 1992 has served as Distinguished Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee, where she has taught since 1990.

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Jason Saul

Jason Saul is an American author, entrepreneur, and educator, best known as an expert on measuring social impact and benchmarking.

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Jean Aziz

Jean Aziz was a Lebanese politician, lawyer and poet.

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Jean Chapelain

Jean Chapelain (4 December 1595 – 22 February 1674) was a French poet and critic during the Grand Siècle, best known for his role as an organizer and founding member of the Académie française.

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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 Roemer

Jean Roemer (born in England about 1815; died in Lenox, Massachusetts, 31 August 1892) was a Dutch soldier and a United States professor of French language and literature at the City College of New York.

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Jean Roudaut

Jean Roudaut (1 June 1929, Morlaix) was a professor of French literature who taught in the universities of Thessaloniki, Pisa, and Fribourg.

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Jean Rousset

Jean Rousset (Geneva, 20 February 1910 – Geneva, 15 September 2002) was a Swiss literary critic who worked on French literature, and in particular on Baroque literature of the late Renaissance and early seventeenth century.

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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 Vauquelin de la Fresnaye

Jean Vauquelin de la Fresnaye (or de La Fresnaye) (1536–1608) was a French poet born at the château of La Fresnaye-au-Sauvage in Normandy in 1536.

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Jean-Baptiste Dureau de la Malle

Jean-Baptiste Dureau de la Malle (27 November 1742, Ouanaminthe, Saint-Domingue – 19 September 1807) was a writer of French literature and translator.

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Jean-Charles Laveaux

Jean-Charles Laveaux (17 November 1749, Troyes – 15 March 1827, Paris) was a French grammarian and translator.

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Jean-Charles-Julien Luce de Lancival

Jean-Charles-Julien Luce de Lancival (28 April 1764 – 17 August 1810).

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Jean-Michel Raimond

Jean-Michel Raimond (born in Orléans) is a French physicist working in the field of quantum mechanics.

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Jean-Paul Goujon

Jean-Paul Goujon Jean-Paul Goujon (born 1949) is a French university professor and writer.

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Jean-Pierre LaFouge

Jean-Pierre LaFouge is an Associate Professor of French at Marquette University.

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Jean-Yves Mollier

Jean-Yves Mollier (born 5 November 1947) is a French contemporary history teacher.

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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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Jirō Osaragi

was the pen-name of a popular Japanese writer in Shōwa period Japan, known primarily for his historical fiction novels, which appeared serialized in newspapers and magazines.

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Joan Nathan

Joan Nathan is an American cookbook author and newspaper journalist.

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Joanna Pruess

Joanna Pruess is a food and travel writer and a consultant to the food industry.

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Jocelyn Godefroi

Jocelyn Godefroi (1880, Kensington – 30 March 1969) was a British translator.

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Jocelyne François

Jocelyne François (born 1933 in Nancy, Meurthe-et-Moselle) is a French writer.

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John Andrews (historical writer)

John Andrews (1736–1809) was a historical writer and pamphleteer.

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John Goldkamp

John S. Goldkamp (December 20, 1947 in Orange, New Jersey–August 26, 2012 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) was an American criminologist who was a professor at Temple University for over 25 years.

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John Jolliffe (librarian)

John William Jolliffe (15 July 1929 – 30 March 1985) was a British librarian who was Bodley's Librarian (head of the Bodleian Library at the University of Oxford) from 1982 until his death.

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John Kennedy College

John Kennedy College is a boys school in Beau-Bassin, Mauritius.

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John Rodker

John Rodker (18 December 1894 – 6 October 1955) was an English writer, modernist poet, and publisher of modernist writers.

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Joke Smit

Johanna Elisabeth (Joke) Smit (27 August 1933, Utrecht – 19 September 1981, Amsterdam) was a well-known Dutch feminist and politician in the 1970s.

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Jonathan M. Weiss

Jonathan Mark Weiss (born May 3, 1942) is an American scholar of French literature and social science whose extensive publications include literary and theatre criticism, essays on Franco-American relations, a short story, and most recently the biography of Irène Némirovsky.

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José Manuel Losada

José Manuel Losada (Zamora, 1962) is a professor and literary theorist with a specialization in the fields of myth criticism and comparative literature.

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Joseph McLellan

Joseph Duncan McLellan, known as Joe, (1929-2005) was The Washington Post's music critic for more than three decades as well as a chess and book reviewer.

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Joseph S. O'Leary

Joseph Stephen O’Leary is an Irish Roman Catholic theologian.

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Journal des débats

The Journal des débats (French for: Journal of Debates) was a French newspaper, published between 1789 and 1944 that changed title several times.

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Jovan Skerlić

Jovan Skerlić (20 August 1877 – 15 May 1914) was a Serbian writer and critic.

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Judith Woodsworth

Judith Weisz Woodsworth (born 1948) is a Canadian academic and university administrator, having formerly served as President of Concordia University and Laurentian University.

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Juliana Jendo

Juliana Jendo (Syriac: ܓܘܠܝܢܐ ܓܢܕܐ) is an Assyrian-American singer and actress.

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Julie Van Dusen

Julie Van Dusen is a Canadian journalist who works for CBC News and is seen mainly during The National.

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Julio Cortázar

Julio Cortázar, born Julio Florencio Cortázar; (August 26, 1914 – February 12, 1984) was an Argentine novelist, short story writer, and essayist.

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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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Jun Ishikawa

was the pen name of a modernist author, translator and literary critic active in Shōwa period Japan.

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Junya Sato

is a Japanese film director.

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K. Ludwig Pfeiffer

K.

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Kamel Daoud

Kamel Daoud (كمال داود; born June 17, 1970) is an Algerian writer and journalist.

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Kansuke Yamamoto (artist)

was a photographer and poet.

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Karin Helmstaedt

Karin Helmstaedt (born 29 December 1966) is a journalist, presenter and former competitive swimmer with the Canadian National Swimming Team.

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Katarina Marinčič

Katarina Marinčič (born 25 June 1968) is a Slovene writer and literary historian.

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Kate Beckinsale

Kathrin Romary Beckinsale (born 26 July 1973) is an English actress.

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Kazuo Okamatsu

was a Japanese philologist and novelist.

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Kazutami Watanabe

was a Japanese scholar and translator of French literature.

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Keith Botsford

Keith Botsford (born March 29, 1928, in Brussels, Belgium) is an American/European writer, Professor Emeritus at Boston University and current editor of News from the Republic of Letters.

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Ken'ichi Yoshida (literary scholar)

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

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Khmer Rouge

The Khmer Rouge ("Red Khmers"; ខ្មែរក្រហម Khmer Kror-Horm) was the name popularly given to the followers of the Communist Party of Kampuchea and by extension to the regime through which the CPK ruled Cambodia between 1975 and 1979.

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Khmer Rouge rule of Cambodia

The Khmer Rouge period (1975–1979) refers to the rule of Pol Pot, Nuon Chea, Ieng Sary, Son Sen, Khieu Samphan and the Communist Party of Kampuchea over Cambodia, which the Khmer Rouge renamed Democratic Kampuchea.

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Khurshid Mahmud Kasuri

Khurshid Mahmud Kasuri (Urdu: خورشيد محمود قصورى; born 18 June 1941), is a Pakistani politician and writer who served as the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Pakistan between November 2002 until November 2007.

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Kingdom of Cambodia (1953–70)

The Kingdom of Cambodia (ព្រះរាជាណាចក្រកម្ពុជា, Royaume du Cambodge), informally known as the first Kingdom of Cambodia (ព្រះរាជាណាចក្រកម្ពុជាទី ១) and the Sangkum Reastr Niyum era (សម័យសង្គមរាស្ត្រនិយម "People's Socialist Community"; Communauté socialiste populaire), referred to Norodom Sihanouk's first administration of Cambodia from 1953 to 1970, an especially significant time in the country's history.

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Kiyoshi Jinzai

was a Japanese novelist, Russian translator and literary critic active during the Shōwa period of Japan.

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Kosugi Tengai

was the pen-name of a novelist in Meiji, Taishō and Shōwa period Japan.

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Kristin Ross

Kristin Ross (born 1953) is a professor of comparative literature at New York University.

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Kunio Tsuji

was a Japanese author, novelist, and scholar of French literature.

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Kurts Fridrihsons

Kurts Heinrihs Fridrihsons (German: Kurt Heinrich Friedrichsohn) was a Latvian painter, illustrator and Anti-Soviet dissident of Baltic German origin.

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Kyoko Nakajima

is an award-winning Japanese writer.

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L'après-midi d'un faune (poem)

L'après-midi d'un faune (or "The Afternoon of a Faun") is a poem by the French author Stéphane Mallarmé.

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L'Esprit Créateur

L'Esprit Créateur is a quarterly academic journal established in 1961 and published by the Johns Hopkins University Press.

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L'Instant X

"L'Instant X" (English: "The X Moment") is a 1995 song recorded by the French artist Mylène Farmer.

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La Bandera (novel)

La Bandera is a 1931 French novel written by Pierre Mac Orlan.

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La Fontaine's Fables

Jean de La Fontaine collected fables from a wide variety of sources, both Western and Eastern, and adapted them into French free verse.

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Lakewood Township, New Jersey

Lakewood Township is a township in Ocean County, New Jersey, United States.

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Language poets

The Language poets (or ''L.

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Langues d'oïl

The langues d'oïl (French) or oïl languages (also in langues d'oui) are a dialect continuum that includes standard French and its closest autochthonous relatives historically spoken in the northern half of France, southern Belgium, and the Channel Islands.

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Laurence de Cambronne

Laurence de Cambronne (born 1 May 1951, Casablanca, Morocco) is a French journalist, novelist and humanitarian.

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Lazăr Șăineanu

Lazăr Șăineanu (also spelled Șeineanu, born Eliezer Schein;Leopold, p.383, 417 Francisized Lazare Sainéan,, Alexandru Mușina,, in România Literară, Nr. 19/2003 or Sainéanu; April 23, 1859 – May 11, 1934) was a Romanian-born philologist, linguist, folklorist and cultural historian.

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Léon Gautier

Émile Théodore Léon Gautier (8 August 1832 – 25 August 1897) was a French literary historian.

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Léon Halévy

Léon Halévy (4 January 1802 – 2 September 1883) was a French civil servant, historian, and dramatist.

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Le Monde's 100 Books of the Century

The 100 Books of the Century (Les cent livres du siècle) is a list of the one hundred best books of the 20th century, according to a poll conducted in the spring of 1999 by the French retailer Fnac and the Paris newspaper Le Monde.

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Le Sexe qui parle

Le Sexe qui parle is a 1975 French adult film by Claude Mulot.

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Lee Garim

Lee Garim (Hangul: 이가림; born 1943) is a South Korean writer.

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Lee Seong-bok

Lee Seong-bok (Hangul: 이성복) is a South Korean poet known for his imaginative and multi-layered poetry.

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Lee Yoon-hyung

Lee Yoon-hyung (April 26, 1979 – November 18, 2005) was a South Korean millionaire and daughter of Samsung Group chief Lee Kun-hee.

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Leila Hatami

Leila Hatami (لیلا حاتمی Leylā Hātamī; born October 1, 1972) is an Iranian actress and director.

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Lenore (ballad)

"Lenore", sometimes translated as "Leonora", "Leonore" or "Ellenore", is a poem written by German author Gottfried August Bürger in 1773, and published in 1774 in the Göttinger Musenalmanach.

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Les Orientales

Les Orientales is a collection of poems by Victor Hugo, inspired by the Greek War of Independence.

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Les Rencontres d'Aubrac

Les Rencontres d'Aubrac is a French literary festival.

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Liam Ó Muirthile

Liam Ó Muirthile (1950 – 18 May 2018) was a prominent Irish-language poet who also wrote plays and novels, he was also a journalist.

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Librairie Avant-Garde (Mount Wutai Branch)

Librairie Avant-Garde (Mount Wutai Branch) is a bookstore opened by Qian Xiaohua in 2004, now regarded as the most representative bookstore in Nanjing, China.

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Library of Congress Classification

The Library of Congress Classification (LCC) is a system of library classification developed by the Library of Congress.

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Library of Congress Classification:Class P -- Language and Literature

Class P: Language and Literature is a first order classification in the Library of Congress Classification system.

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Linda Gaboriau

Linda Gaboriau, née Johnson,"Decoding the message a translator's challenge".

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Lire (magazine)

Lire (literally, to read) is a French literary magazine covering both French and foreign literature.

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List of Cambridge International Examinations Advanced Level subjects

Following are the disciplines in which Cambridge International Examinations (CIE) of Cambridge Assessment (UCLES) offers General Certificate of Education (GCE) Advanced Level and/or Advanced Subsidiary Level (AS/A Level) qualifications.

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List of Columbia College people

The following list contains only notable graduates and former students of Columbia College, the undergraduate liberal arts division of Columbia University, and its predecessor, from 1754 to 1776, King's College.

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List of digital library projects

This is a list of digital library projects.

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List of European literatures

This is a list of European literatures.

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List of foreign recipients of the Ordre des Palmes Académiques

The Ordre des Palmes Académiques (Order of Academic Palms) is an order of knighthood of France for academics and cultural and educational figures.

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List of French artists

The following is a chronological list of French artists working in visual or plastic media (plus, for some artists of the 20th century, performance art).

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List of French novelists

This is a list of novelists from France.

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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 geological features on Ariel

This list of geological features on Ariel itemizes the named geological features on the moon of Uranus called Ariel.

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List of geological features on Triton

This is a list of named geological features, of various kinds, on Triton, the planet Neptune's largest moon.

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List of Japanese-language poets

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 Poets are listed alphabetically by surname (or by widely known name, such as a pen name, with multiple names for the same poet listed separately if both are notable).

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List of literary awards

This is a list of literary awards from around the world.

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List of literary movements

This is a list of modern literary movements: that is, movements after the Renaissance.

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List of modernist writers

Literary modernism, or modernist literature, has its origins in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, mainly in Europe and North America.

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List of novelists by nationality

Well-known authors of novels, listed by country: See also: Lists of authors, List of poets, List of playwrights, List of short story authors.

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List of people from Rhode Island

This is a list of prominent people who were born in the U.S. state of Rhode Island or spent significant periods of their lives in the state.

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List of people from Wrocław

This list includes people who were born in or lived in Wrocław after 1945.

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List of University of Zimbabwe people

This list of University of Zimbabwe people includes notable alumni, professors, and administrators associated with the University of Zimbabwe, formerly the University of Rhodesia.

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List of university professors at Columbia University

At Columbia University, the title of University Professor is the highest faculty rank reserved for a small number of its faculty who have made important contributions to their field of study.

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List of Walt Disney Animation Studios films

This is a list of films from Walt Disney Animation Studios, an American animation studio headquartered in Burbank, California.

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List of Waseda University people

This is a list of notable alumni, faculty, and students, from Waseda University.

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List of Worthing inhabitants

This is a list of notable inhabitants of the borough of Worthing in West Sussex, England.

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List of York University people

This is a list of York University people.

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Literature by country

This is a list of literature pages categorized by country, language, or cultural group.

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Lolita

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

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Lolita (1997 film)

Lolita is a 1997 American-French drama film directed by Adrian Lyne and written by Stephen Schiff.

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Lolita Séchan

Lolita Séchan is a French writer.

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Lou Andreas-Salomé

Lou Andreas-Salomé (born either Louise von Salomé or Luíza Gustavovna Salomé or Lioulia von Salomé, Луиза Густавовна Саломе; 12 February 18615 February 1937) was a Russian-born psychoanalyst and author.

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Louis XIV of France

Louis XIV (Louis Dieudonné; 5 September 16381 September 1715), known as Louis the Great (Louis le Grand) or the Sun King (Roi Soleil), was a monarch of the House of Bourbon who reigned as King of France from 1643 until his death in 1715.

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Louis-Fernand Flutre

Louis-Fernand Flutre (21 June 1892 - 1978) was a French academic.

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Lucien-Anatole Prévost-Paradol

Lucien-Anatole Prévost-Paradol (8 August 1829, Paris – 20 July 1870, Washington, D.C.) was a French journalist and essayist.

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Lycée Français de Sofia

Lycée Français de Sofia Alphonse de Lamartine (LFAL, in Bulgarian: 9-та френска езикова гимназия „Алфонс дьо Ламартин“, ФЕГ) is a French language school in Sofia, established in 1961 under the name of 9th French Language School Georgi Kirkov.

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Lycée International de Saint-Germain-en-Laye

The Lycée International de Saint-Germain-en-Laye (commonly, Lycée International or L.I.; English: International High School of Saint-Germain-en-Laye) is a French public school located in Saint-Germain-en-Laye, Yvelines, in the western suburbs of Paris, France.

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Lycée Lyautey (Casablanca)

Lycée Lyautey is a French Lycée belonging to the French Mission in Casablanca, Morocco.

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Lydia Davis

Lydia Davis (born July 15, 1947) is an American writer noted for literary works of extreme brevity (commonly called "flash fiction").

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Maciej Żurowski

Maciej Żurowski (17 September 1915 in Płock – 8 May 2003 in Warsaw) was a Polish historian of French literature, translator, Romanist.

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Madeleine Patin

Madeleine Patin (1610–1682), born Madeleine Homanet, was a French moralist author.

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Mal du siècle

Mal du siècle ("sickness of the century") is a term used to refer to the ennui, disillusionment, and melancholy experienced by primarily young adults of Europe's early 19th century, when speaking in terms of the rising Romantic movement.

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Malcolm Bowie

Malcolm McNaughtan Bowie FBA (5 May 1943 – 28 January 2007) was a British academic, and Master of Christ's College, Cambridge from 2002 to 2006.

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Mansour Fadlallah Azzam

Mansour Fadlallah Azzam (born 1960) is the Minister of Presidential Affairs of Syria.

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Marcel Janco

Marcel Janco (common rendition of the Romanian name Marcel Hermann Iancu, last name also Ianco, Janko or Jancu; May 24, 1895 – April 21, 1984) was a Romanian and Israeli visual artist, architect and art theorist.

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Marcel Paquet

Marcel Paquet (21 February 1947 – 22 November 2014) was a Belgian philosopher.

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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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Margaret Diesendorf

Margaret Diesendorf née Máté (MA, D.Phil.), (1912–1993), was an Australian linguist, poet, editor, translator and educationist.

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Margaret Mary Vojtko

Margaret Mary Vojtko (January 15, 1930 – September 1, 2013) was an American adjunct professor of French at Duquesne University.

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Marian Engel

Marian Engel,, née Marian Ruth Passmore (May 24, 1933 – February 16, 1985) was a Canadian novelist and a founding member of the Writers' Union of Canada.

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Marian Hobson

Marian Elizabeth Hobson Jeanneret, (née Hobson; born 10 November 1941) is a British scholar of French philosophy, and culture.

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Markus Hediger

Markus Hediger (born 31 March 1959) is a Swiss writer and translator.

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Marquis de Custine

Astolphe-Louis-Léonor, Marquis de Custine (18 March 1790 – 25 september 1857) was a French aristocrat and writer who is best known for his travel writing, in particular his account of his visit to Russia La Russie en 1839.

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Martha Farnsworth Riche

Martha Farnsworth Riche (born October 16, 1939) is an American economist who directed the United States Census Bureau from 1994 to 1998.

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Martine Beck

Martine Beck (born 1947) is a French psychotherapist, as well as an author of picture books and other children's literature.

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Massacre of Lwów professors

In July 1941, 25 Polish academics from the city of Lwów (modern-day Lviv, Ukraine) were killed by Nazi German occupation forces along with their families.

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Mastermind (TV series)

Mastermind is a British game show, well known for its challenging questions, intimidating setting, and air of seriousness.

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Masuji Ibuse

was a Japanese author.

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Maud de Boer-Buquicchio

Maud de Boer-Buquicchio (born December 28, 1944), a Dutch jurist, is the UN's Special Rapporteur on the sale of children, child prostitution and child pornography.

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Maurice Barrès

Auguste-Maurice Barrès (19 August 1862 – 4 December 1923) was a French novelist, journalist and politician.

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May Menassa

May Menassa (Arabic: مي منسى) (born 1939) is a Lebanese author, critic and translator.

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May Telmissany

May Telmissany (Arabic: مي التلمساني) is an Egyptian-Canadian novelist, translator, film critic and academic born in Cairo, Egypt, on 1 July 1965.

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May Ziade

May Ziade (مي زيادة; 11 February 1886 – 17 October 1941) was a Lebanese-Palestinian poet, essayist and translator.

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Mário de Andrade

Mário Raul de Morais Andrade (October 9, 1893 – February 25, 1945) was a Brazilian poet, novelist, musicologist, art historian and critic, and photographer.

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Meiji Gakuin University

is a Christian university in Tokyo and Yokohama that was established in 1863.

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Metamorphoses

The Metamorphoses (Metamorphōseōn librī: "Books of Transformations") is a Latin narrative poem by the Roman poet Ovid, considered his magnum opus.

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Michael Showalter

Michael Showalter (born June 17, 1970) is an American comedian, actor, director, writer and producer.

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Michel Deguy

Michel Deguy (born 1930 in Paris) is a French poet and translator.

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Michel Murat

Michel Murat is best known as a specialist of twentieth-century French literature, with an emphasis on modernity, style, poetics, and versification.

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Michel Paul Guy de Chabanon

Michel-Paul Guy de Chabanon (1730, Saint-Domingue – 1792, Paris) was a violinist, composer and writer on music theory and French literature.

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Michelle Yim

Michelle Yim Wai-ling (born September 2, 1955), also known by her stage name Mai Suet, is a Hong Kong actress and elder sister of former actress Shirley Yim Shuet Lei.

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Mihail Sebastian

Mihail Sebastian (born Iosif Mendel Hechter; October 18, 1907 – May 29, 1945) was a Romanian playwright, essayist, journalist and novelist.

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Ministry of Culture (France)

The Ministry of Culture (Ministère de la Culture) is the ministry of the Government of France in charge of national museums and the monuments historiques.

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Mira Schor

Mira Schor (b. in New York City in 1950) is an American artist, writer, editor, and educator, known for her contributions to critical discourse on the status of painting in contemporary art and culture as well as to feminist art history and criticism.

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Mirapolis

Mirapolis was a theme park located in Courdimanche (Val-d'Oise, France), which was based on elements from French literature (novels and fables) and culture.

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Misto Treska

Misto Treska (19 April 1914 - 23 June 1993) was an Albanian translator, diplomat (Ambassador), writer and politician of Albania during communist regime.

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Mitsuo Nakamura

was the pen-name of a writer of biographies and stage-plays, and a literary critic active in Shōwa period Japan.

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Mohamed Toihiri

Mohamed Toihiri (born 20 August 1955) was the Permanent Representative to the United Nations for Comoros, (also accredited as ambassador to the United States, Canada and Cuba) between 2007 and 2012.

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Mohammed Ali Bey al-Abed

Mohammad Ali al-Abed (محمد علي العابد / ALA-LC: Muḥammad ‘Alī Al-‘Ābed; 1867–1939) was appointed the first president of Syria (from 11 June 1932 until 21 December 1936) as a nominee of the nationalist Syrian parliament in Damascus after the country received partial recognition of sovereignty from France.

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Mohtaram Eskandari

Mohtaram Eskandari (1895 – July 27, 1924) (محترم اسکندری) was an Iranian intellectual and a pioneer of the Iranian women's movement.

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Moi, Antoine de Tounens, roi de Patagonie

Moi, Antoine de Tounens, roi de Patagonie is a 1981 novel by the French writer Jean Raspail.

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Monie Tung

Monie Tung (born 26 November 1980) is a Hong Kong film and television entertainer, programme host and stage actress, and started when she was 6 years old, and enrolled in the wireless TV children's programme 430 Space Shuttle, she entered the Sheng Kung Hui Lam Woo Memorial Secondary School, and graduated from the University of Hong Kong College of Arts (majoring in French literature), and in 2004 she officially joined the entertainment circle.

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Monique Wittig

Monique Wittig (July 13, 1935 – January 3, 2003) was a French author and feminist theorist who wrote about overcoming socially enforced gender roles and who coined the phrase "heterosexual contract".

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Mount Laurel, New Jersey

Mount Laurel is a township in Burlington County, New Jersey, United States, and is an edge city suburb of Philadelphia.

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Nakae Chōmin

was the pen-name of a journalist, political theorist and statesman in Meiji-period Japan.

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Naomi Schor

Naomi Schor (October 10, 1943 in New York City – December 2, 2001 in New Haven, CT) was a noted literary critic and theorist.

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National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

The National and Kapodistrian University of Athens (NKUA;Εθνικὸν καὶ Καποδιστριακόν Πανεπιστήμιον Ἀθηνῶν, Ethnikón kai Kapodistriakón Panepistímion Athinón), usually referred to simply as the University of Athens (UoA), is a public university in Zografou, a suburb of Athens, Greece.

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Nguyen Manh Tuong

Nguyễn Mạnh Tường (1909–1997) was a Vietnamese lawyer and intellectual.

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Nicolas Mary

Nicolas Mary, sieur Desfontaines also called Desfontaines, born c. 1610 in Rouen – died 4 February 1652 in Angers, was a 17th-century French playwright, novelist and actor.

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Nicolas-Edme Rétif

Nicolas-Edme Rétif or Nicolas-Edme Restif (23 October 1734 – 3 February 1806), also known as Rétif de la Bretonne, was a French novelist.

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Nikola Andrić

Nikola Andrić (5 July 1867 – 7 April 1942) was a Croatian writer, philologist 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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Nil volentibus arduum

Nil volentibus arduum is a Latin expression meaning "nothing is impossible to the valiant", and the name of a 17th-century Dutch literary society that tried to bring French literature to the Dutch Republic.

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Nina Rootes

Nina Rootes is a translator of French and Italian literature.

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Nineteenth-Century French Studies

Nineteenth-Century French Studies is a biannual peer-reviewed academic journal covering nineteenth-century French literature and related fields.

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Ninon de l'Enclos

Anne "Ninon" de l'Enclos also spelled Ninon de Lenclos and Ninon de Lanclos (10 November 1620 – 17 October 1705) was a French author, courtesan, and patron of the arts.

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Nippon Decimal Classification

The Nippon Decimal Classification (NDC, also called the Nippon Decimal System) is a system of library classification developed for mainly Japanese language books maintained by the Japan Library Association since 1956.

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Noah Charney

Noah Charney (born November 27, 1979) is an American art historian and novelist.

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Noboru Tanaka

was a Japanese film director known for his Roman Porno films, including three critically respected films known as the Showa trilogy: A Woman Called Sada Abe (aka Sada Abe: Docu-Drama) (1975), Watcher in the Attic (1976), and Beauty's Exotic Dance: Torture! (1977), all three starring Nikkatsu Roman porno queen Junko Miyashita.

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Noor-ol-Hoda Mangeneh

Noor-ol-Hoda Mangeneh (born 1902, date of death unknown) was an Iranian intellectual and one of the pioneering figures in the women's rights movement in Iran.

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Notes on Novelists

Notes on Novelists is a book of literary criticism by Henry James published in 1914.

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Nouveau roman

The Nouveau Roman (new novel) is a type of 1950s French novel that diverged from classical literary genres.

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Novel sequence

A novel sequence is a set or series of novels which share common themes, characters, or settings, but where each novel has its own title and free-standing storyline, and can thus be read independently or out of sequence.

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Ola Raknes

Ola Raknes (17 January 1887 – 28 January 1975) was a Norwegian psychologist, philologist and non-fiction writer.

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Ook Chung

Ook Chung, born in Japan in 1963, is a Québécois writer.

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Orgasm

Orgasm (from Greek ὀργασμός orgasmos "excitement, swelling"; also sexual climax) is the sudden discharge of accumulated sexual excitement during the sexual response cycle, resulting in rhythmic muscular contractions in the pelvic region characterized by sexual pleasure.

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Osamu Dazai

was a Japanese author who is considered one of the foremost fiction writers of 20th-century Japan.

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Oscar Conti

Oscar "Oski" Conti (191430 October 1979) was a prominent Argentine cartoonist and humorist.

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Oskar Davičo

Oskar Davičo (Оскар Давичо; 1909—1989) was a distinguished Serbian and Yugoslavian novelist and poet.

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Ottoman Empire

The Ottoman Empire (دولت عليه عثمانیه,, literally The Exalted Ottoman State; Modern Turkish: Osmanlı İmparatorluğu or Osmanlı Devleti), also historically known in Western Europe as the Turkish Empire"The Ottoman Empire-also known in Europe as the Turkish Empire" or simply Turkey, was a state that controlled much of Southeast Europe, Western Asia and North Africa between the 14th and early 20th centuries.

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Our Lady of the Flowers

Our Lady of the Flowers (Notre Dame des Fleurs) is the debut novel of French writer Jean Genet, first published in 1943.

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Outline of France

The following outline is provided as an overview and topical guide of France: France – country in Western Europe with several overseas regions and territories.

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Oxford Companions

Oxford Companions is a book series published by Oxford University Press, providing general knowledge within a specific area.

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Palacký University

Palacký University Olomouc is the oldest university in Moravia and the second-oldest in the Czech Republic.

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Paolo Marinou-Blanco

Paolo Marinou-Blanco is a film director and screenwriter.

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Paolo Poli

Paolo Poli (May 23, 1929 – March 25, 2016) was an Italian theatre actor.

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Papel volante

Papel volante is a Portuguese name that designates a form of popular literature that may include popular prints.

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Park Ynhui

Park Ynhui (born February 26, 1930) is a South Korean poet and writer who publishes under the name Park Yeemun in Korean.

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Parnassianism

Parnassianism (or Parnassism) was a French literary style that began during the positivist period of the 19th century, occurring after romanticism and prior to symbolism.

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Pascal Rambert

Pascal Rambert is a French writer, choreographer, and director for the stage and screen.

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Paul Adam (French novelist)

Paul Adam (December 7, 1862 – January 2, 1920) was a French novelist.

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Paul Feinman

Paul George Feinman, New York Times (December 1, 2013).

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Paul Gagné (translator)

Paul Gagné is a Canadian literary translator currently working in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

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Paul-Jacques Bonzon

Paul-Jacques Bonzon (August 31, 1908 - September 24, 1978) was a French writer, best known for the series Les six compagnons ("Six companions").

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Père Goriot

Le Père Goriot (Old Goriot or Father Goriot) is an 1835 novel by French novelist and playwright Honoré de Balzac (1799–1850), included in the Scènes de la vie privée section of his novel sequence La Comédie humaine.

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Pe Maung Tin

Pe Maung Tin (ဖေမောင်တင်; 24 April 1888 – 22 March 1973) was a scholar of Pali and Buddhism and educator in Myanmar, formerly Burma.

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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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Peter Hallward

Peter Hallward is a political philosopher, best known for his work on Alain Badiou and Gilles Deleuze.

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Peter Mieg

Peter Mieg (5 September 1906 – 7 December 1990) was a Swiss composer, painter and journalist.

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Petr Herel

Petr Herel was born 1943 in Czechoslovakia.

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Philippe de Tarrazi

Viscount Philippe de Tarrazi (فيليب دي طرّازي / ALA-LC: Fīlīb dī Ṭarrāzī; 28 April 1865 – 7 August 1956), was a Lebanese polymath, philanthropist, founder of the National Library of Lebanon and a founding member of the Arab Academy of Damascus.

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Philippe Djian

Philippe Djian (born 3 June 1949) is a popular French author of Armenian descent.

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Phillip Osborne

Phillip Osborne (16 March 1904 – 23 August 1936) was an early travelling companion of Sir Wilfred Thesiger, educated at Christ's Hospital and Pembroke College, Oxford University.

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Pierre Autin-Grenier

Pierre Autin-Grenier (4 April 1947 – 12 April 2014) was a French author.

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Pierre Capelle

Pierre Adolphe Capelle (4 November 1775 – 4 October 1851) was a 19th-century French chansonnier, goguettier and writer.

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Pierre Fallon

Pierre Fallon (24 September 1912, Namur, Belgium - 20 September 1985, Calcutta, India) was a Belgian Jesuit priest, missionary in India, Professor of French literature at the University of Calcutta.

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Pierre Sprey

Pierre Sprey, born in 1937, is a defense analyst and record producer.

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Pierre-Claude Nivelle de La Chaussée

Pierre-Claude Nivelle de La Chaussée (14 February 1692 in Paris – 14 May 1754 in Paris) was a French dramatist who blurred the lines between comedy and tragedy with his comédie larmoyante.

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Plutarch

Plutarch (Πλούταρχος, Ploútarkhos,; c. CE 46 – CE 120), later named, upon becoming a Roman citizen, Lucius Mestrius Plutarchus, (Λούκιος Μέστριος Πλούταρχος) was a Greek biographer and essayist, known primarily for his Parallel Lives and Moralia.

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Pramatha Chaudhuri

Pramathanath Chaudhuri (প্রমথনাথ চৌধুরী) (7 August 1868 – 2 September 1946), known as Pramatha Chaudhuri, alias Birbal, was a Bengali writer and an influential figure in Bengali literature.

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Predrag Matvejević

Predrag Matvejević (7 October 1932 – 2 February 2017) was a Yugoslav writer and scholar.

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Prix Alain-Fournier

The Prix Alain-Fournier is a French literary prize, awarded by the town of Saint-Amand-Montrond in honour of Alain-Fournier, author of Le Grand Meaulnes.

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Prix de Flore

The Prix de Flore is a French literary prize founded in 1994 by Frédéric Beigbeder.

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Prix Goncourt

The Prix Goncourt (Le prix Goncourt,, The Goncourt Prize) is a prize in French literature, given by the académie Goncourt to the author of "the best and most imaginative prose work of the year".

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Qory Sandioriva

Qory Sandioriva (born in Jakarta, August 17, 1991), is an Indonesian beauty pageant titleholder.

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R. N. Whybray

Roger Norman Whybray (1923–1997) was a biblical scholar and specialist in Hebrew studies.

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Radovan Lukavský

Radovan Lukavský (1 November 1919 – 10 March 2008) was a Czech theatre and film actor.

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Ralph Manheim

Ralph Frederick Manheim (April 4, 1907 – September 26, 1992) was an American translator of German and French literature, as well as occasional works from Dutch, Polish and Hungarian.

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Rasha Rizk

Rasha Rizk (رشا رزق.; born 5 March 1976) is a Syrian singer-songwriter.

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Rei Nakanishi

is a Japanese novelist and songwriter.

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René Girard

René Noël Théophile Girard (25 December 1923 – 4 November 2015) was a French historian, literary critic, and philosopher of social science whose work belongs to the tradition of anthropological philosophy.

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René Pomeau

René Pomeau (20 February 1917 in Beautiran – 26 February 2000 in Clamart) was an eminent French scholar of eighteenth-century French literature generally recognised as one of the most expert authority on Voltaire by the time of his death in 2000.

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Renee Richetts

Renee Richetts (November 5, 1954) is an American artist best known for her hinged metal books, created from re-purposed materials.

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Restoration literature

Restoration literature is the English literature written during the historical period commonly referred to as the English Restoration (1660–1689), which corresponds to the last years of the direct Stuart reign in England, Scotland, Wales, and Ireland.

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Reviving Toru Dutt

Reviving Toru Dutt is a short documentary on the Indian author Toru Dutt who lived in the 19th century.

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Revue d'Histoire littéraire de la France

The Revue d'Histoire littéraire de la France is a quarterly literary journal covering the study of French literature since the 15th century.

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Rhyme royal

Rhyme royal (or rime royal) is a rhyming stanza form that was introduced to English poetry by Geoffrey Chaucer.

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Richard Wolffe

Richard L. Wolffe (born 17 September 1968) is a British-American journalist, MSNBC commentator, and author of the Barack Obama books Renegade: The Making of a President (Crown, June 2009) and Revival: The Struggle for Survival Inside the Obama White House (Crown, November 2010).

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Rid Grachev

Rid Iosifovich Grachev (nèe Vite, Russian: Вите), also spelled Reed or Reid (Russian: Рид Иосифович Грачёв) (18 July 1935 – 1 November 2004) was a Soviet and Russian poet, writer, translator and essayist; who influenced and was a close friend of a number of Leningrad authors of the late 1950s—early 1960s, including Vera Panova, Sergey Dovlatov and, most notably, Joseph Brodsky.

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Robert Baldick

Robert André Edouard Baldick, FRSL (9 November 1927 – April 1972), was a British scholar of French literature, writer, joint editor of the Penguin Classics series with Betty Radice, and a well-known translator.

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Robert Marleau

Robert Marleau, is a former Canadian federal public servant and former Information Commissioner of Canada.

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Robert Picht

Professor Dr.

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Robert Stam

Robert Stam is a University Professor at New York University, where he teaches about the French New Wave filmmakers.

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Roger Knight

Roger David Verdon Knight (born 6 September 1946) is an English administrator, cricketer and schoolmaster.

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Roger Le Moine

Roger Le Moine (6 November 1933, La Malbaie – 12 July 2004, Ottawa) was an emeritus professor of Québec and French literature at the University of Ottawa.

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Roger Shattuck

Roger Whitney Shattuck (August 20, 1923 in Manhattan, New York – December 8, 2005 in Lincoln, Vermont) was an American writer best known for his books on French literature, art, and music of the twentieth century.

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Roger Viry-Babel

Roger Viry-Babel (1945 in Mirecourt, Vosges – 2006), saw himself as an entertainer, academic and French filmmaker.

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Roman d'Alexandre

The Roman d'Alexandre, from the Old French Li romans d'Alixandre (English: "Romance of Alexander"), is a 16,000-verseHasenohr, 1306.

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Ronald E. Asher

Ronald E. Asher (born 23 July 1926) is a British linguist and educator specialised in Dravidian languages.

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Ronald Syme

Sir Ronald Syme, (11 March 1903 – 4 September 1989) was a New Zealand-born historian and classicist.

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Roncevaux Terra

Roncevaux Terra is the name given to the northern part of the highly reflective side of Saturn's moon Iapetus.

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Royds Hall School

Royds Hall Community School is a mixed all-through school for pupils aged 4 – 16.

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Russian literature

Russian literature refers to the literature of Russia and its émigrés and to the Russian-language literature of several independent nations once a part of what was historically Rus', the Russian Empire or the Soviet Union.

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Ruth Sato

Ruth Sato (1904–1992) was a Broadway chorus dancer, gossip columnist, musician promoter and nightclub manager.

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Ruzha Lazarova

Ruzha Lazarova (Bulgarian Cyrillic, Ружа Лазарова; Sofia, 1968) is a Bulgarian French language writer who currently lives in Paris.

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Sabine Chaouche

Sabine Chaouche is a French scholar who specializes in theatre and social and economic history.

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Sadaf Foroughi

Sadaf Foroughi (صدف فروغی) (born 27 July 1976 in Tehran, Iran) is an Iranian–Canadian film maker, video artist and film editor.

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Sair Tjerita Siti Akbari

Sair Tjerita Siti Akbari (Perfected spelling: Syair Cerita Siti Akbari, Malay for Poem on the Story of Siti Akbari; also known as Siti Akbari) is an 1884 Malay-language syair (poem) by Lie Kim Hok.

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Sally Price

Sally Price, born Sally Hamlin (16 September 1943) in Boston, is an American anthropologist, best known for her studies of so-called “primitive art” and its place in the imaginaire of Western viewers.

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Sandrine Veysset

Sandrine Veysset (born 29 March 1967) is a French film director and screenwriter.

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Sanssouci

Sanssouci is the summer palace of Frederick the Great, King of Prussia, in Potsdam, near Berlin.

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Sarah Kay

Sarah Kay is a professor of French at New York University.

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Sayyid Qutb

Sayyid Qutb (or;,; سيد قطب Sayyid Quṭb; also spelled Said, Syed, Seyyid, Sayid, Sayed; Koteb, Qutub, Kotb, Kutb; 9 October 1906 – 29 August 1966) was an Egyptian author, educator, Islamic theorist, poet, and the leading member of the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood in the 1950s and 1960s.

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SCEGGS Darlinghurst

SCEGGS Darlinghurst is an independent, Anglican school for girls, located in Darlinghurst, an inner-city, eastern suburb of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.

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Scottie Thompson

Susan Scott "Scottie" Thompson (born November 9, 1981) is an American film, television and stage actress.

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Secondary education in France

In France, secondary education is in two stages.

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Seewoosagur Ramgoolam

Sir Seewoosagur Ramgoolam (Hindi: सर शिवसागर रामगुलाम; September 18, 1900 – December 15, 1985; often referred to as Chacha Ramgoolam) was a Mauritian politician, statesman and philanthropist.

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Sergey Kuznetsov (writer)

Sergey Yurievich Kuznetsov (Сергей Юрьевич Кузнецов; born 14 June 1966) is a contemporary Russian writer, journalist and entrepreneur.

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Sevasti Kallisperi

Sevasti Kallisperi (Σεβαστή Καλλισπέρη; 1858-1953) was the first Greek woman to attain a university degree.

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Shahrzad (Reza Kamal)

Reza Kamal (1898 – 11 September 1937), better known by the pseudonym Shahrzad or Scheherazade, was an Iranian dramatist and playwright.

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Sharon R. Long

Sharon Rugel Long, Ph.D. (-) is an American plant biologist.

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Shaun Whiteside

Shaun Whiteside (born 1959) is a Northern Irish translator of French, Dutch, German, and Italian literature.

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Shōhei Ōoka

was a Japanese novelist, literary critic, and translator of French literature who was active during the Shōwa period of Japan.

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Shigehiko Hasumi

(born 29 April 1936 in Roppongi, Tokyo) is a film critic and an academic researcher on French literature from Japan.

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Shimon Peres

Shimon Peres (שמעון פרס,; born Szymon Perski; August 2, 1923 – September 28, 2016) was an Israeli politician who served as the ninth President of Israel (2007–2014), the Prime Minister of Israel (twice), and the Interim Prime Minister, in the 1970s to the 1990s.

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Siegfried van Praag

Siegfried Emanuel van Praag (8 August 1899 in Amsterdam – 16 March 2002 in Brussels), was a prolific Dutch writer of more than 60 books.

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Silvina Bullrich

Silvina Bullrich (October 4, 1915 – July 2, 1990) was a best-selling Argentine novelist, as well as a translator, screenwriter, critic, and academic.

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Simon Harel

Simon Harel is a Canadian intellectual born in Montréal in 1957.

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Simone Philip Kamel

Simone Philip Kamel (سيمون فيليپ كامل), mononymously known as Simone, born June 14, is an Egyptian singer, that throughout the 1990s was famous for her soprano voice.

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Société des gens de lettres

The Société des gens de lettres de France ("Society of Men of Letters of France"), or SGDLF, is a writers' association founded in 1838 by the notable French authors Honoré de Balzac, Victor Hugo, Alexandre Dumas, and George Sand.

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Sorbonne University

Sorbonne University (Sorbonne Université) is a public research university in Paris, France, established by fusion in 2018 of Paris-Sorbonne University and Pierre and Marie Curie University.

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Stuart Symington

William Stuart Symington, Jr. (June 26, 1901 – December 14, 1988) was an American businessman and politician from Missouri.

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SubStance

SubStance: A Review of Theory and Literary Criticism is a triannual peer-reviewed academic journal that was established in 1971 and is published by the University of Wisconsin Press.

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Suheir Atassi

Suheir al-Atassi (Suhair al-ʾAtāsī; born 1971) is the leading female secular activist in the Syrian opposition, and co-vice-president of the National Coalition for Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition Forces between November 2012 and December 2013.

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Susana Chou

Susana Chou Vaz da Luz also known as Chou Kei Jan (born 2 December 1941 in Shanghai) was the President of the Legislative Assembly of Macau from 1999 to 2009.

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Sylvère Lotringer

Sylvère Lotringer (born 1938) is literary critic and cultural theorist.

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Syrian literature

Syrian literature is literature originating from present-day Syria (officially the "Syrian Arabic Republic"), and which may be written in any of the languages of Syria.

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Tadeusz Boy-Żeleński

Tadeusz Kamil Marcjan Żeleński (better known by his pen name, Tadeusz Boy-Żeleński; 21 December 1874 – 4 July 1941) was a Polish stage writer, poet, critic and, above all, the translator of over 100 French literary classics into Polish.

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Tajar Zavalani

Tajar Zavalani (1903–1966) was an Albanian historian, publicist, and writer.

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Takako Takahashi

was a Japanese author.

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Takashi Tachibana

is a Japanese independent journalist.

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Tama Cemetery

in Tokyo is the largest municipal cemetery in Japan.

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Tania Boteva-Malo

Tania Boteva-Malo (Bulgarian: Таня Ботева-Мало; Sofia, 1950) is a Bulgarian French language writer who currently lives in Brussels.

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Tariq Ramadan

Tariq Ramadan (طارق رمضان; born 26 August 1962) is a Swiss Muslim academic, philosopher, and writer.

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Tatsuhiko Shibusawa

was the pen name of Shibusawa Tatsuo, a novelist, art critic, and translator of French literature active during Shōwa period Japan.

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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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Teruo Yajima

was a Japanese writer.

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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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Thérèse-Adèle Husson

Born into an upper-middle-class family in 1803, Thérèse-Adèle Husson was a French writer in the post-Revolutionary period.

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The Bad Life

The Bad Life (La Mauvaise Vie) is a 2005 French novel by Frédéric Mitterrand, the Minister of Culture and Communication of France.

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The Boy and the Blind Man

The Boy and the Blind Man (Le Garçon et l'aveugle) is the name of a 13th-century French play; considered the oldest surviving French farce.

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The Class (2008 film)

The Class (Entre les murs) is a 2008 French drama film directed by Laurent Cantet, based on the 2006 novel of the same name by François Bégaudeau.

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The College Preparatory School

The College Preparatory School (CPS) is a four-year private high school in Oakland, California.

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The Miller School of Albemarle

Miller School of Albemarle is a co-educational private preparatory school located in Albemarle County, Virginia.

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The Muse’s Tragedy

"The Muse’s Tragedy" is a short-story written by Edith Wharton.

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The Paratrooper's Prayer

La Prière du Para (The Paratrooper's Prayer) is a French poem found in the possession of the presumed author, Aspirant (Brevet-Lieutenant) André Zirnheld, upon his death in Libya on June 27, 1942.

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The Song of Roland

The Song of Roland (La Chanson de Roland) is an epic poem (Chanson de geste) based on the Battle of Roncevaux Pass in 778, during the reign of Charlemagne.

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The Story of Civilization

The Story of Civilization, by husband and wife Will and Ariel Durant, is an eleven-volume set of books covering Western history for the general reader.

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The Woman of the Port (1934 film)

The Woman of the Port (La Mujer del Puerto) is a 1934 Mexican romantic drama film directed by Arcady Boytler and starring Andrea Palma.

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Thomas Elsaesser

Thomas Elsaesser (born 1943, in Berlin-Charlottenburg) is an international film historian and professor of Film and Television Studies at the University of Amsterdam.

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Timeline of Zionism

This is a partial timeline of Zionism in the modern era, since the start of the 16th century.

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Tina Holmes

Tina Holmes (born July 13, 1973 in New York City, New York) is an American television and film actress.

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Tjhit Liap Seng

Tjhit Liap Seng (Perfected Spelling: Chit Liap Seng, Hokkien Chinese for Seven Stars or Pleiades), also known as Bintang Toedjoeh in Malay, is an 1886 novel by Lie Kim Hok.

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Toby Alone

Toby Alone, originally published as La Vie suspendue, or A Life Suspended, is a children's novel by French author Timothée de Fombelle.

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Tomo Akikawabaya

Tomo Akikawabaya is a Japanese electronic musician and experimental artist.

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Transgressive fiction

Transgressive fiction is a genre of literature which focuses on characters who feel confined by the norms and expectations of society and who break free of those confines in unusual or illicit ways.

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Translators Association of China

The Translators Association of China (TAC) is a national association for translation studies in China.

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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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Troubadour

A troubadour (trobador, archaically: -->) was a composer and performer of Old Occitan lyric poetry during the High Middle Ages (1100–1350).

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Turkish literature

Turkish literature (Türk edebiyatı) comprises oral compositions and written texts in Turkic languages.

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Umm Kulthum

Umm Kulthum (أم كلثوم;; born (فاطمة إبراهيم السيد البلتاجي; see kunya) on an uncertain date (December 31, 1898, or May 4, 1904), died February 3, 1975) was an internationally renowned Egyptian singer, songwriter, and film actress active from the 1920s to the 1970s.

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Unanimism

Unanimism (French: Unanimisme) is a movement in French literature begun by Jules Romains in the early 1900s, with his first book, La vie unanime, published in 1904.

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Under Fire (Barbusse novel)

Under Fire: The Story of a Squad (French: Le Feu: journal d'une escouade) by Henri Barbusse (December 1916), was one of the first novels about World War I to be published.

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Unholy Love

Unholy Love (released in the United Kingdom as Deceit) is a 1932 American pre-Code drama film, directed and produced by Albert Ray.

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University of Delaware Press

The University of Delaware Press (UDP) is a publishing house and a department of the University of Delaware in the United States, whose main campus is at Newark, Delaware, where the University Press is also based.

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University of Virginia College of Arts and Sciences

The University of Virginia College and Graduate School of Arts & Sciences is the largest of the University of Virginia's ten schools.

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UPRM College of Arts and Sciences

The UPRM College of Arts and Sciences is one of four colleges of University of Puerto Rico at Mayaguez.

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Vagina loquens

The vagina loquens, or "talking vagina", is a significant tradition in literature and art, dating back to the ancient folklore motif of the "talking cunt".

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Vajiravudh

Phra Bat Somdet Phra Poramenthra Maha Vajiravudh Phra Mongkut Klao Chao Yu Hua (พระบาทสมเด็จพระปรเมนทรมหาวชิราวุธฯ พระมงกุฎเกล้าเจ้าอยู่หัว), or Phra Bat Somdet Phra Ramathibodi Si Sinthra Maha Vajiravudh Phra Mongkut Klao Chao Yu Hua (พระบาทสมเด็จพระรามาธิบดีศรีสินทรมหาวชิราวุธฯ พระมงกุฎเกล้าเจ้าอยู่หัว), or Rama VI (1 January 1880 – 26 November 1925), was the sixth monarch of Siam under the Chakri dynasty, ruling from 1910 until his death.

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Valérie Mangin

Valérie Mangin (born August 14, 1973 in Nancy) is a French comic book writer.

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Valerian Pidmohylny

Valerian Pidmohylny (Валеріан Підмогильний, February 2, 1901 - November 3, 1937) was an important Ukrainian novelist, most famous for the realist novel Misto (The City).

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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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Vasily Trediakovsky

Vasily Kirillovich Trediakovsky (Васи́лий Кири́ллович Тредиако́вский (Тредьяко́вский); in Astrakhan – in Saint Petersburg) was a Russian poet, essayist and playwright who helped lay the foundations of classical Russian literature.

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Vernon Rosario

Vernon A. Rosario II (born 1962) is an American psychiatrist and medical historian who studies human sexuality.

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Very Short Introductions

Very Short Introductions (VSI) are a book series published by the Oxford University Press (OUP).

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Victor Brombert

Victor Henri Brombert (born, November 11, 1923) is an American scholar of nineteenth and twentieth century literature, the Henry Putnam University Professor at Princeton University.

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Victor de Laprade

Pierre Martin Victor Richard de Laprade (13 January 1812 – 13 December 1883), known as Victor de Laprade, was a French poet and critic.

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Victor Hanzeli

Victor Egon Hanzeli, Sr. (1925 – April 23, 1991) was a Hungarian linguist and professor of Romance Languages and Literature at the University of Washington.

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Vietnam National University, Ho Chi Minh City

Vietnam National University Ho Chi Minh City (Đại học Quốc gia Thành phố Hồ Chí Minh) is one of the two largest national universities in Vietnam (the other is Vietnam National University, Hanoi, founded on 27 January 1995, and reorganized on 12 February 2001, under the Decision no. 15/2001/QĐ-TTg by the Prime Minister of Vietnam Phan Văn Khải).

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Vigdís Finnbogadóttir

Vigdís Finnbogadóttir (born 15 April 1930) served as the fourth President of Iceland from 1 August 1980 to 1996.

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Viola Klein

Viola Klein (1908–1973) was a sociologist in Great Britain.

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Virelai

A virelai is a form of medieval French verse used often in poetry and music.

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Virginia Pérez-Ratton

Virginia Pérez-Ratton is the pseudonym for Virginia Pérez Johnston (1950–2010).

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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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Warren Motte

Warren Motte is a Professor of French and Comparative Literature at the University of Colorado Boulder.

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Waseda University

, abbreviated as, is a Japanese private research university in Shinjuku, Tokyo.

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Welsh mythology

Welsh mythology consists of both folk traditions developed in Wales, and traditions developed by the Celtic Britons elsewhere before the end of the first millennium.

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Wendy Artin

Wendy Artin (born 1963) is an American painter.

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Western canon

The Western canon is the body of Western literature, European classical music, philosophy, and works of art that represents the high culture of Europe and North America: "a certain Western intellectual tradition that goes from, say, Socrates to Wittgenstein in philosophy, and from Homer to James Joyce in literature".

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Wiener Moderne

The Wiener Moderne or Viennese Modern Age is a term describing the culture of Vienna in the period between approximately 1890 and 1910.

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Wisława Szymborska

Maria Wisława Anna SzymborskaVioletta Szostak gazeta.pl, 2012-02-09.

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Women in France

The roles of women in France have changed throughout history.

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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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Xavier de Maistre

Xavier de Maistre (10 October 1763 – 12 June 1852) of Savoy (then part of the Kingdom of Piedmont-Sardinia) lived largely as a military man, but is known as a French writer.

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Yasuharu Hasebe

was a Japanese film director best known for his movies in the "Violent pink" subgenre of the Pink film, such as Assault! Jack the Ripper (1976), Rape! (1976), Rape! 13th Hour (1977) and Raping! (1978).

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Yūji Kinoshita

was a Japanese poet, a member of the group associated with the journal Shiki, and famous during his lifetime for his pastoral poetry.

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Yehoshua Kenaz

Yehoshua Kenaz (יהושע קנז, born Yehoshua Glass in 1937) is an Israeli novelist.

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Yehuda Lancry

Dr Yehuda Lancry (יהודה לנקרי,; born 25 September 1947) is a former Israeli politician and ambassador to France and the United Nations.

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Yehudit Harari

Yehudit Harari (née Eisenberg; October 4, 1885 – June 7, 1979) (Hebrew: יהודית הררי לבית אייזנברג) was an educator, teacher, kindergarten teacher and writer, one of the founders of Tel Aviv.

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Yi In-seong

Yi In-seong (Hangul: 이인성, hanja: 李仁星) is a South Korean modern novelist.

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Yoshinori Kobayashi

is a Japanese manga artist noted for his controversial political commentary manga Gōmanism Sengen.

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Yousuf Hussain Khan

Yousuf Hussain Khan (1902–1979), born in Hyderabad, India, was a historian, scholar, educationist, critic and author.

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Ysopet

Ysopet ("Little Aesop") refers to a medieval collection of fables in French literature, specifically to versions of Aesop's Fables.

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Yung Lean

Jonatan Leandoer Håstad (born 18 July 1996), better known by his stage name Yung Lean, is a Swedish singer, songwriter, rapper, fashion designer and record producer from Södermalm, Stockholm.

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Yves Beauchemin

Yves Beauchemin (born 26 June 1941) is a Quebec novelist.

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Yves Navarre

Yves Navarre (September 24, 1940 – January 24, 1994) was a French writer.

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Zheng Yonghui

Zheng Yonghui (1918 - 9 September 2012) was a Chinese writer (of Chinese Vietnamese ethnicity) translator who won the Lu Xun Literary Prize, a prestigious literature award in China.

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Zhou Kexi

Zhou Kexi, born 1942, is a Chinese translator of French literature.

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1892 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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1958 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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1959 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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1960 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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1961 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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1962 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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1963 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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1964 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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1965 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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1968 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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1981 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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1982 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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1988 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 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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2002 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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Redirects here:

French Literature, French novel, French novels, Literature of France.

References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_literature

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