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Honoré de Balzac

Index Honoré de Balzac

Honoré de Balzac (born Honoré Balzac, 20 May 1799 – 18 August 1850) was a French novelist and playwright. [1]

1031 relations: *** (novel), A Reader's Manifesto, A Resurrection, A Song to Remember, Abbaye-aux-Bois, Académie française, Academia (publishing house), Achille Devéria, Adolphe d'Ennery, Adolphe Thiers, Adrien Moreau, Adrien-Jean-Pierre Thilorier, Agy, Aimée Crocker, Aix-les-Bains, Albert Cossery, Albert Dubout, Albert Dupuis, Albert Husson, Albert Lynch, Albert Rieux, Albert Savarus, Alberto Blest Gana, Albin Schram, Album de la Pléiade, Alexander Shirvanzade, Alexander Vassiliev, Alexandre Auffredi, Alexandre Falguière, Alexandre Saint-Yves d'Alveydre, Alfred de Musset, Alfred Pasquali, Alfredo Arias (theatre producer), Alfredo Pareja Diezcanseco, Ali Khamenei, Allan McLane Hamilton, Alphonse Royer, Alvin Journeyman, Amanda Craig, Amicus Plato, sed magis amica veritas, Amos Urban Shirk, An Episode Under the Terror, Anatole Cerfberr, Andernach, Andert-et-Condon, André Billy, André Charpak, André Maurois, Ange Du Fresnay, Angevin dialect, ..., Angoulême, Anka Muhlstein, Ann Radcliffe, Ann Scott, Annemarie Kleinert, Anthony Trollope, Antoine François Desrues, Aram Haigaz, Aravind Adiga, Arcis-sur-Aube, Argentiera, Aris Marangopoulos, Arkady Davidowitz, Armand Lanoux, Armand Malitourne, Armorial de la Comédie Humaine, Arpajon, Arshag Chobanian, Arthur Bernède, Arthur de Beauplan, Astral projection, Au pair, Auberge rouge, August 18, August Derleth, August Strindberg, Auguste Borget, Auguste Le Poitevin de L'Égreville, Auguste Leroux, Auguste Rodin, Aurélien Bellanger, Avenue d'Iéna, Azerbaijan State Academic National Drama Theatre, Azerbaijan State Russian Drama Theatre, Édouard Monnais, Édouard Toudouze, Émile Drain, Émile Fabre, Émile Zola, Étienne Arago, Étienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, Étude de femme, Bagne of Toulon, Bal Mabille, Balzac (band), Balzac (crater), Balzac (disambiguation), Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress, Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress (film), Balzac in the Robe of a Dominican Monk, Balzac's Coffee Roasters, Balzac, Alberta, Balzac, Colorado, Baruničina ljubav, Battle of Aspern-Essling, Battle of Berezina, Battle of Eylau, Batz-sur-Mer, Béatrix, Béatrix Dussane, Beatrix, Beau Brummell, Benito Pérez Galdós, Benoît-Joseph Marsollier, Benvenuto Cellini, Berdychiv, Bertall, Bertrand de Molleville, Bette Davis, Binet-Valmer, Black Venus (1983 film), Blasco de Garay, Božidara Turzonovová filmography, Bohemianism, Book censorship in the Republic of Ireland, Book League of America, Boston (card game), Boules, Boulevard Raspail, Boulevard Saint-Germain, Bourbon Restoration, Breguet (brand), Bret Easton Ellis, Bruce Chatwin, C. P. 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chat-qui-pelote, La Messe de l'athée, La Mort de Balzac, La Paix du ménage, La Peau de chagrin, La Quotidienne, La Rabouilleuse, La Vendetta (novel), La Vieille Fille (novel), Lac du Bourget, Landscape, Laure Junot, Duchess of Abrantès, Léon Gozlan, Léon Séché, Le Bal de Sceaux, Le Cabinet des Antiques, Le Chef-d'œuvre inconnu, Le Constitutionnel, Le Contrat de mariage, Le Courrier français (1884–1914), Le Cousin Pons, Le Curé de Tours, Le Curé de village, Le Havre, Le Lys dans la vallée, Le Médecin de campagne, Le Réquisitionnaire, Le shérif, Le Voleur (magazine), Les Chouans, Les Proscrits, Les Rougon-Macquart, Lesbian, Letters from 74 rue Taitbout, Library catalog, Lisbeth, List of authors by name: B, List of biographers, List of biographical films, List of book-based war films (1775–1898 wars), List of books about Tintin, List of books banned by governments, List of bow tie wearers, List of burials at Père Lachaise Cemetery, List of Catholic authors, List of Charvet customers, List of compositions by Darius Milhaud, List of compositions by Dmitri Shostakovich, List of compositions by Ernest Chausson, List of compositions by Eugène Bozza, List of compositions by Jean Françaix, List of craters on Mercury, List of cultural icons of France, List of Desert Island Discs episodes (1951–60), List of Desert Island Discs episodes (1991–2000), List of Desert Island Discs episodes (2001–10), List of East German films, List of eponyms (A–K), List of fictional literature featuring opera, List of French films of 1920, List of French novelists, List of French people, List of French playwrights, List of French-language authors, List of kingdoms and royal dynasties, List of knitters in literature, List of La Comédie humaine characters, List of Latin phrases (T), List of LGBT writers, List of literary movements, List of museums in Paris, List of Musical Works by Faye-Ellen Silverman, List of names in A Biographical Dictionary of Modern Rationalists, List of Occitans, List of operas 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Pritchett, Vasile Demetrius, Vasile Savel, Vautrin, Vũ Trọng Phụng, Vendée, Vicar, Vicente Blasco Ibáñez, Victor Ratier, Victor Sappey, Victor Vignon, Vidame de Chartres, Villa Di Negro Rosazza dello Scoglietto, Villa Diodati, Vintilă Russu-Șirianu, Vjenceslav Novak, Vollard Suite, Wacław Rzewuski, Waiting for Godot, Wakefield Press (US), Weird fiction, Western canon, Willa Cather, William Faulkner, William Hobart Royce, William Makepeace Thackeray, William Robson (writer), Writers in Paris, Yuri Khanon, Yves Beauchemin, Yves-André Hubert, Z. Marcas, Zarafa (giraffe), Zheng Yonghui, Zhou Meisen, Zi Zhongyun, Zigu Ornea, Zoltán Ambrus, Zulma Carraud, Zurab Tsereteli, 100 Classic Book Collection, 1799, 1799 in France, 1799 in literature, 1819 in literature, 1819 in poetry, 1826 in literature, 1829 in literature, 1830 in literature, 1831 in literature, 1832 in literature, 1833 in literature, 1834 in literature, 1835 in literature, 1836 in literature, 1837 in literature, 1839 in art, 1839 in literature, 1841 in literature, 1842 in literature, 1844 in literature, 1845 in literature, 1846 in literature, 1847 in literature, 1849 in literature, 1850, 1850 in France, 1850 in literature, 1865 in literature, 1946 in literature, 19th century, 19th century in literature, 19th-century French literature, 2 + 2 = 5, 20th arrondissement of Paris, 7th arrondissement of Paris. Expand index (981 more) »

*** (novel)

*** is Michael Brodsky's fifth novel.

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A Reader's Manifesto

A Reader's Manifesto is a 2002 book written by B. R. Myers that was originally published in heavily edited form in the July/August 2001 issue of The Atlantic Monthly magazine.

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A Resurrection

"A Resurrection" is a short story by American writer Willa Cather.

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A Song to Remember

A Song to Remember is a 1945 Columbia Pictures Technicolor biographical film which tells a fictionalised life story of Polish pianist and composer Frédéric Chopin.

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Abbaye-aux-Bois

The Abbey of the Woods (Abbaye-aux-Bois) was a Bernardine (i.e., Cistercian) convent in Paris, with buildings at 16 rue de Sèvres and at 11 rue de la Chaise in the 7th arrondissement.

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Académie française

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

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Academia (publishing house)

Academia (named after Platonic Academy) was a Soviet publishing house prior to the merger with Goslitizdat.

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Achille Devéria

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

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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 Thiers

Marie Joseph Louis Adolphe Thiers (15 April 17973 September 1877) was a French statesman and historian.

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Adrien Moreau

Adrien Moreau (18 April 1843 – 22 February 1906) was a French genre and historical painter, sculptor and illustrator.

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Adrien-Jean-Pierre Thilorier

Adrien-Jean-Pierre Thilorier (16 February 1790 – 2 December 1844) was a French inventor who was the first person to produce solid carbon dioxide ("dry ice").

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Agy

Agy is a French commune in the Calvados department in the Normandy region of north-western France.

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Aimée Crocker

Aimée Isabella Crocker (December 5, 1864 – February 7, 1941) was an American princess, mystic, Bohemian, and author.

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Aix-les-Bains

Aix-les-Bains (French: Èx-los-Bens, Aquae Gratianae), locally called Aix, is a commune in the Savoie department in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region in south-eastern France.

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Albert Cossery

Albert Cossery (3 November 1913 – 22 June 2008) was an Egyptian-born French writer.

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Albert Dubout

Albert Dubout (15 May 1905 – 27 June 1976) was a French cartoonist, illustrator, painter, and sculptor.

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Albert Dupuis

Albert Dupuis (1 March 1877 – 19 September 1967) was a Belgian composer.

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Albert Husson

Albert Husson (3 August 1912 – 16 December 1978) was a French playwright and theatre director.

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Albert Lynch

Albert Lynch (1851–1912) was a Peruvian painter.

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Albert Rieux

Albert Rieux (6 October 1914 - 15 April 1983) was a French stage and film actor.

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Albert Savarus

Albert Savarus is an 1842 novel by French novelist and playwright Honoré de Balzac (1799–1850) and included in his series of novels (or Roman-fleuve) known as La Comédie humaine (The Human Comedy) which parodies and depicts French society in the period of the Restoration and the July Monarchy (1815–1848).

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Alberto Blest Gana

Alberto Blest Gana (May 4, 1830 – November 9, 1920) was a Chilean novelist and diplomat, considered the father of Chilean novel.

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Albin Schram

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

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Album de la Pléiade

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

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Alexander Shirvanzade

Alexander Movsesyan (Ալեքսանդր Մինասի Մովսիսյան; 18 April 1858 – 7 August 1935), better known by his pen name Alexander Shirvanzade (Ալեքսանդր Շիրվանզադե) was an Armenian playwright and novelist.

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Alexander Vassiliev

Alexander Vassiliev (Александр Васильев; born 1962) is a Russian journalist, writer, and espionage historian living in London who is a subject matter expert in the Soviet KGB and Russian SVR.

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Alexandre Auffredi

Alexandre Auffredi was a wealthy bourgeois of the city of La Rochelle in France, who in 1196 sent a fleet of seven ships to Africa to tap the riches of the continent.

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Alexandre Falguière

Jean Alexandre Joseph Falguière (also given as Jean-Joseph-Alexandre Falguière, or in short Alexandre Falguière) (7 September 183120 April 1900) was a French sculptor and painter.

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Alexandre Saint-Yves d'Alveydre

Alexandre Saint-Yves, Marquess of Alveydre (26 March 1842 – 5 February 1909) was a French occultist who adapted the works of Fabre d'Olivet (1767–1825) and, in turn, had his ideas adapted by Gérard Encausse alias Papus.

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Alfred de Musset

Alfred Louis Charles de Musset-Pathay (11 December 1810 – 2 May 1857) was a French dramatist, poet, and novelist.

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Alfred Pasquali

Alfred-Adolphe Pasquali (31 October 1898 - 12 June 1991) was a French actor and theatre director.

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Alfredo Arias (theatre producer)

Alfredo Arias (born 4 March 1944) is a theatre producer, actor and playwright.

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Alfredo Pareja Diezcanseco

Alfredo Pareja Diezcanseco (October 12, 1908 in Guayaquil — May 1, 1993 in Quito) — born Alfredo Pareja y Díez Canseco — was a prominent Ecuadorian novelist, essayist, journalist, historian and diplomat.

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Ali Khamenei

Sayyid Ali Hosseini Khamenei (سید علی حسینی خامنه‌ای,; born 17 July 1939) is a ''marja'' and the second and current Supreme Leader of Iran, in office since 1989.

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Allan McLane Hamilton

Allan McLane Hamilton (October 6, 1848 – November 23, 1919) was an American psychiatrist of Scots descent, specialising in suicide and the impact of accidents and trauma upon mental health, and in criminal insanity, appearing at several trials.

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Alphonse Royer

Alphonse Royer, (10 September 1803 – 11 April 1875) was a French author, dramatist and theatre manager, most remembered today for having written (with his regular collaborator, Gustave Vaëz) the librettos for Gaetano Donizetti's opera La favorite and Giuseppe Verdi's Jérusalem.

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Alvin Journeyman

Alvin Journeyman (1995) is an alternate history/fantasy novel by American writer Orson Scott Card.

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Amanda Craig

Amanda Craig (born 1959) is a British novelist, critic and journalist.

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Amicus Plato, sed magis amica veritas

Amicus Plato, sed magis amica veritas is a Latin phrase, translating to "Plato is my friend, but truth is a better friend (literally: Plato is friend, but truth is more friend (to me than he is))." The maxim is often attributed to Aristotle, as a paraphrase of the Nicomachean Ethics 1096a11-15: But perhaps it is desirable that we should examine the notion of a Universal Good, and review the difficulties that it involves, although such an inquiry goes against the grain because of our friendship for the authors of the Theory of Ideas.

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Amos Urban Shirk

Amos Urban Shirk (1890 – October 20, 1956) was an American businessman, author and reader of encyclopedias.

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An Episode Under the Terror

Un épisode sous la Terreur (An Episode Under the Terror) is a novel by French author Honoré de Balzac, published in 1842.

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Anatole Cerfberr

Anatole Cerfberr (1835, Paris—1896, Neuilly) was a French journalist and author.

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Andernach

Andernach is a town in the district of Mayen-Koblenz, in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany, of currently about 30,000 inhabitants.

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Andert-et-Condon

Andert-et-Condon is a French commune in the department of Ain in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region of eastern France.

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André Billy

André Billy (13 December 1882 – 11 April 1971) was a French writer.

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André Charpak

André Charpak (4 September 1928 – 23 June 2006) was a French actor, dialoguist, film director and screenwriter.

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André Maurois

André Maurois (born Émile Salomon Wilhelm Herzog; 26 July 1885 – 9 October 1967) was a French author.

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Ange Du Fresnay

Ange Antoine Guy du Fresnay was knight of the Order of Carlos III of Spain and director of The Phoenix Companies in France.

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Angevin dialect

Angevin is the traditional langue d'oïl spoken in Anjou, a historic province in western France.

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Angoulême

Angoulême (Poitevin-Saintongeais: Engoulaeme; Engoleime) is a commune, the capital of the Charente department, in the Nouvelle-Aquitaine region of southwestern France.

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Anka Muhlstein

Anka Muhlstein (born 1935) is a historian and biographer.

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Ann Radcliffe

Ann Radcliffe (born Ward, 9 July 1764 – 7 February 1823) was an English author and pioneer of the Gothic novel.

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Ann Scott

Ann Scott (born 3 November 1965 in Paris, France) is a French novelist.

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Annemarie Kleinert

Annemarie Kleinert-Ludwig (born 1 February 1947, Geseke) is a German Doctor of Philosophy who did research and taught history at the Free University of Berlin, the University of Hanover, and the University of California, San Diego.

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Anthony Trollope

Anthony Trollope (24 April 1815 – 6 December 1882) was an English novelist of the Victorian era.

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Antoine François Desrues

Antoine François Desrues (1744–1777) was a French poisoner.

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Aram Haigaz

Aram Haigaz (Armenian: Արամ Հայկազ - March 22, 1900 - March 10, 1986) was the pen name of Aram Chekenian, an Armenian writer who was born in the town of Shabin Karahisar, Ottoman Empire, and survived the Armenian Genocide in 1915.

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Aravind Adiga

Aravind Adiga (born 23 October 1974) is an Indo-Australian writer and journalist.

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Arcis-sur-Aube

Arcis-sur-Aube is a French commune in the Aube department in the Grand Est region of north-central France.

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Argentiera

Argentiera is a small town and a frazione (hamlet) in the comune of Sassari, in Sardinia, Italy.

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Aris Marangopoulos

Aris Marangopoulos (in Greek spelled Maragkopoulos, b. Athens, 1948) is a Greek author, literary critic and translator.

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Arkady Davidowitz

Arkady Davidowitz (born Adolf Filippovich Freudberg, 12 June 1930, Voronezh) is a writer and aphorist, author of over 50,000 published aphorisms.

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Armand Lanoux

Armand Lanoux (24 October 1913 - 23 March 1983) was a French writer.

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Armand Malitourne

Pierre-Armand Malitourne (19 July 1796 – 19 April 1866) was a 19th-century French journalist, literary critic and writer.

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Armorial de la Comédie Humaine

Armorial de la Comédie Humaine is an armorial describing the coats of arms of the fictional characters in the literary works collectivelly called La Comédie humaine, written by Honoré de Balzac.

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Arpajon

Arpajon is a commune in the Essonne department in the Île-de-France region of northern France.

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Arshag Chobanian

Arshag Chobanian (15 July 1872 – 9 June 1954), was an Armenian short story writer, journalist, editor, poet, translator, literary critic, playwright, philologist, and novelist.

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Arthur Bernède

Arthur Bernède (5 January 1871 – 20 March 1937) was a French writer, poet, opera libretist, and playwright.

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Arthur de Beauplan

Arthur de Beauplan (20 June 1823 – 11 May 1890) The son of the writer and composer Amédée de Beauplan, he wrote numerous vaudevilles and libretti for opéras comiques for Adolphe Adam (La poupée de Nuremberg, 1852), Ferdinand Poise (Bonsoir, voisin, 1853) or Théodore Dubois (Le Pain bis ou La Lilloise, 1879), in collaboration in particular with Adolphe de Leuven and Léon Lévy Brunswick.

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Astral projection

Astral projection (or astral travel) is a term used in esotericism to describe a willful out-of-body experience (OBE) that assumes the existence of a soul or consciousness called an "astral body" that is separate from the physical body and capable of travelling outside it throughout the universe.

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Au pair

An au pair (plural: au pairs) is a domestic assistant from a foreign country working for, and living as part of, a host family.

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Auberge rouge

L'auberge rouge (The Red Inn) is an inn, originally named L'Auberge de Peyrebeille ("the Inn of Peyrebeille"), in the commune of Lanarce in Ardèche, bordering Issanlas and Lavillatte.

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August 18

No description.

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August Derleth

August William Derleth (February 24, 1909 – July 4, 1971) was an American writer and anthologist.

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August Strindberg

Johan August Strindberg (22 January 184914 May 1912) was a Swedish playwright, novelist, poet, essayist and painter.

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Auguste Borget

Auguste Borget (1808–1877) was a French artist known for his drawings and prints of exotic places, in particular China.

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Auguste Le Poitevin de L'Égreville

Auguste Le Poitevin de L’Égreville or Saint-Alme, (Paris, 1791 – Paris, 31 August 1854) was a 19th-century French homme de lettres and playwright.

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Auguste Leroux

Jules Marie Auguste Leroux (14 April 1871 - 26 March 1954) was a French painter and illustrator.

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Auguste Rodin

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

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Aurélien Bellanger

Aurélien Bellanger, born 20 April 1980 in Laval, Mayenne, is a French writer and actor.

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Avenue d'Iéna

The Avenue d'Iéna is a tree-lined avenue in the 16th arrondissement of Paris, running from the Trocadéro (Avenue Albert De Mun) to the Place de l'Étoile.

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Azerbaijan State Academic National Drama Theatre

The Azerbaijan State Academic Drama Theatre (Azərbaycan Akademik Milli Dram Teatrı) is an academic theatre of drama in Baku, Azerbaijan.

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Azerbaijan State Russian Drama Theatre

Azerbaijan State Russian Samed Vurgun Drama Theatre (Səməd Vurğun adına Azərbaycan Dövlət Rus Drama Teatrı, Азербайджанский государственный русский драматический театр имени Самеда Вургуна), is a drama theatre located in Baku, Azerbaijan performing plays in the Russian language.

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Édouard Monnais

Désiré Guillaume Édouard Monnais (27 May 1798 – 25 February 1868) was a French journalist, theater director, playwright and librettist.

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Édouard Toudouze

Édouard Toudouze (1848-1907) was a French painter, illustrator and decorative artist.

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Émile Drain

Émile Drain (1890–1966) was a French actor and comedian.

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Émile Fabre

Émile Fabre (24 March 1869 in Metz, France – 25 September 1955 in Paris) was a French playwright and general administrator of the Comédie-Française from 2 December 1915 to 15 October 1936.

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Émile Zola

Émile Édouard Charles Antoine Zola (2 April 1840 – 29 September 1902) was a French novelist, playwright, journalist, the best-known practitioner of the literary school of naturalism, and an important contributor to the development of theatrical naturalism.

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Étienne Arago

Étienne Vincent Arago (9 February 1802 – 7 March 1892) was a French writer and politician, and co-founder (with Maurice Alhoy) of the newspaper Le Figaro.

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Étienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire

Étienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire (15 April 1772 – 19 June 1844) was a French naturalist who established the principle of "unity of composition".

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Étude de femme

Étude de femme (English "Study of a Woman") is a short story by Honoré de Balzac.

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Bagne of Toulon

The Bagne of Toulon was the notorious prison in Toulon, France, made famous as the place of imprisonment of Jean Valjean, the hero of Les Misérables, the novel by Victor Hugo.

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Bal Mabille

The Bal Mabille, also known as Jardin Mabille and Mabille Gardens in English, was a fashionable open-air dance establishment on what is now Avenue Montaigne in Faubourg Saint-Honoré, Paris, extending from 49 to 53 in the modern street numbering.

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Balzac (band)

Balzac (typeset as BALZAC) is a Japanese punk band formed in 1992 in Kyoto.

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Balzac (crater)

Balzac is a crater on Mercury.

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Balzac (disambiguation)

Balzac as a surname may refer to.

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Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress

Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress (Balzac et la petite tailleuse chinoise) is a semi-autobiographical novel written by Dai Sijie, and published in 2000 in French and in English in 2001.

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Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress (film)

Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress (Balzac et la Petite Tailleuse Chinoise) is a 2002 Franco-Chinese romance drama film with dialogue in the Sichuan dialect directed by Dai Sijie and starring Zhou Xun, Chen Kun and Liu Ye.

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Balzac in the Robe of a Dominican Monk

Balzac in the Robe of a Dominican Monk is a bronze sculpture by French artist Auguste Rodin, one of the studies made in preparation to the Monument to Balzac, a tribute to novelist Honoré Balzac commissioned by the Society of Men of Letters of France in 1891.

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Balzac's Coffee Roasters

Balzac's Coffee Roasters is a Canadian coffee company with thirteen retail locations in the GTA, Niagara, Kitchener, Waterloo, Stratford, Guelph, St. Catharines, and Kingston.

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Balzac, Alberta

Balzac is a hamlet in the southern portion of the Canadian province of Alberta, in Rocky View County.

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Balzac, Colorado

Balzac is an extinct town in Morgan County, in the U.S. state of Colorado.

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Baruničina ljubav

Baruničina ljubav (lit. "Baroness’ love") is a novel written by Croatian writer Ante Kovačić.

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Battle of Aspern-Essling

In the Battle of Aspern-Essling (21–22 May 1809), Napoleon attempted a forced crossing of the Danube near Vienna, but the French and their allies were driven back by the Austrians under Archduke Charles.

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Battle of Berezina

The Battle of Berezina (or Beresina) took place from 26 to 29 November 1812, between the French army of Napoleon, retreating after his invasion of Russia and crossing the Berezina (near Borisov, Belarus), and the Russian armies under Mikhail Kutuzov, Peter Wittgenstein and Admiral Pavel Chichagov.

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Battle of Eylau

The Battle of Eylau or Battle of Preussisch-Eylau, 7 and 8 February 1807, was a bloody and inconclusive battle between Napoleon's Grande Armée and the Imperial Russian Army under the command of Levin August, Count von Bennigsen near the town of Preussisch Eylau in East Prussia.

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Batz-sur-Mer

Batz-sur-Mer (Breton: Bourc'h-Baz) is a commune in the Loire-Atlantique department in western France.

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Béatrix

Béatrix is an 1839 novel by French author Honoré de Balzac (1799–1850) and included in the Scènes de la vie privée section of his novel sequence La Comédie humaine.

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Béatrix Dussane

Béatrice Dussan, called Béatrix Dussane, (9 March 1888 - 3 March 1969) was a French stage actress.

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Beatrix

Beatrix is a given name, most likely derived from Viatrix, a feminine form of the Late Latin name Viator which meant "voyager, traveller" and later influenced in spelling by association with the Latin word beatus or "blessed".

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Beau Brummell

George Bryan "Beau" Brummell (7 June 1778 – 30 March 1840) was an iconic figure in Regency England and for many years the arbiter of men's fashion.

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Benito Pérez Galdós

Benito Pérez Galdós (May 10, 1843 – January 4, 1920) was a Spanish realist novelist.

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Benoît-Joseph Marsollier

Benoît-Joseph Marsollier (also known as Benoît-Joseph Marsollier des Vivetières, (Paris, 1750 – Versailles, 22 April 1817) was a French playwright and librettist. He is particularly noted for his work in opéra comique. In 1780 he also led the first exploration of the Grotte des Demoiselles. His librettos include Nina, L'irato, and Les deux petits savoyards.

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Benvenuto Cellini

Benvenuto Cellini (3 November 150013 February 1571) was an Italian goldsmith, sculptor, draftsman, soldier, musician, and artist who also wrote a famous autobiography and poetry.

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Berdychiv

Berdychiv (Бердичів, Polish: Berdyczów, Bardichev, Berdichev) is a historic city in the Zhytomyr Oblast (province) of northern Ukraine.

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Bertall

Charles Albert d'Arnoux (Charles Constant Albert Nicolas, Vicomte d'Arnoux, Count of Limoges-Saint-Saëns), known as Bertall (or Bertal, an anagram of Albert) or Tortu-Goth (December 18, 1820, Paris - March 24, 1882, Soyons) was a French illustrator, engraver, caricaturist, and early photographer.

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Bertrand de Molleville

Comte Antoine François Bertrand de Molleville (25 October 1744, Toulouse – 19 October 1818, Paris) was a French politician.

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Bette Davis

Ruth Elizabeth "Bette" Davis (April 5, 1908 – October 6, 1989) was an American actress of film, television, and theater.

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Binet-Valmer

Jean-Auguste-Gustave Binet (3 June 1875 – 20 April 1940), also known as Binet-Valmer, was a Franco-Swiss novelist and journalist.

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Black Venus (1983 film)

Black Venus is a 1983 softcore erotic melodrama film directed by Claude Mulot.

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Blasco de Garay

Blasco de Garay (1500–1552) was a Spanish navy captain and inventor.

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Božidara Turzonovová filmography

The filmography of Bulgarian-born Slovak actress Božidara Turzonovová chronicles her work through the artist's fifty years as a film, television and stage actress.

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Bohemianism

Bohemianism is the practice of an unconventional lifestyle, often in the company of like-minded people and with few permanent ties.

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Book censorship in the Republic of Ireland

Book censorship was carried out in Ireland from 1929 until 2010 when all prior bans expired.

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Book League of America

The Book League of America, Inc. was a US book publisher and mail order book sales club.

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Boston (card game)

Boston is an 18th-century trick-taking card game played throughout the Western world apart from Britain, forming an evolutionary link between Hombre and Solo Whist.

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Boules

Boules is a collective name for a wide range of games similar to bowls and bocce (In French: jeu or jeux, in Italian: gioco or giochi) in which the objective is to throw or roll heavy balls (called boules in France, and bocce in Italy) as close as possible to a small target ball.

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Boulevard Raspail

Boulevard Raspail is a boulevard of Paris, in France.

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Boulevard Saint-Germain

The boulevard Saint-Germain is a major street in Paris on the Left Bank of the River Seine.

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Bourbon Restoration

The Bourbon Restoration was the period of French history following the fall of Napoleon in 1814 until the July Revolution of 1830.

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Breguet (brand)

Breguet is a Swatch-owned brand of luxury watches founded by Abraham-Louis Breguet in Paris in 1775.

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Bret Easton Ellis

Bret Easton Ellis (born March 7, 1964) is an American author, screenwriter, and short story writer.

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Bruce Chatwin

Charles Bruce Chatwin (13 May 194018 January 1989) was an English travel writer, novelist, and journalist.

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C. P. Snow

Charles Percy Snow, Baron Snow, CBE (15 October 1905 – 1 July 1980) was a novelist and English physical chemist who also served in several important positions in the British Civil Service and briefly in the UK government.

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Café Anglais

The Café Anglais (English café) was a famous French restaurant located at the corner of the Boulevard des Italiens (n° 13) and the Rue de Marivaux in Paris, France.

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Café philosophique

Café philosophique ("cafe-philo") is a grassroots forum for philosophical discussion, founded by philosopher Marc Sautet in Paris, France, on December 13, 1992.

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Calmann-Lévy

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

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Cameo appearance

A cameo role or cameo appearance (often shortened to just cameo) is a brief appearance or voice part of a known person in a work of the performing arts, typically unnamed or appearing as themselves.

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Camille de Morlhon

Édouard de Morlhon (19 February 1869 - 24 November 1952) was a French film director.

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Camino de Sacramento

Camino de Sacramento ("Road of Sacramento") is a 1945 Mexican film.

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Canadian literature

Canadian literature (widely abbreviated as CanLit) is literature originating from Canada.

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Cannabis in France

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

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Capital in the Twenty-First Century

Capital in the Twenty-First Century is a 2013 book by French economist Thomas Piketty.

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Carlism in literature

On March 21, 1890, at a conference dedicated to the siege of Bilbao during the last civil war, Miguel de Unamuno delivered a lecture titled La última guerra carlista como materia poética.

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Catherine Hiegel

Catherine Hiegel (born 10 December 1946) is a French actress, comedian and director.

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Catherine Radziwill

Princess Catherine Radziwiłł (Katarzyna Radziwiłłowa; 30 March 1858 – 12 May 1941), TomFolio.com.

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Céleste Albaret

Céleste Albaret (Gineste, 17 May 1891 – 25 April 1984) was a country girl who moved to Paris in 1913 when she married the taxi driver Odilon Albaret.

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Célestine Hitiura Vaite

Célestine Hitiura Vaite (born 1966) is a Tahitian writer.

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César Birotteau

Histoire de la grandeur et de la décadence de César Birotteau or César Birotteau, is an 1837 novel by Honoré de Balzac, and is one of the Scènes de la vie parisienne in the series La Comédie humaine.

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Cedar Paul

Cedar Paul, née Gertrude Mary Davenport (1880 – 18 March 1972) was a singer, author, translator and journalist.

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Censorship in Canada

In Canada, appeals by the judiciary to community standards and the public interest are the ultimate determinants of which forms of expression may legally be published, broadcast, or otherwise publicly disseminated.

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Cesário Verde

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

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Cezar Petrescu

Cezar Petrescu (December 1, 1892, Cotnari, Iaşi County–March 9, 1961) was a Romanian journalist, novelist and children's writer.

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Champfleury

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

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Charles 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 de Groux

Charles de Groux or Charles Degroux (Comines, 25 August 1825 - Saint-Josse-ten-Noode, 30 March 1870) at the Netherlands Institute for Art History was a French painter, engraver, lithographer and illustrator.

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Charles de Rémusat

Charles François Marie, Comte de Rémusat (13 March 1797 – 6 June 1875), was a French politician and writer.

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Charles Lallemand

François Antoine "Charles" Lallemand (23 June 1774 – 9 March 1839) was a French general who served Napoleon I of France, tried to found a colony in what is now Texas, and finally returned to France to serve as governor of Corsica.

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Charles Lamb Kenney

Charles Lamb Kenney (29 April 1821 – 25 August 1881) was a journalist, dramatist and miscellaneous writer.

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Charles Maturin

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

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Charles Rabou

Charles Félix Henri Rabou (6 September 1803 – 1 February 1871) was a 19th-century French writer, novelist and journalist.

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Charles Thilorier

Charles-Saint-Ange Thilorier was a student at the École polytechnique in the class / year of 1815, who was mistakenly believed to have been the first person to create solid carbon dioxide ("dry ice").

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Charles-Henri Sanson

Charles-Henri Sanson, full title Chevalier Charles-Henri Sanson de Longval (15 February 1739 – 4 July 1806), was the royal executioner of France during the reign of King Louis XVI, and High Executioner of the First French Republic.

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Charles-Joseph Traviès de Villers

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

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Charles-Victor Prévot, vicomte d'Arlincourt

Charles-Victor Prévot, vicomte d'Arlincourt (26 September 1788 — 22 January 1856) was a French novelist, born at the Château de Mérantais, Magny-les-Hameaux, Yvelines.

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Charlotte de Rothschild

Charlotte de Rothschild (May 6, 1825 – July 20, 1899) was a French socialite, painter, and a member of the prominent Rothschild banking family of France.

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Charlotte Mandell

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

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Charlotte Mary Yonge

Charlotte Mary Yonge (1823–1901) was an English novelist who wrote to the service of the church.

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Charlotte Riddell

Charlotte Riddell, known also as Mrs J. H. Riddell (30 September 1832 – 24 September 1906), was a highly popular and influential Irish-born writer in the Victorian period.

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Château d'Azay-le-Rideau

The Château d'Azay-le-Rideau is located in the town of Azay-le-Rideau in the French département of Indre-et-Loire.

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Château de Saché

The Château de Saché is a writer's house museum located in a home built from the converted remains of a feudal castle.

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Chen Xuezhao

Chen Xuezhao (April 17, 1906 – 1991) was a Chinese writer and journalist.

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Cherbourg-Octeville

Cherbourg-Octeville is a city and former commune situated at the northern end of the Cotentin peninsula in the northwestern French department of Manche.

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Chestnut

The chestnut (Castanea) group is a genus of eight or nine species of deciduous trees and shrubs in the beech family Fagaceae, native to temperate regions of the Northern Hemisphere.

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Chouannerie

The Chouannerie was a royalist uprising or counter-revolution in 12 of the western départements of France, particularly in the provinces of Brittany and Maine, against the French First Republic during the French Revolution.

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Chouans!

Chouans! is a 1988 French historical adventure film directed by Philippe de Broca and starring Sophie Marceau, Philippe Noiret, and Lambert Wilson.

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Chris Dolan

Chris Dolan (born 1957, Glasgow, Scotland) is an award-winning Scottish novelist, poet, and playwright.

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Christine Mayo

Christine Mayo (1884–1963) was a silent film actress whose Hollywood career spanned the years from 1915–1924.

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Christopher Whyte (writer)

Christopher Whyte (Crìsdean MacIlleBhàin) is a Scottish poet, novelist, translator and critic.

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Church of Saint-Sulpice, Paris

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

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Ciarán Hinds

Ciarán Hinds (born 9 February 1953) is an Irish film, television, and stage actor.

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Cire Trudon

Cire Trudon is a French candlemaker and the oldest wax-producing factory worldwide.

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Clara Bell

Clara Bell, née Poynter (1835–1927), was an English translator fluent in French, German, Danish, Dutch, Italian, Norwegian, Russian, and Spanish,The Illustrated American: 22 November 1890, p.500The Author: A Monthly Magazine for Literary Workers: Vol.2: 15 November 1890, p. 170 noted for her translations of works by Henrik Ibsen, Balzac, Georg Ebers, Huysmans, Maupassant, and others.

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Clara Sereni

Clara Sereni (born in 1946) is an Italian writer of Jewish descent.

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Claude Houghton

Claude Houghton Oldfield (May 1889 – 10 February 1961), who published under the name Claude Houghton, was a British writer, principally of novels that have been characterised as "psychological romances, often embodying personal mysticism and a remote allegory".

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Claude Jade

Claude Marcelle Jorré, better known as Claude Jade (8 October 1948 – 1 December 2006), was a French actress.

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Claude-Edmonde Magny

Claude-Edmonde Magny, real name Edmonde Vinel (1913–1966) was a French woman of letters.

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Claudia Schmölders

Claudia Schmölders, also Claudia Henn-Schmölders (born 25 October 1944 in Heidelberg) is a cultural scholar, author, and translator.

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Club des Hashischins

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

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Colonel Chabert (1943 film)

Colonel Chabert is a 1943 French drama film directed by René Le Hénaff, starring Raimu, Marie Bell, Aimé Clariond and Jacques Baumer.

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Colonel Chabert (1994 film)

Le Colonel Chabert (English title: Colonel Chabert) is a 1994 French historical drama film directed by Yves Angelo and starring Gérard Depardieu, Fanny Ardant and Fabrice Luchini.

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Colonel Chabert (novel)

Le Colonel Chabert (English: Colonel Chabert) is an 1832 novella by French novelist and playwright Honoré de Balzac (1799–1850).

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Colonialism

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

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Conceptual framework

A conceptual framework is an analytical tool with several variations and contexts.

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Conceptual writing

Conceptual writing (often used interchangeably with conceptual poetry) is a term which describes a range of experimental texts based on techniques such as appropriation (the "literary ready-made"), texts which may be reduced to a set of procedures, a generative instruction or constraint, a "concept" which precedes and is considered more important than the resulting text(s).

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Consulate-General of France in Saint Petersburg

The Consulate-General of France in Saint Petersburg is the diplomatic mission of France in Saint Petersburg, Russian Federation.

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Contracts House

The Contracts House (Контрактовий будинок) is a trade building in the Podil neighborhood of Kiev (Kyiv), the capital of Ukraine.

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Corinne Le Poulain

Corinne Le Poulain (–) was a French actress.

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Coudenhove-Kalergi

The Coudenhove-Kalergi family is a noble Bohemian family of mixed European descent, which was formed after Count Franz Karl von Coudenhove (1825–1893) married Marie Kalergi (1840–1877).

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Courtesan

A courtesan was originally a courtier, which means a person who attends the court of a monarch or other powerful person.

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Cousin Bette

La Cousine Bette (Cousin Bette) is an 1846 novel by French author Honoré de Balzac.

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Cousin Bette (film)

Cousin Bette is a 1998 British-American comedy-drama film starring Jessica Lange in the title role and is loosely based on the novel Cousin Bette by Honoré de Balzac.

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Crime and Punishment

Crime and Punishment (Pre-reform Russian: Преступленіе и наказаніе; post-reform prʲɪstʊˈplʲenʲɪje ɪ nəkɐˈzanʲɪje) is a novel by the Russian author Fyodor Dostoevsky.

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Cristina Trivulzio Belgiojoso

Cristina Trivulzio di Belgiojoso (28 June 1808, Milan, Lombardy, Italy5 July 1871, near Milan) was an Italian noblewoman who played a prominent part in Italy's struggle for independence.

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Cromwell (tragedy)

Cromwell is an 1820 verse tragedy by Honoré de Balzac.

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Cross of Gold (film)

Cross of Gold is a 1965 Australian television film which aired on ABC.

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Culture of Europe

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

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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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Dan Lungu

Dan Lungu (born September 15, 1969) is a Romanian novelist, short story writer, poet and dramatist, also known as a literary theorist and sociologist.

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Dandy

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

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Danièle Chatelain

Danièle Chatelain (born in France) is a professor of French and a writer.

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Daniel Guérin

Daniel Guérin (19 May 1904 in Paris – 14 April 1988 in Suresnes) was a French anarcho-communist author, best known for his work Anarchism: From Theory to Practice, as well as his collection No Gods No Masters: An Anthology of Anarchism in which he collected writings on the idea and movement it inspired, from the first writings of Max Stirner in the mid-19th century through the first half of the 20th century.

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Daniel O'Connell

Daniel O'Connell (Dónall Ó Conaill; 6 August 1775 – 15 May 1847), often referred to as The Liberator or The Emancipator, was an Irish political leader in the first half of the 19th century.

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Daniel Singer (journalist)

Daniel Singer (26 September 1926 – 2 December 2000) was a socialist writer and journalist.

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Dante Alighieri and the Divine Comedy in popular culture

The works of Dante Alighieri – particularly the Divine Comedy, widely considered his masterpiece – have been a source of inspiration for various artists since their publications in the late 13th and early 14th centuries.

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David Bellos

David Bellos (born 1945) is an English-born translator and biographer.

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David d'Angers

Pierre-Jean David (12 March 17884 January 1856) was a French sculptor and medallist.

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David Ferdinand Koreff

David Ferdinand Koreff (1 February 1783 – 15 May 1851) was a German physician who was a personal doctor of Staatskanzler Karl August von Hardenberg and occupied one of the two chairs for animal magnetism created in 1817 at the University of Berlin.

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Delphine (given name)

Delphine is a feminine French given name, a form of the Latin Delphina, meaning woman from Delphi.

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Delphine de Girardin

Delphine de Girardin (24 January 1804 – 29 June 1855), pen name Vicomte Delaunay, was a French author.

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Denis d'Inès

Denis d'Inès, real name Joseph-Victor-Octave Denis, (1 September 1885 - 25 October 1968) was a French actor and theatre director for some plays..

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Denis Diderot

Denis Diderot (5 October 171331 July 1784) was a French philosopher, art critic, and writer, best known for serving as co-founder, chief editor, and contributor to the Encyclopédie along with Jean le Rond d'Alembert.

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Department store

A department store is a retail establishment offering a wide range of consumer goods in different product categories known as "departments".

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Desire (1920 film)

Desire is a 1920 British silent fantasy film directed by George Edwardes-Hall and starring Dennis Neilson-Terry, Yvonne Arnaud and Christine Maitland.

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Didier Bourdon

Didier Bourdon (born 23 January 1959) is a French Algerian-born actor, screenwriter and film director.

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Die tödlichen Wünsche

Die tödlichen Wünsche (The Deadly Wishes), Op. 27, is an opera by Giselher Klebe who also wrote the libretto based on La Peau de chagrin by Honoré de Balzac.

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Diogenes Verlag

The Diogenes Verlag (short: Diogenes) is a Swiss publisher in Zurich, founded in 1952 by, with a focus on literature, plays and cartoons.

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Dom Casmurro

Dom Casmurro is an 1899 novel written by Brazilian author Joaquim Maria Machado de Assis.

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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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Drug user

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

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Dublin Rams

The Dublin Rams are an ice hockey team in the Irish Ice Hockey League.

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Dying Inside

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

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E. Haldeman-Julius

Emanuel Haldeman-Julius (né Emanuel Julius) (July 30, 1889 – July 31, 1951) was a Jewish-American socialist writer, atheist thinker, social reformer and publisher.

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Early life of Joseph Stalin

The early life of Joseph Stalin covers the life of Stalin from his birth on 6 December (18 December, New Style) 1878 until the October Revolution on 25 October 1917 (7 November).

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Economic history of France

This is a history of the economy of France.

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Edmond de Coussemaker

Charles Edmond Henri de Coussemaker, known as Edmond de Coussemaker, born on 19 April 1805 in Belle, died on 10 January 1876 in Bourbourg, was a schooled jurist.

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Edmond Guiraud

Edmond Guiraud (22 March 1879 – 18 April 1961) was a 20th-century French playwright, librettist, and actor from the Cévennes region in southern France.

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Edmund Fuller

Edmund Maybank Fuller (3 March 1914 - 29 January 2001) was an American educator, editor, novelist, historian, and literary critic.

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Eduard Vilde

Eduard Vilde (4 March 1865 in Pudivere, Väike-Maarja Parish, Lääne-Viru County – 26 December 1933 in Tallinn) was an Estonian writer, a pioneer of critical realism in Estonian literature, and a diplomat.

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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 Sherman Gould

Edward Sherman Gould (11 May 1808 Litchfield, Connecticut - 21 February 1885 New York City) was a 19th-century United States author and critic.

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Edwin Sill Fussell

Edwin Sill Fussell, Ph.D. (July 4, 1922 – August 27, 2002) was a professor of English literature at the University of California, San Diego.

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El Verdugo (short story)

El Verdugo is a short story by Honoré de Balzac, published in 1829.

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Elementary realism

The realism is derived from real word.

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Elizabeth Drew Stoddard

Elizabeth Drew Stoddard, née Barstow (May 6, 1823 – August 1, 1902), was a United States poet and novelist.

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Ellen Kaarma

Ellen Kaarma (2 January 1928 – 4 July 1973) was an Estonian stage and film actress.

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Ellen Marriage

Ellen Marriage (26 August 1865 – 23 December 1946) was an English translator from French, notably of Balzac's novels.

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Emanuel Swedenborg

Emanuel Swedenborg ((born Emanuel Swedberg; 29 January 1688 – 29 March 1772) was a Swedish Lutheran theologian, scientist, philosopher, revelator and mystic who inspired Swedenborgianism. He is best known for his book on the afterlife, Heaven and Hell (1758). Swedenborg had a prolific career as an inventor and scientist. In 1741, at 53, he entered into a spiritual phase in which he began to experience dreams and visions, beginning on Easter Weekend, on 6 April 1744. It culminated in a 'spiritual awakening' in which he received a revelation that he was appointed by the Lord Jesus Christ to write The Heavenly Doctrine to reform Christianity. According to The Heavenly Doctrine, the Lord had opened Swedenborg's spiritual eyes so that from then on, he could freely visit heaven and hell and talk with angels, demons and other spirits and the Last Judgment had already occurred the year before, in 1757. For the last 28 years of his life, Swedenborg wrote 18 published theological works—and several more that were unpublished. He termed himself a "Servant of the Lord Jesus Christ" in True Christian Religion, which he published himself. Some followers of The Heavenly Doctrine believe that of his theological works, only those that were published by Swedenborg himself are fully divinely inspired.

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Epistolary novel

An epistolary novel is a novel written as a series of documents.

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Ernest Dowson

Ernest Christopher Dowson (2 August 186723 February 1900) was an English poet, novelist, short-story writer, often associated with the Decadent movement.

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Eroticism

Eroticism (from the Greek ἔρως, eros—"desire") is a quality that causes sexual feelings, as well as a philosophical contemplation concerning the aesthetics of sexual desire, sensuality and romantic love.

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Ersilia Caetani Lovatelli

Ersilia Caetani-Lovatelli or Ersilia Caetani (12 October 1840 – 22 December 1925) was an Italian art historian, cultural historian and archaeologist.

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Eugène Atget

Eugène Atget (12 February 1857 – 4 August 1927) was a French flâneur and a pioneer of documentary photography, noted for his determination to document all of the architecture and street scenes of Paris before their disappearance to modernization.

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Eugène de Rastignac

Eugène de Rastignac is a fictional character from La Comédie humaine, a series of novels by Honoré de Balzac.

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Eugène François Vidocq

Eugène François Vidocq (July 24, 1775 – May 11, 1857) was a French criminal and criminalist whose life story inspired several writers, including Victor Hugo, Edgar Allan Poe, and Honoré de Balzac.

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Eugène Lampsonius

Auguste-Hilaire Eugène Lampsonius (1822–71) was a French painter and illustrator.

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Eugène Sue (film)

Eugène Sue was a 1974 French television film on the life of the author Eugène Sue, played by Bernard Verley.

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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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Eugénie

Eugénie is the French version of the female given name Eugenia.

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Eugénie Grandet

Eugénie Grandet is an 1833 novel by French author Honoré de Balzac, about miserliness and how it is bequeathed from the father to the daughter, Eugénie, through her unsatisfying love attachment with her cousin.

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Eugénie Grandet (1993)

Eugénie Grandet (1994) is a French film directed by Jean-Daniel Verhaeghe.

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Eugenia Grandet

Eugenia Grandet (also known as Eugenie Grandet) is a 1946 Italian drama film directed by Mario Soldati.

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Eugenia Grandet (1918 film)

Eugenia Grandet is a 1918 Italian silent historical film directed by Roberto Roberti and starring Francesca Bertini.

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Eugenia Grandet (1953 film)

Eugenia Grandet is a 1953 Mexican drama film directed by Emilio Gómez Muriel and starring Marga López, Julio Villarreal and Andrea Palma.

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Ewelina Hańska

Eveline Hańska (Ewelina, née Rzewuska, 6 January c. 1805 – 11 April 1882) was a Polish noblewoman best known for her marriage to French novelist Honoré de Balzac.

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Examining magistrate

In an inquisitorial system of law, the examining magistrate (also called investigating magistrate, inquisitorial magistrate, or investigating judge), is a judge who carries out pre-trial investigations into allegations of crime and in some cases makes a recommendation for prosecution.

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Ezequiel Martínez Estrada

Ezequiel Martínez Estrada (September 14, 1895 – November 4, 1964) was an Argentine writer, poet, essayist, and literary critic.

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Facino Cane (short story)

"Facino Cane" is an 1836 short story by French author Honoré de Balzac (1799-1850) and included in the Scènes de la vie parisienne section of his novel sequence La Comédie humaine.

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Fanny Mosselman

Françoise Zoé Mathilde Mosselman (1808–1880), known as Fanny Mosselman, was a Belgian noble and salonist, known as the maîtresse en titre (official mistress) of the duke Charles de Morny.

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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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Faubourg Saint-Germain

The Faubourg Saint Germain is a historic district of Paris.

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Félix Davin

Félix Davin was a 19th-century French journalist, novelist and poet.

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Federico Gana

Federico Gana (Santiago, Chile; January 15, 1867 – April 22, 1926) was a Chilean writer and diplomat.

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Female monsters in literature

This is a list of female monsters in literature.

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Ferdinand Brunetière

Ferdinand Brunetière (19 July 1849 – 9 December 1906) was a French writer and critic.

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Ferdinand Duviard

Ferdinand Jean Marie Valentin Duviard, (11 June 1889 – 2 February 1965) was a French high school teacher in Cahors, a writer and novelist.

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Ferme générale

The ferme générale ("general farm") was, in ancien régime France, essentially an outsourced customs, excise and indirect tax operation.

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Ferragus: Chief of the Devorants

Ferragus (Full title: Ferragus, chef des Dévorants; English: Ferragus, Chief of the Devorants) is an 1833 novel by French author Honoré de Balzac (1799–1850) and included in the Scènes de la vie parisienne section of his novel sequence La Comédie humaine.

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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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Flâneur

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

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Fontana Rosa

Fontana Rosa is a historic garden situated on the Avenue Blasco Ibáñez in Menton, Alpes-Maritimes, on the French Riviera.

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Forgery

Forgery is the process of making, adapting, or imitating objects, statistics, or documents with the intent to deceive for the sake of altering the public perception, or to earn profit by selling the forged item.

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Fougères

Fougères (Felger; Gallo: Foujerr) is a commune and a sub-prefecture of the Ille-et-Vilaine department in the region of Brittany, northwestern France.

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François Arago

Dominique François Jean Arago (Domènec Francesc Joan Aragó), known simply as François Arago (Catalan: Francesc Aragó) (26 February 17862 October 1853), was a French mathematician, physicist, astronomer, freemason, supporter of the carbonari and politician.

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François Buloz

François Buloz (20 September 1803 – 12 January 1877) was a French littérateur, magazine editor, and theater administrator.

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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 Lays

François Lay, better known under the stage name Lays (14 February 1758 – 30 March 1831), was a French baritone and tenor opera singer.

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François Rabelais

François Rabelais (between 1483 and 1494 – 9 April 1553) was a French Renaissance writer, physician, Renaissance humanist, monk and Greek scholar.

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François Taillandier

François Taillandier (born in 1955, Clermont-Ferrand, France) is a French writer portraying the French contemporary society.

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François-Désiré Froment-Meurice

François-Désiré Froment-Meurice (31 December 1802 (Paris)— (Paris) 17 February 1855) was a French goldsmith, working in a free and naturalistic manner in the tradition of Mannerist and Baroque masters.

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France

France, officially the French Republic (République française), is a sovereign state whose territory consists of metropolitan France in Western Europe, as well as several overseas regions and territories.

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Frances Frenaye

Frances Frenaye (1908-1996) was an American translator of French and Italian literature.

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Francis Joffo

Francis Joffo is a French actor, writer and theater director who essentially played for television, particularly in the program which made him famous.

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Francisco Teixeira de Queiroz

Francisco Teixeira de Queiroz (May 3, 1848 - July 22, 1919), who used the pen name of Bento Moreno, was a Portuguese writer.

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Frank Clewlow

Frank Dawson Clewlow (October–December 1885 – 13 June 1957 Hobart, Tasmania) was an English-born actor, director, producer and theatre manager, he worked in his native England, as well as Scotland, Australia and New Zealand, in 1936 he became Federal Controller of Productions for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.

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Frédérick Lemaître

Frédérick Lemaître (28 July 1800 – 26 January 1876) — birth name Antoine Louis Prosper Lemaître — was a French actor and playwright, one of the most famous players on the celebrated Boulevard du Crime.

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French Directory

The Directory or Directorate was a five-member committee which governed France from 1795, when it replaced the Committee of Public Safety.

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French Leave (novel)

French Leave is a novel by P. G. Wodehouse, first published in the United Kingdom on 20 January 1956 by Herbert Jenkins, London and in the United States on 28 September 1959 by Simon & Schuster, Inc., New York.

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French literature

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

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French nobility

The French nobility (la noblesse) was a privileged social class in France during the Middle Ages and the Early Modern period to the revolution in 1790.

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French Poets and Novelists

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

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French Restoration style

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

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French sol

The sol, later called a sou, is the name of a number of different coins, for accounting or payment, dating from Antiquity to today.

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Fu Lei

Fu Lei (Fou Lei;; courtesy name Nu'an 怒安, pseudonym Nu'an 怒庵; 1908–1966), with his renowned rendition of Balzac and Romain Rolland, was one of China's most respected translators of French literature.

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Fyodor Dostoevsky

Fyodor Mikhailovich DostoevskyHis name has been variously transcribed into English, his first name sometimes being rendered as Theodore or Fedor.

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Fyodor Dostoevsky bibliography

The bibliography of Fyodor Dostoyevsky comprises novels, novellas, short stories, essays and other literary works.

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Fyodor Sologub

Fyodor Sologub (Фёдор Сологу́б, born Fyodor Kuzmich Teternikov, Фёдор Кузьми́ч Тете́рников, also known as Theodor Sologub; – 5 December 1927) was a Russian Symbolist poet, novelist, playwright and essayist.

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G. Peignot et Fils

G.

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Gabriel Hanotaux

Albert Auguste Gabriel Hanotaux, known as Gabriel Hanotaux (19 November 1853 – 11 April 1944) was a French statesman and historian.

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Galley slave

A galley slave is a slave rowing in a galley, either a convicted criminal sentenced to work at the oar (French: galérien), or a kind of human chattel, often a prisoner of war, assigned to his duty of rowing.

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Gambara (short story)

Gambara is a short story by Honoré de Balzac, first published in 1837 in the Revue et gazette musicale de Paris at the request of its editor Maurice Schlesinger.

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Gambling

Gambling is the wagering of money or something of value (referred to as "the stakes") on an event with an uncertain outcome with the primary intent of winning money or material goods.

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Gareth Davies (director)

Gareth Davies is a British television director and actor.

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Gaston Bussière

Gaston Bussière (April 24, 1862 in Cuisery – October 29, 1928 or 1929 in Saulieu) was a French Symbolist painter and illustrator.

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Gateway to the Great Books

Gateway to the Great Books is a 10-volume series of books originally published by Encyclopædia Britannica Inc.

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Gatianus of Tours

Gatianus (Catianus, Gatianus, Gratianus; Cassien, Gatien, Gratien) (3rd century CE) was the founding bishop of the see of Tours.

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Gérard de Nerval

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

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Gérard Depardieu filmography

Gérard Depardieu (born 27 December 1948) is a French actor, filmmaker, businessman and vineyard owner.

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Geneviève de Brunelle

Geneviève de Brunelle, Marquise de Combray (1742–1823), was a French counter-revolutionary and royalist during the French Revolution and the first empire.

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Geoffrey Beevers

Geoffrey Beevers is a British actor who has appeared in many different stage and screen roles.

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George Bentley (publisher)

George Bentley (7 June 1828 – 29 May 1895) was a 19th-century English publisher based in London.

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George Burnham Ives

George Burnham Ives (1856-1930) was an American bibliographer, editor, and translator.

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George Călinescu

George Călinescu (19 June 1899, Iași – 12 March 1965, Otopeni) was a Romanian literary critic, historian, novelist, academician and journalist, and a writer of classicist and humanist tendencies.

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George Eliot

Mary Anne Evans (22 November 1819 – 22 December 1880; alternatively "Mary Ann" or "Marian"), known by her pen name George Eliot, was an English novelist, poet, journalist, translator, and one of the leading writers of the Victorian era.

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George Meredith

George Meredith, OM (12 February 1828 – 18 May 1909) was an English novelist and poet of the Victorian era.

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George Robert Sims

George Robert Sims (2 September 1847 – 4 September 1922) was an English journalist, poet, dramatist, novelist and bon vivant.

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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 Sand

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

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George W. Anson

George W. Anson (25 November 1847 – 2 August 1920) was a British actor.

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Georges Cain

Georges-Jules-Auguste Cain (16 April 1856, Paris - 4 March 1919, Paris) was a French painter, illustrator and writer, who specialized in the history of Paris, its monuments and its theaters.

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Georges Darien

Georges Darien (pseudonym for Georges Hippolyte Adrien), (6 April 1862 – 19 August 1921), was a French writer associated with anarchism and an outspoken advocate of Georgism.

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Georges Lentz

Georges Lentz is a contemporary composer and sound artist, born in Luxembourg in 1965, and is that country's internationally best-known composer.

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Georges Marchal

Georges Marchal (10 January 1920 – 28 November 1997) was a French actor.

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Georges Vicaire

Georges Vicaire (8 December 1853 – 4 November 1921) was a French bibliophile and bibliographer.

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Gerrit Dou

Gerrit Dou (7 April 1613 – 9 February 1675), also known as Gerard and Douw or Dow, was a Dutch Golden Age painter, whose small, highly polished paintings are typical of the Leiden fijnschilders.

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Giacomo Meyerbeer

Giacomo Meyerbeer (born Jacob Liebmann Beer; 5 September 1791 – 2 May 1864) was a German opera composer of Jewish birth who has been described as perhaps the most successful stage composer of the nineteenth century.

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Gil Blas

Gil Blas (L'Histoire de Gil Blas de Santillane) is a picaresque novel by Alain-René Lesage published between 1715 and 1735.

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Ginzburg v. United States

Ginzburg v. United States, 383 U.S. 463 (1966), was a decision by the United States Supreme Court involving the application of the First Amendment to Federal obscenity laws.

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Giovanni Giolitti

Giovanni Giolitti (27 October 1842 – 17 July 1928) was an Italian statesman.

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Giulietta Pezzi

Giulietta Pezzi (10 February 1810 – 31 December 1878) was an Italian writer and journalist whose work included poetry, four novels, and a five-act play.

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Giuseppe Verdi (film)

Giuseppe Verdi is a 1938 Italian biographical film directed by Carmine Gallone and starring Fosco Giachetti, Gaby Morlay and Germana Paolieri.

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Gobseck

Gobseck is an 1830 novella by French author Honoré de Balzac (1799-1850) and included in the Scènes de la vie privée section of his novel sequence La Comédie humaine.

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Gods Without Men

Gods Without Men is Hari Kunzru's fourth novel, first published in 2011.

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Gordian Knot

The Gordian Knot is a legend of Phrygian Gordium associated with Alexander the Great.

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Graham Robb

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

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Granville, Manche

Granville is a commune in the Manche department and region of Normandy in north-western France.

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Graphic Classics

Graphic Classics is a comic book anthology series published by Eureka Productions of Mount Horeb, Wisconsin.

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Great books

The great books are books that are thought to constitute an essential foundation in the literature of Western culture.

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Great Books of the Western World

Great Books of the Western World is a series of books originally published in the United States in 1952, by Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc., to present the Great Books in a 54-volume set.

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Great Writers series

The Great Writers series was a collection of literary biographies published in London from 1887, by Walter Scott & Co.

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Greta Garbo

Greta Garbo (born Greta Lovisa Gustafsson; 18 September 1905 – 15 April 1990) was a Swedish film actress during the 1920s and 1930s.

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Guérande

Guérande (Gwenrann) is a medieval town located in the ''département'' of Loire-Atlantique in western France.

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Guillaume Dupuytren

Baron Guillaume Dupuytren (5 October 1777 – 8 February 1835) was a French anatomist and military surgeon.

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Gustave Doré

Paul Gustave Louis Christophe Doré (6 January 1832 – 23 January 1883) was a French artist, printmaker, illustrator, comics artist, caricaturist and sculptor who worked primarily with wood engraving.

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Gustave Drouineau

Gustave Pierre Drouineau (22 February 1798 – 19 April 1878) was a 19th-century French novelist, poet and playwright.

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Gustave Flaubert

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

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Guy de Charnacé

Ernest Charles Guy de Girard, count then marquis de Charnacé (3 May 1825 – 3 March 1909) was a French writer, journalist, agronomist and musicologist.

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Guy de Maupassant

Henri René Albert Guy de Maupassant (5 August 1850 – 6 July 1893) was a French writer, remembered as a master of the short story form, and as a representative of the naturalist school of writers, who depicted human lives and destinies and social forces in disillusioned and often pessimistic terms.

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Guy Kerner

Guy Kerner (28 January 1922 – 5 April 1984) was a 20th-century French stage and film actor.

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György Lukács

György Lukács (also Georg Lukács; born György Bernát Löwinger; 13 April 1885 – 4 June 1971) was a Hungarian Marxist philosopher, aesthetician, literary historian, and critic.

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Hanns Heinz Ewers

Hanns Heinz Ewers (3 November 1871 – 12 June 1943) was a German actor, poet, philosopher, and writer of short stories and novels.

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Haralamb Lecca

Haralamb George Lecca (also known as Haralamb Leca, Har. Lecca,C. D. Fort., "Recenzii. Cărți. Antologia poeților olteni, de I. C. Popescu-Polyclet", in Arhivele Olteniei, Nr. 45–46/1929, p. 546"Noutăți. Știri literare", in Unirea. Foaie Bisericească-Politică, Nr. 28/1907, p. 253 or Haralambie Lecca;Elena Siupiur, "Rapports littéraires roumano-bulgares entre 1878–1916", in Revue Des Études Sud-est Européennes, Nr. 4/1972, p. 704 – March 9, 1920) was a Romanian poet, playwright and translator, grandson of artist Constantin Lecca and brother of genealogist Octav-George Lecca, as well as nephew and rival of writer Ion Luca Caragiale.

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Harry Alan Towers

Harry Alan Towers (19 October 1920 – 31 July 2009) was a British radio and independent film producer and screenwriter.

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Harvard Classics

The Harvard Universal Classics, originally known as Dr.

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Hashish

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

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Haussmann's renovation of Paris

Haussmann's renovation of Paris was a vast public works program commissioned by Emperor Napoléon III and directed by his prefect of the Seine, Georges-Eugène Haussmann, between 1853 and 1870.

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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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Hôtel Lambert

The Hôtel Lambert is a hôtel particulier, a grand mansion townhouse, on the Quai Anjou on the eastern tip of the Île Saint-Louis, in 4th arrondissement of Paris.

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Heartfire

Heartfire (1998) is an alternate history/fantasy novel by American writer Orson Scott Card.

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Heaven and Hell (Swedenborg)

Heaven and Hell is the common English title of a book written by Emanuel Swedenborg in Latin, published in 1758.

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Hector Berlioz

Louis-Hector Berlioz; 11 December 1803 – 8 March 1869) was a French Romantic composer, best known for his compositions Symphonie fantastique, Harold en Italie, Roméo et Juliette, Grande messe des morts (Requiem), L'Enfance du Christ, Benvenuto Cellini, La Damnation de Faust, and Les Troyens. Berlioz made significant contributions to the modern orchestra with his Treatise on Instrumentation. He specified huge orchestral forces for some of his works, and conducted several concerts with more than 1,000 musicians. He also composed around 50 compositions for voice, accompanied by piano or orchestra. His influence was critical for the further development of Romanticism, especially in composers like Richard Wagner, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, Franz Liszt, Richard Strauss, and Gustav Mahler.

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Hedwig Lachmann

Hedwig Lachmann (29 August 1865 – 21 February 1918) was a German author, translator and poet.

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Henrik Pontoppidan

Henrik Pontoppidan (24 July 1857 – 21 August 1943) was a Danish realist writer who shared with Karl Gjellerup the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1917 for "his authentic descriptions of present-day life in Denmark." Pontoppidan's novels and short stories — informed with a desire for social progress but despairing, later in his life, of its realization — present an unusually comprehensive picture of his country and his epoch.

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Henry Curwen (journalist)

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

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Henry Dupont

Richard Henry Puech Dupont or Henry Dupont (1 November 1798 - 2 July 1873) was a French naturalist and a collector and trader in specimens of beetles and birds.

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Henry Greisley

Henry Greisley (1615?-1678), was an English translator.

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Henry James

Henry James, OM (–) was an American author regarded as a key transitional figure between literary realism and literary modernism, and is considered by many to be among the greatest novelists in the English language.

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Henry Miller

Henry Valentine Miller (December 26, 1891 – June 7, 1980) was an American writer, expatriated in Paris at his flourishing.

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Henry Monnier

Henry-Bonaventure Monnier (7 June 1799 in Paris – 3 January 1877) was a French playwright, caricaturist and actor.

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Henryk Rzewuski

Henryk Rzewuski (Slavuta, Volyn, 3 May 1791 – 28 February 1866, Chudniv, Volyn) was a Polish Romantic-era journalist and novelist.

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Herbert Hunt

Herbert James Hunt (1899–1973), was an English academic, author and translator, particularly of the novels of Honoré de Balzac.

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Hermann Wolfgang von Waltershausen

Hermann Wolfgang Sartorius Freiherr von Waltershausen (Göttingen, 12 October 1882 – Munich, 14 June 1954) was a German composer, conductor, teacher and writer.

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Hippolyte Charles

Hippolyte Charles (July 6, 1773March 8, 1837) was best known for being Josephine Bonaparte's lover soon after her marriage to Napoleon Bonaparte.

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Hispanism

Hispanism (sometimes referred to as Hispanic Studies or Spanish Studies) is the study of the literature and culture of the Spanish-speaking world, principally that of Spain and Hispanic America.

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Historical fiction

Historical fiction is a literary genre in which the plot takes place in a setting located in the past.

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Historical realism

Historical realism requires the writer’s critical knowledge of the historicist who has a different interpretation of the historical events.

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Historical romance

Historical romance (also historical novel) is a broad category of fiction in which the plot takes place in a setting located in the past.

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History of mining in Sardinia

Mining and the processing of minerals date back to ancient times in Sardinia.

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History of modern literature

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

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History of Paris

The oldest traces of human occupation in Paris, discovered in 2008 near the Rue Henri-Farman in the 15th arrondissement, are human bones and evidence of an encampment of hunter-gatherers dating from about 8000 BC, during the Mesolithic period.

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History of the Palace of Versailles

The Palace of Versailles is a royal château in Versailles, in the Île-de-France region of France.

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Hobson's choice

A Hobson's choice is a free choice in which only one thing is offered.

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Honor of the Family

Honor of the Family is a 1931 American Pre-Code drama film released by First National Pictures (a subsidiary of Warner Bros.), starring Bebe Daniels and Warren William.

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Honoré

Honoré is a name of French origin and may refer to several people or places.

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Honorine (novel)

Honorine is an 1843 novel by French novelist and playwright Honoré de Balzac (1799-1850) and included in his series of novels (or Roman-fleuve) known as La Comédie humaine (The Human Comedy) which parodies and depicts French society in the period of the Restoration and the July Monarchy (1815-1848).

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Hotel Danieli

Hotel Danieli, formerly Palazzo Dandolo, is a five-star palatial hotel in Venice, Italy.

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House of George Sand

The House of George Sand is a writer's house museum in the village of Nohant, in the Indre department of France.

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How to Read a Book

How to Read a Book is a 1940 book by Mortimer Adler.

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Howard Curtis

Howard Curtis (born 1949) is a British translator of French, Italian and Spanish fiction.

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Humor magazine

A humor magazine is a magazine specifically designed to deliver humorous content to its readership.

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Illusions perdues

Illusions perdues — in English, Lost Illusions — is a serial novel written by the French writer Honoré de Balzac between 1837 and 1843.

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Imperia (statue)

The Imperia is a statue at the entrance of the harbour of Konstanz, Germany, commemorating the Council of Constance that took place there between 1414 and 1418.

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Imperia Cognati

Imperia Cognati (also called Imperia La Divina, meaning Imperia The Divine, or The Queen of Courtesans, 3 August 1486 - 15 August 1512), was a Roman courtesan.

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In Search of Lost Time

In Search of Lost Time (À la recherche du temps perdu) – previously also translated as Remembrance of Things Past – is a novel in seven volumes, written by Marcel Proust (1871–1922).

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Index of World War II articles (H)

# H-hour (D-day).

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Indre-et-Loire

Indre-et-Loire is a department in west-central France named after the Indre and the Loire rivers.

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Innocence (short story)

"Innocence" is a short story written by Honoré de Balzac.

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International Short Stories

International Short Stories is a three-volume anthology of outstanding English, American, and French short stories and novellae of the 18th, 19th, and early 20th centuries.

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Ion Caraion

Ion Caraion (pen name of Stelian Diaconescu; May 24, 1923–July 21, 1986) was a Romanian poet, essayist and translator.

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Ion Luca Caragiale

Ion Luca Caragiale (commonly referred to as I. L. Caragiale; According to his birth certificate, published and discussed by Constantin Popescu-Cadem in Manuscriptum, Vol. VIII, Nr. 2, 1977, p.179-184 – 9 June 1912) was a Wallachian, later Romanian playwright, short story writer, poet, theater manager, political commentator and journalist.

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Ion Negoițescu

Ion Negoiţescu (also known as Nego; August 10, 1921 – February 6, 1993) was a Romanian literary historian, critic, poet, novelist and memoirist, one of the leading members of the Sibiu Literary Circle.

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Ion Vinea

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

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Irving Goldman

Irving Goldman (September 2, 1911 – April 7, 2002) was an American anthropologist.

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Irving Gottesman

Irving Isadore Gottesman (December 29, 1930 – June 29, 2016) was an American professor of psychology who devoted most of his career to the study of the genetics of schizophrenia.

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Isabelle Aboulker

Isabelle Aboulker is a French composer, particularly known for her operas and other vocal works.

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Isabelle de Limeuil

Isabelle de la Tour, Lady of Limeuil (c. 1535 – 25 March 1609) was a French noblewoman and a Maid of Honour to the Queen Mother Catherine de' Medici.

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Issoudun

Issoudun is a commune in the Indre department in the Centre-Val de Loire region of France.

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Italo Calvino

Italo Calvino (. RAI (circa 1970), retrieved 25 October 2012. 15 October 1923 – 19 September 1985) was an Italian journalist and writer of short stories and novels.

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Jaan Kross

Jaan Kross (19 February 1920 – 27 December 2007) was an Estonian writer.

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Jack Matthews (author)

Jack Matthews (22 July 1925 – 28 November 2013) was an American novelist, short story writer, essayist, playwright and former professor.

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Jacques Dubois (literary theorist)

Jacques Dubois (born 1933, Liège), Professor emeritus of Literature at the Université de Liège invented the concept of the Literary Institution following the work of Pierre Bourdieu by analogy with other social institutions such as military, medical, and political.

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Jacques Rivette

Jacques Rivette (1 March 1928 – 29 January 2016) was a French film director and film critic most commonly associated with the French New Wave and the film magazine Cahiers du Cinéma.

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Jacques-Germain Chaudes-Aigues

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

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James Fenimore Cooper

James Fenimore Cooper (September 15, 1789 – September 14, 1851) was an American writer of the first half of the 19th century.

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James Mayer de Rothschild

James Mayer de Rothschild, Baron de Rothschild (15 May 1792 – 15 November 1868), born Jakob Mayer Rothschild, was a German-French banker and the founder of the French branch of the Rothschild family.

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James Wong Howe

Wong Tung Jim, A.S.C. (August 28, 1899 – July 12, 1976), known professionally as James Wong Howe, was a Chinese American cinematographer who worked on over 130 films.

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Jan Verkade

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

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Józef Ignacy Kraszewski

Józef Ignacy Kraszewski (28 July 1812 – 19 March 1887) was a Polish writer, publisher, historian, journalist, scholar, painter and author who produced more than 200 novels and 150 novellas, short stories, and art reviews.

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Jean Chouan

Jean Chouan was the nom de guerre of the Frenchman, Jean Cottereau, who was born at Saint-Berthevin, near Laval, in the department of Mayenne on 30 October 1757 and died 18 July 1794 at Olivet, also in Mayenne.

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Jean Gigoux

Jean Gigoux (8 January 1806 – 11 December 1894) was a French painter and illustrator.

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Jean Gillibert

Jean Gillibert (1925 – 31 October 2014) was a French psychiatrist, psychoanalyst, poet, translator, playwright and theatre director.

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Jean Giono

Jean Giono (30 March 1895 – 8 October 1970) was a French author who wrote works of fiction mostly set in the Provence region of France.

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Jean Le Poulain

Jean Le Poulain (12 September 1924 – 1 March 1988) was a French stage actor and stage director.

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Jean Louis Barthélemy O'Donnell

Comte Jean Louis Barthelemy O'Donnell (1783–1836), was born in Maine-et-Loire, France, and was a Hiberno-French count who survived the French Revolution, campaigned in Italy and Spain under Napoleon Bonaparte, and played a prominent role in local government in France.

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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-Baptiste Botul

Jean-Baptiste Botul is a fictional French philosopher created in 1995 by the journalist Frédéric Pagès and other members of a group calling itself the Association of the Friends of Jean-Baptiste Botul.

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Jean-François Barrière

Jean-François Barrière (12 May 1786 – 22 August 1868) was a French historian.

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Jean-Marc Parisis

Jean-Marc Parisis (born 1962) is a French writer and journalist.

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Jean-Marie Serreau

Jean-Marie Serreau (28 April 1915 – 22 May 1973) was a 20th-century French actor, theatre director and a former student of Charles Dullin.

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Jean-Paul Comart

Jean-Paul Comart (born 27 September 1953) is a Belgian actor best known for his appearances in French film in the 1980s.

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Jean-Pierre Dantan

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

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Jean-Pierre Lacombe-Saint-Michel

Jean-Pierre Lacombe-Saint-Michel, born 5 March 1751 and died 27 January 1812 in the château de Saint-Michel-de-Vax (Tarn), was a French general in the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic armies.

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Jeanne Bérangère

Jeanne Bérangère (9 June 1864 – 19 November 1928) was a French stage and film actress whose career spanned nearly forty years on the stage and in films during the silent film era.

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Jeffrey Hatcher

Jeffrey Hatcher is an American playwright and screenwriter.

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Jerome Charyn

Jerome Charyn (born May 13, 1937) is an American author.

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Jesper Ewald

Jesper Ewald (24 December 1893 in Vordingborg – 30 August 1969 in Copenhagen) was a Danish author, journalist and translator.

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Jessica Lange

Jessica Phyllis Lange (born April 20, 1949) is an American film, television and theatre actress.

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Jiang Rong

Lü Jiamin (born 1946 in Jiangsu), better known by his pseudonym Jiang Rong, is a Chinese writer, most famous for his best-selling 2004 novel Wolf Totem, which he wrote under the pseudonym Jiang Rong.

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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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Joan Bodon

Joan Bodon, who was born in Crespin, Aveyron, Occitania (France) on December 11, 1920 and died on February 24, 1975 in Algeria, is an author who wrote exclusively in Occitan although he is credited as being called Jean Boudou in the French translations of his works.

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Jocelyn Quivrin

Jocelyn Quivrin (14 February 1979 – 15 November 2009) was a French actor.

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Johann Maria Farina gegenüber dem Jülichs-Platz

Johann Maria Farina gegenüber dem Jülichs-Platz GmbH (English: John Maria Farina opposite Jülich's Square) is the world's oldest eau de Cologne and perfume factory.

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John Connell

John Connell (born 25 June 1940 in Atlanta, Georgia; died September 27, 2009 in Mariaville, Maine) was an American artist.

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John Frey and Peter Morris

John Andrew Frey (August 29, 1929 – August 22, 1997) and Peter Louis Morris (December 29, 1929 - August 29, 2010) are buried together in the gay corner of the Congressional Cemetery, in Washington, D.C.

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John Updike

John Hoyer Updike (March 18, 1932 – January 27, 2009) was an American novelist, poet, short story writer, art critic, and literary critic.

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José María de Pereda

José María de Pereda (born 6 February 1833, Polanco, Cantabria – died 1 March 1906, Polanco) was a modern Spanish novelist, and a Member of the Royal Spanish Academy.

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José María Pino Suárez

José María Pino Suárez (8 September 1869 – 22 February 1913) was a Mexican statesman, jurist, poet, journalist and revolutionary who served as the 7th and last Vice President of Mexico from 1911 until his assassination in 1913.

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José Maria de Eça de Queirós

José Maria de Eça de Queiroz (25 November 1845 – 16 August 1900) is generally considered to have been the greatest Portuguese writer in the realist style.

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Josée Dayan

Josée Dayan (born 6 October 1943 in Toulouse, France) is a French film director, screenwriter and producer.

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Josep Feliu i Codina

Josep Feliu i Codina (also known by his Spanish name José Feliú y Codina) (11 June 1845 – 2 May 1897) was a Catalan journalist, novelist and playwright whose work is linked to the Realist movement and to the Catalan Renaixença.

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Josep Palau i Fabre

Josep Palau i Fabre (born April 21, 1917 in Barcelona- died in the same city on February 23, 2008) was a Spanish Catalan poet and writer.

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Joseph Cachin

Baron Joseph Marie François Cachin was a French engineer, most notable for his work at Cherbourg Harbour.

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Journal Kyaw Ma Ma Lay

Journal Kyaw Ma Ma Lay (ဂျာနယ်ကျော် မမလေး) is widely acknowledged as one of the greatest Burmese writers of the 20th century.

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Jules Barbey d'Aurevilly

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

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Jules Vallès

Jules Vallès (10 June 1832 – 14 February 1885) was a French journalist and author.

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Jules Verne

Jules Gabriel Verne (Longman Pronunciation Dictionary.; 8 February 1828 – 24 March 1905) was a French novelist, poet, and playwright.

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Julie Depardieu

Julie Marion Depardieu (born 18 June 1973) is a French actress who has appeared in a number of successful films.

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Julien Green

Julien Green (September 6, 1900 – August 13, 1998) was an American writer who authored several novels (The Dark Journey, The Closed Garden, Moira, Each Man in His Darkness, the Dixie trilogy, etc.), a four-volume autobiography (The Green Paradise, The War at Sixteen, Love in America and Restless Youth) and his famous Diary (in nineteen volumes, 1919–1998).

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Juliette Béliveau

Juliette Béliveau (October 28, 1889 – August 26, 1975) was a French Canadian actress and singer, who starred in various radio and television comedies and dramas, as well as in theatre productions.

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July Monarchy

The July Monarchy (Monarchie de Juillet) was a liberal constitutional monarchy in France under Louis Philippe I, starting with the July Revolution of 1830 and ending with the Revolution of 1848.

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Karađorđe

Đorđe Petrović OSA (Ђорђе Петровић), better known by the sobriquet Black George, or Karađorđe (Карађорђе,; –), was a Serbian revolutionary leader who fought for his country's independence from the Ottoman Empire during the First Serbian Uprising of 1804–1813.

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Karolina Sobańska

Countess Karolina Rozalia Tekla Sobańska (née Rzewuska) (25 December 1795 – 21 July 1885) was a Polish agent and noblewoman.

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Karriere in Paris

Karriere in Paris is a 1952 East German film.

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Katherine Prescott Wormeley

Katherine Prescott Wormeley (January 14, 1830 – August 4, 1908) was an American nurse in the Civil War, author, editor, and translator of French language literary works.

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Kathleen Raine

Kathleen Jessie Raine CBE (14 June 1908 – 6 July 2003) was a British poet, critic and scholar, writing in particular on William Blake, W. B. Yeats and Thomas Taylor.

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Künstlerroman

A Künstlerroman (plural -ane), meaning "artist's novel" in English, is a narrative about an artist's growth to maturity.

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Kesari Balakrishna Pillai

Kesari Balakrishna Pillai (1889–1960) was a Malayalam writer, art and literary critic, journalist, thinker and visionary.

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Kings Row

Kings Row is a 1942 film starring Ann Sheridan, Robert Cummings, and Ronald Reagan that tells a story of young people growing up in a small American town at the turn of the twentieth century.

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L'Artiste

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

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L'Auberge rouge (short story)

L'Auberge rouge (English "The Red Inn") is a short story by Honoré de Balzac.

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L'Homme du large

L' Homme du large (English: Man of the Sea or Man of the Open Seas) is a 1920 French silent film directed by Marcel L'Herbier and based on a short story by Honoré de Balzac.

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La 628-E8

La 628-E8 is a novel by the French novelist and playwright Octave Mirbeau, published by Fasquelle in 1907.

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La Belle Noiseuse

La Belle Noiseuse is a 1991 film directed by Jacques Rivette and starring Michel Piccoli, Jane Birkin, and Emmanuelle Béart.

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La Bourse

La Bourse (The Purse) is a short story by the French novelist Honoré de Balzac.

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La Caricature (1830–1843)

La Caricature was a satirical weekly published French periodical that was distributed in Paris between 1830 and 1843 during the July Monarchy.

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La Comédie humaine

La Comédie humaine (The Human Comedy) is the title of Honoré de Balzac's (1799–1850) multi-volume collection of interlinked novels and stories depicting French society in the period of the Restoration (1815-1830) and the July Monarchy (1830–1848).

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La Duchesse de Langeais

La Duchesse de Langeais is an 1834 novel by French author Honoré de Balzac (1799-1850) and included in the Scènes de la vie parisienne section of his novel sequence La Comédie humaine.

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La Fausse Maîtresse

La Fausse Maîtresse is an 1843 novel by French novelist and playwright Honoré de Balzac (1799-1850) and included in his series of novels (or Roman-fleuve) known as La Comédie humaine (The Human Comedy) which parodies and depicts French society in the period of the Restoration and the July Monarchy (1815-1848).

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La fausse maîtresse

La fausse maîtresse (Twisted Mistress) is a 1942 French comedy film starring Danielle Darrieux.

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La Fille aux yeux d'or

La Fille aux yeux d'or (English: The Girl With the Golden Eyes) is a novella by Honoré de Balzac.

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La Force Prison

La Force Prison was a French prison located in the Rue du Roi de Sicile, in what is now the 4th arrondissement of Paris.

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La Grande Bretèche

La Grande Bretèche is a short story by Honoré de Balzac published in 1831.

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La Maison du chat-qui-pelote

La Maison du chat-qui-pelote (At the Sign of the Cat and Racket) is a novel by Honoré de Balzac.

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La Messe de l'athée

La Messe de l'athée (English "The Atheist's Mass") is a short story by Honoré de Balzac, published in 1836.

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La Mort de Balzac

La Mort de Balzac (The Death of Balzac) by Octave Mirbeau is a collection of three sub-chapters that were initially intended to appear in Mirbeau’s La 628-E8, in November 1907, but were then withdrawn at the last moment at the request of the 80-year daughter of Madame Hanska, the Countess of Mniszech.

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La Paix du ménage

La Paix du ménage (Domestic Bliss) is a French novella by Honoré de Balzac, which was first published by Mame et Delaunay-Vallée in 1830 as one of the author's Scènes de la vie privée (Scenes from Private Life).

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La Peau de chagrin

La Peau de chagrin (The Skin of Sorrow or The Wild Ass's Skin) is an 1831 novel by French novelist and playwright Honoré de Balzac (1799–1850).

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La Quotidienne

La Quotidienne was a French Royalist newspaper.

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La Rabouilleuse

La Rabouilleuse (The Black Sheep) is an 1842 novel by Honoré de Balzac, and is one of the Scènes de la vie province in the series La Comédie humaine.

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La Vendetta (novel)

La Vendetta (The Vendetta) is a novel by the French writer Honoré de Balzac.

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La Vieille Fille (novel)

La Vieille Fille (The Old Maid or An Old Maid) is a novel by the French writer Honoré de Balzac.

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Lac du Bourget

Lac du Bourget (Lake Bourget), also locally known as Lac Gris (Grey Lake) or Lac d'Aix, is a lake at the southernmost end of the Jura Mountains in the department of Savoie, France.

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Landscape

A landscape is the visible features of an area of land, its landforms and how they integrate with natural or man-made features.

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Laure Junot, Duchess of Abrantès

Laure Junot, Duchess of Abrantès (née Martin de Permond; 6 November 17847 June 1838) was a French writer.

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Léon Gozlan

Léon Gozlan (11 September 1803 – 14 September 1866) was a 19th-century French novelist and playwright.

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Léon Séché

Léon Séché (April 3, 1848 - Mai 5, 1914) was a French poet.

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Le Bal de Sceaux

Le Bal de Sceaux (The Ball at Sceaux) is the fifth work of Honoré de Balzac, one of the oldest texts of la Comédie Humaine.

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Le Cabinet des Antiques

Le Cabinet des Antiques (The Cabinet of Antiquities) is a French novel published by Honoré de Balzac in 1838 under the title les Rivalités en province (Rivalries in the provinces) in le Constitutionnel, then published as a work in its own right in 1838 by the Souverain publishing house.

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Le Chef-d'œuvre inconnu

Le Chef-d’œuvre inconnu (English "The Unknown Masterpiece") is a short story by Honoré de Balzac.

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Le Constitutionnel

Le Constitutionnel (The Constitutional) was a French political and literary newspaper, founded in Paris during the Hundred Days by Joseph Fouché.

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Le Contrat de mariage

Le Contrat de mariage (English: A Marriage Contract or A Marriage Settlement) is an 1835 novel by French author Honoré de Balzac (1799-1850) and included in the Scènes de la vie privée section of his novel sequence La Comédie humaine.

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Le Courrier français (1884–1914)

Le Courrier français was an illustrated weekly founded and edited by Jules Roques.

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Le Cousin Pons

Le Cousin Pons is one of the last of the 94 works of Honoré de Balzac’s Comédie humaine, which are in novel and short story form.

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Le Curé de Tours

Le Curé de Tours is a long short story (or, more properly, a novella) by Honoré de Balzac, written in 1832.

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Le Curé de village

Le Curé de village (The Village Priest) is a novel by Honoré de Balzac.

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Le Havre

Le Havre, historically called Newhaven in English, is an urban French commune and city in the Seine-Maritime department in the Normandy region of northwestern France.

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Le Lys dans la vallée

Le Lys dans la Vallée (English: The Lily of the Valley) is an 1835 novel about love and society by French novelist and playwright Honoré de Balzac (1799–1850).

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Le Médecin de campagne

Le Médecin de campagne (The Country Doctor) is an 1833 novel by Honoré de Balzac.

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Le Réquisitionnaire

Le Réquisitionnaire (English "The Conscript" or "The Recruit") is a short story by Honoré de Balzac.

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Le shérif

Le shérif (The Sheriff) is an opéra comique in three acts composed by Fromental Halévy to a libretto by Eugène Scribe.

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Le Voleur (magazine)

Le Voleur was an illustrated literary magazine published weekly in Paris from 1828 until 1907.

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Les Chouans

Les Chouans (The Chouans) is an 1829 novel by French novelist and playwright Honoré de Balzac (1799–1850) and included in the Scènes de la vie militaire section of his novel sequence La Comédie humaine.

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Les Proscrits

Les Proscrits (sometimes translated into English as The Exiles) is a French novel by Honoré de Balzac, published in 1831 by éditions Gosselin, then in 1846 by Furne, Dubochet, Hetzel in Études philosophiques.

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Les Rougon-Macquart

Les Rougon-Macquart is the collective title given to a cycle of twenty novels by French writer Émile Zola.

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Lesbian

A lesbian is a homosexual woman.

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Letters from 74 rue Taitbout

Letters from 74 Rue Taitbout or Don't Go But If You Must Say Hello To Everybody is a book of short stories in the form of letters by William Saroyan.

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Library catalog

A library catalog or library catalogue is a register of all bibliographic items found in a library or group of libraries, such as a network of libraries at several locations.

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Lisbeth

Lizbeth is a feminine given name, a variant of Elisabeth.

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List of authors by name: B

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

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List of biographers

Biographers are authors who write an account of another person's life, while autobiographers are authors who write their own biography.

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List of biographical films

This is a list of biographical films.

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List of book-based war films (1775–1898 wars)

This is list of war films based on books for wars that took place between 1775 and 1898.

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List of books about Tintin

This is a list of books about The Adventures of Tintin, the comics series by Belgian cartoonist Hergé.

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List of books banned by governments

Banned books are books or other printed works such as essays or plays which are prohibited by law or to which free access is not permitted by other means.

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List of bow tie wearers

This is a list of notable bow tie wearers, real and fictional; notable people for whom the wearing of a bow tie (when not in formal dress) is also a notable characteristic.

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List of burials at Père Lachaise Cemetery

No description.

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List of Catholic authors

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

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List of Charvet customers

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

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List of compositions by Darius Milhaud

Below is a list of compositions by Darius Milhaud sorted by category.

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List of compositions by Dmitri Shostakovich

This is a list of compositions by Dmitri Shostakovich.

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List of compositions by Ernest Chausson

This is a list of compositions by Ernest Chausson.

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List of compositions by Eugène Bozza

Eugène Bozza was a French composer.

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List of compositions by Jean Françaix

Below is a sortable list of compositions by Jean Françaix.

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List of craters on Mercury

This is a list of named craters on Mercury, the innermost planet of the Solar System (for other features, see list of geological features on Mercury).

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List of cultural icons of France

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

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List of Desert Island Discs episodes (1951–60)

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

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List of Desert Island Discs episodes (1991–2000)

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

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List of Desert Island Discs episodes (2001–10)

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

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List of East German films

This is a list, in year order, of the most notable films produced in the Soviet Occupation Zone of Germany and the socialist German Democratic Republic (GDR, East Germany) from 1945 until German Reunification in October 1990.

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List of eponyms (A–K)

An eponym is a person (real or fictitious) from whom something is said to take its name.

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List of fictional literature featuring opera

This is a list of literary fiction which feature opera in the plot.

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List of French films of 1920

A list of films produced in France in 1920.

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List of French novelists

This is a list of novelists from France.

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List of French people

French people of note include.

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List of French playwrights

This is an incomplete list of playwrights from France in chronological order, according to date of birth.

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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 kingdoms and royal dynasties

Monarchism is a movement that supports the monarchy as a form of government.

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List of knitters in literature

Jane Fairfax and Mrs.

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List of La Comédie humaine characters

The following is a list of characters from La Comédie humaine a collection of 95 loosely connected novels satirically detailing the life and times of French society in the period after the fall of Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821)—namely the period of the Restoration (1815–1830) and the July Monarchy (1830–1848).

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List of Latin phrases (T)

Additional references.

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List of LGBT writers

This list of LGBT writers includes writers who are lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender or otherwise non-heterosexual who have written about LGBT themes, elements or about LGBT issues (such as Jonny Frank).

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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 museums in Paris

There are around 130 museums in Paris, France within city limits.

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List of Musical Works by Faye-Ellen Silverman

The following is a list of Musical Works by Faye-Ellen Silverman.

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List of names in A Biographical Dictionary of Modern Rationalists

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

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List of Occitans

This is a non-exhaustive list of people who were born in the Occitania historical territory (although it is difficult to know the exact boundaries), or notable people from other regions of France or Europe with Occitan roots, or notable people from other regions of France or Europe who have other significant links with the historical region.

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List of operas by Alfano

This is a list of the operas of the Italian composer Franco Alfano (1876–1954).

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List of Penguin Classics

This is a list of books published as Penguin Classics.

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List of people on the postage stamps of Romania

The following is a list of people on the postage stamps of Romania.

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List of playwrights

This is a list of notable playwrights.

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List of playwrights by nationality and year of birth

Dramatists listed in chronological order by country and language: See also: List of playwrights; List of early-modern women playwrights; Lists of writers.

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List of productions directed by André Antoine

This article offers a list of productions directed by André Antoine.

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List of romantics

List of romantics.

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List of rose cultivars named after people

Among the individuals or fictional characters who have had rose cultivars named after them are the following.

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List of Simon & Schuster authors

List of authors published by Simon & Schuster and its various imprints including Atria Publishing Group, Doubleday, Free Press, Scribner, Simon & Schuster for Young Readers, Touchstone and Washington Square Press.

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List of succubi in fiction

A succubus (plural succubi) is a type of demoness referenced in various works of fiction.

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List of tuberculosis cases

This is a list of famous people and celebrities who had, or are believed to have had tuberculosis, also known as consumption.

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List of University of Paris people

This is an incomplete list of notable people affiliated with the University of Paris, often called "La Sorbonne".

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List of women writers

This is a list of notable women writers.

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List of works by Alexandre Falguière

This is a list of some of the works by the French artist Alexandre Falguière.

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List of works by W. Somerset Maugham

W. Somerset Maugham (1874 – 1965) was a British playwright, novelist and short story writer.

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List of years in literature

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

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Litblog

A litblog (alternate: lit-blog or literary blog) is a blog that focuses primarily on the topic of literature.

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Literary realism

Literary realism is part of the realist art movement beginning with mid nineteenth-century French literature (Stendhal), and Russian literature (Alexander Pushkin) and extending to the late nineteenth and early twentieth century.

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Locked-room mystery

The locked-room mystery is a subgenre of detective fiction in which a crime — almost always murder — is committed in circumstances under which it was seemingly impossible for the perpetrator to commit the crime or evade detection in the course of getting in and out of the crime scene.

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Lolita

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

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Louis Édouard Fournier

Louis Édouard Fournier (12 December 1857 – 10 April 1917) was a French painter and illustrator.

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Louis Lambert (novel)

Louis Lambert is an 1832 novel by French novelist and playwright Honoré de Balzac (1799–1850), included in the Études philosophiques section of his novel sequence La Comédie humaine.

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Louis Lurine

Louis Lurine (1812 – 30 November 1860) was a 19th-century French homme de lettres, journalist, playwright, novelist and historian.

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Louis Philippe style

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

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Louis XI of France

Louis XI (3 July 1423 – 30 August 1483), called "Louis the Prudent" (le Prudent), was a monarch of the House of Valois who ruled as King of France from 1461 to 1483.

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Louis-Camille d'Olivier

Louis-Camille d'Olivier (1827–1870) was a French photographer.

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Louis-François L'Héritier

Louis-François L'Héritier, also known under the name L'Héritier de l'Ain (30 May 1788 – 14 July 1852) was a 19th-century French playwright, essayist, novelist and journalist.

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Love (1927 German film)

Love (German: Liebe) is a 1927 German silent film directed by Paul Czinner and starring Elisabeth Bergner, Agnes Esterhazy and Elza Temary.

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Lucia Demetrius

Lucia Aurora Demetrius (February 16, 1910–July 29, 1992) was a Romanian novelist, poet, playwright and translator.

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Lucien Arnaud

Lucien Arnaud (26 August 1897 - 11 December 1975) was a French film and stage actor.

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Lucien Métivet

Lucien Marie François Métivet was a French poster artist, cartoonist, illustrator, and author who achieved notoriety during the Belle Epoque.

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Ludovic Dauș

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

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Ludwig Hohl

Ludwig Hohl (9 April 1904 – 3 November 1980) was a Swiss author writing in the German language.

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Luiz Ruffato

Luiz Fernando Ruffato de Souza (Cataguases, Brazil, February 1961) is a contemporary Brazilian writer.

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Lycée Charlemagne

The Lycée Charlemagne is located in the Marais quarter of the 4th arrondissement of Paris, the capital city of France.

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M. and Mme. Joseph Prudhomme

Monsieur and Madame Prudhomme were a pair of French caricature characters of the 19th century, created by Henry Monnier.

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Madame Bovary

Madame Bovary (full French title: Madame Bovary. Mœurs de province) is the debut novel of French writer Gustave Flaubert, published in 1856.

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Madelonnettes Convent

The Madelonnettes Convent (couvent des Madelonnettes) was a Paris convent in the 3rd arrondissement of Paris.

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Mademoiselle Judith

Julie Bernat (30 January 1827-27 October 1912), known by her stage name of Mademoiselle Judith, was a French female actor.

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Mahmoud Etemadzadeh

Mahmoud Etemadzadeh AKA Behazin, (محمود اعتمادزاده؛ م.ا. به‌آذین; January 14, 1915– 2006 in Rasht, Iran) was a writer and literary translator.

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Maison de Balzac

The Maison de Balzac is a writer's house museum in the former residence of French novelist Honoré de Balzac (1799–1850).

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Maison dorée (Paris)

The Maison Dorée (the "Gilded House") was a famous restaurant located at 20 Boulevard des Italiens, Paris.

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Majorat

Majorat is a French term for an arrangement giving the right of succession to a specific parcel of property associated with a title of nobility to a single heir, based on male primogeniture.

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Malvern, Worcestershire

Malvern is a spa town and civil parish in Worcestershire, England.

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Mammonart

Mammonart.

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Man Without a Name (1932 film)

Man Without a Name (German: Mensch ohne Namen) is a 1932 German drama film directed by Gustav Ucicky and starring Werner Krauss, Helene Thimig and Mathias Wieman.

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Mao Dun

Mao Dun (4 July 1896 – 27 March 1981) was the pen name of Shen Dehong (Shen Yanbing), a 20th-century Chinese novelist, cultural critic, and the Minister of Culture of People's Republic of China (1949–65).

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Marcel Bouteron

Marcel Bouteron (3 August 1877, in Le Mans – 9 July 1962, in Vence) was a French librarian and literary historian, who specialized in Balzac studies.

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Marcel Brion

Marcel Brion (21 November 1895 – 23 October 1984) was a French essayist, literary critic, novelist, and historian.

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Marcel L'Herbier

Marcel L'Herbier (23 April 1888 – 26 November 1979) was a French filmmaker who achieved prominence as an avant-garde theorist and imaginative practitioner with a series of silent films in the 1920s.

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Marcel Schwob

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

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Marceline Desbordes-Valmore

Marceline Desbordes-Valmore (20 June 1786 – 23 July 1859) was a French poet and novelist.

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Margarita Luti

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

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Maria Du Fresnay

Marie Du Fresnay, aka Maria du Fresnay, née Daminois, was a French writer, born in 1809 and deceased in 1892.

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Marie de' Medici

Marie de' Medici (Marie de Médicis, Maria de' Medici; 26 April 1575 – 3 July 1642) was Queen of France as the second wife of King Henry IV of France, of the House of Bourbon.

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Marie Dorval

Marie Dorval (6 January 1798, Lorient, Morbihan – 20 May 1849) was a French actress.

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Marie Laforêt

Marie Laforêt (born Maïténa Marie Brigitte Doumenach, on 5 October 1939 in Soulac-sur-Mer, Gironde) is a French singer and actress.

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Marie-Noémi Cadiot

Marie-Noémi Cadiot (12 December 1828 or 1832, Paris – 10 April 1888, Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat) was a French sculptor and writer of the 19th century.

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Marilyn Imrie

Marilyn Elsie Imrie (born 20 November 1947) is a Scottish radio drama director and producer.

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Mario Puzo

Mario Gianluigi Puzo (October 15, 1920 – July 2, 1999) was an American author, screenwriter and journalist.

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Mario Soldati

Mario Soldati (17 November 1906 – 19 June 1999) was an Italian writer and film director.

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Marjan Rožanc

Marjan Rožanc (21 November 1930 – 18 September 1990) was a Slovenian author, playwright, and journalist.

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Marjorie Pickthall

Marjorie Lowry Christie Pickthall (14 September 1883, Gunnersbury, London – 22 April 1922, Vancouver), was a Canadian writer who was born in England but lived in Canada from the time she was seven.

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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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Mary Hanford Ford

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

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Mary Marquet

Mary Marquet (14 April 1895 – 29 August 1979), born Micheline Marguerite Delphine Marquet, was a French stage and film actress.

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Mary of Egypt

Mary of Egypt (Ϯⲁⲅⲓⲁ Ⲙⲁⲣⲓⲁ Ⲛⲣⲉⲙⲛ̀ⲭⲏⲙⲓ; c. 344 – c. 421) is revered as the patron saint of penitents, most particularly in the Catholic Church, Eastern Orthodox Churches, and Oriental Orthodox Churches.

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Massimilla Doni

Massimilla Doni is a short story by Honoré de Balzac.

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Masturbation

Masturbation is the sexual stimulation of one's own genitals for sexual arousal or other sexual pleasure, usually to the point of orgasm.

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Mateiu Caragiale

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

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Maurice Bardèche

Maurice Bardèche (1 October 1907 – 30 July 1998) was a French essayist, literary and art critic, journalist, and one of the leading exponents of neo-fascism in post–World War II Europe.

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May 20

No description.

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Maya Angelou

Maya Angelou (born Marguerite Annie Johnson; April 4, 1928 – May 28, 2014) was an American poet, singer, memoirist, and civil rights activist.

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Mémoires de deux jeunes mariées

Mémoires de deux jeunes mariées (Letters of Two Brides) is an epistolary novel by the French writer Honoré de Balzac.

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Meanings of minor planet names: 155001–156000

270 | 155270 Dianawheeler || || Diana E. Wheeler (born 1950) made fundamental contributions to understanding the physiological basis of caste determination in social insects.

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Meanings of minor planet names: 18001–19000

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

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Mehdi Sojoudi Moghaddam

Mehdi Sojoudi Moghaddam (born January 15, 1962) is an Iranian writer, literary translator and scholar.

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Mehmet Murat Somer

Mehmet Murat Somer (born 1959) is a Turkish author of crime fiction best known for his Hop-Çiki-Yaya series set in Istanbul and featuring an unnamed transvestite amateur detective.

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Melmoth the Wanderer

Melmoth the Wanderer is an 1820 Gothic novel by Irish playwright, novelist and clergyman Charles Maturin.

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Mercadet

Mercadet or Le faiseur is a 1936 French comedy film directed by André Hugon and starring Paul Pauley, Janine Borelli and Philippe Janvier.

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Mervyn Peake

Mervyn Laurence Peake (9 July 1911 – 17 November 1968) was an English writer, artist, poet, and illustrator.

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Michael Lonsdale

Michael Edward Lonsdale (born May 24, 1931), sometimes billed as Michel Lonsdale, is a French actor who has appeared in over 180 films and television shows.

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Michael Tolliver Lives

Michael Tolliver Lives (2007) is the seventh book in the Tales of the City series by San Francisco novelist Armistead Maupin.

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Michel Houellebecq

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

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Michel Lévy

Michel Lévy (1821–1875) was the founder of the Michel Lévy Frères publishing house.

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Michel Lévy Frères

Michel Lévy Frères is a Parisian publishing house founded in 1836 by Michel Lévy with his brothers Nathan and Kalmus.

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Michelangelo Caetani

This article contains material translated from the Italian Wikipedia's version of this page. Michelangelo Caetani, Duke of Sermoneta and Prince of Teano (Rome, 20 March 1804 – Rome, 12 December 1882) was a notable political figure and an Italian scholar with great interest in literature, sculpture and goldsmith.

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Miguel de Cervantes

Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra (29 September 1547 (assumed)23 April 1616 NS) was a Spanish writer who is widely regarded as the greatest writer in the Spanish language and one of the world's pre-eminent novelists.

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Mihail Celarianu

Mihail Celarianu (August 1, 1893 – 1985) was a Romanian poet and novelist.

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Mihail Sadoveanu

Mihail Sadoveanu (occasionally referred to as Mihai Sadoveanu; November 5, 1880 – October 19, 1961) was a Romanian novelist, short story writer, journalist and political figure, who twice served as acting head of state for the communist republic (1947–1948 and 1958).

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Mike Murphy (trainer and coach)

Michael Charles "Mike" Murphy (February 26, 1860 – June 4, 1913) was an athletic trainer and coach at Yale University (1887–1889, 1892–1896, 1901–1905), Detroit Athletic Club (1889–1892), University of Michigan (1891), Villanova University (1894), University of Pennsylvania (1896–1901, 1905–1913), and the New York Athletic Club (1890–1900).

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Mikhail Lifshitz

Mikhail Aleksandrovich Lifshitz (Михаи́л Алекса́ндрович Ли́фшиц; July 23, 1905, in Melitopol, Tavria (Crimea) – September 28, 1983, in Moscow) was a Soviet Marxian literary critic and philosopher of art who had a long and controversial career in the former Soviet Union.

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Mikhail Ovsyannikov

Mikhail Fedotovich Ovsyannikov (Михаи́л Федо́тович Овся́нников; 21 November 191511 August 1987) was a Soviet philosopher and academic who concentrated on in-depth study of Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel.

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Milan Crnković

Milan Crnković (February 15, 1925 – 1998) was a Croatian children's literature professor and critic.

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Miller v. California

Miller v. California, 413 U.S. 15 (1973),.

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Milovan Glišić

Milovan Glišić (6 January 1847 – 20 January 1908) was a Serbian writer, dramatist, translator, and literary theorist.

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Mimesis: The Representation of Reality in Western Literature

Mimesis: The Representation of Reality in Western Literature (Mimesis: Dargestellte Wirklichkeit in der abendländischen Literatur) is a book of literary criticism by Erich Auerbach, and his most well known work.

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Mina Urgan

Mina Urgan Irgat (14 May 1916 – 15 June 2000) was a Turkish academic, translator, author and socialist politician.

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Mira Trailović

Mira Trailović (Serbian Cyrillic: Мира Траиловић; née Milićević; 22 January 1924 – 7 August 1989) was a Serbian dramaturg and one of the most distinguished theatre directors in the history of Serbian and Yugoslav theatre.

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Mircea Eliade

Mircea Eliade (– April 22, 1986) was a Romanian historian of religion, fiction writer, philosopher, and professor at the University of Chicago.

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Miser

A miser is a person who is reluctant to spend, sometimes to the point of forgoing even basic comforts and some necessities, in order to hoard money or other possessions.

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Model Shop (film)

Model Shop is a 1969 American film by French writer-director Jacques Demy starring Gary Lockwood, Alexandra Hay, and Anouk Aimée, featuring a guest appearance by Spirit who recorded the soundtrack.

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Modern sculpture

Modern sculpture is generally considered to have begun with the work of Auguste Rodin, who is seen as the progenitor of modern sculpture.

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Modeste Mignon

Modeste Mignon is a novel by the French writer Honoré de Balzac.

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Mondoperaio

Mondoperaio is a cultural-political journal, born on 4 December 1948 as Mondo Operaio, on the initiative of the former Italian Minister of Foreign Affairs and Socialist leader Pietro Nenni.

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Monomania

In 19th-century psychiatry, monomania (from Greek monos, one, and mania, meaning "madness" or "frenzy") was a form of partial insanity conceived as single pathological preoccupation in an otherwise sound mind.

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Monsieur Lecoq

Monsieur Lecoq is the creation of Émile Gaboriau, a 19th-century French writer and journalist.

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Monument to Balzac

Monument to Balzac is a sculpture by Auguste Rodin in memory of the French novelist Honoré Balzac.

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Morgan Library & Museum

The Morgan Library & Museum – formerly the Pierpont Morgan Library – is a museum and research library located at 225 Madison Avenue at East 36th Street in the Murray Hill neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City.

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Musée des familles

Musée des familles ("Museum of Families") was an illustrated French literary magazine that was published in Paris from 1833 to 1900.

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Musée du Vin

The Musée du Vin (in Wine Museum of Paris) is a cultural venue in the 16th arrondissement located at 5, square Charles Dickens, Paris, France next to the Trocadéro and the Eiffel Tower.

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Musée Maurice Dufresne

The Museum of Maurice Dufresne (in French: Musée Maurice-Dufresne) is a technological history museum located in the mill at Marnay, near the Château of Azay-le-Rideau, France.

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Musée Picasso

The Musée Picasso is an art gallery located in the Hôtel Salé in rue de Thorigny, in the Marais district of Paris, France, dedicated to the work of the Spanish artist Pablo Picasso (1881–1973).

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My Pleasure Is Your Pleasure

My Pleasure Is Your Pleasure (Il tuo piacere è il mio) is a 1973 commedia sexy all'italiana anthology film written and directed by the cinematographer, at his writing and directorial debut.

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Nadar

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

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Names for the human species

The common name of the human species in English is historically man (from Germanic), often replaced by the Latinate human (since the 16th century).

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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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Napoleonic Wars in fiction

The Napoleonic Wars were a defining event of the early 19th century, and inspired many works of fiction, from then until the present day.

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Narcís Oller

Narcís Oller i Moragas (10 August 1846 in Valls – 26 July 1930 in Barcelona) was a Catalan writer, most noted for the novels La papallona (The Butterfly) which appeared with a foreword by Émile Zola in the French translation; his most well-known work L'Escanyapobres (The Usurer); and La febre d'or (Gold Fever) which is set in Barcelona during the period of promoterism.

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Natan Rybak

Natan Rybak (Рибак, Натан, 3 January 1913 – 11 September 1978) Ukrainian poet and socialist-realist writer of Jewish origin.

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Nausea (novel)

Nausea (La Nausée) is a philosophical novel by the existentialist philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre, published in 1938.

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Neuchâtel

Neuchâtel, or Neuchatel; (neu(f) "new" and chatel "castle" (château); Neuenburg; Neuchâtel; Neuchâtel or Neufchâtel)The city was also called Neuchâtel-outre-Joux (Neuchâtel beyond Joux) to distinguish it from another Neuchâtel in Burgundy, now Neuchâtel-Urtière.

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Neuilly-sur-Marne

Neuilly-sur-Marne is a commune in the eastern suburbs of Paris, France.

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New Directions Publishing

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

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New York Review Books

New York Review Books (NYRB) is the publishing house of The New York Review of Books.

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Night Is Darkest

Night Is Darkest is a novel by the French writer Georges Bernanos, published posthumously in 1950.

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Nikolai Pavlov (writer)

Nikolai Filippovich Pavlov (Николай Филиппович Павлов, 19 September 1803, — 10 April 1864) was a Russian writer, dramatist, translator, publisher and editor.

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Ninasi

Ninasi is a village in Mustvee Parish, Jõgeva County in northeastern Estonia.

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Noblesse oblige

Noblesse oblige is a French expression used in English.

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Noel Gerson

Noel Bertram Gerson (1913-1988) was an American author who wrote 325 books, including several best sellers, among them two screenplay novelizations penned under the pseudonym Samuel Edwards, The Naked Maja, and 55 Days at Peking.

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Nohant-en-Graçay

Nohant-en-Graçay is a commune in the Cher department in the Centre-Val de Loire region of France.

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Nohant-Vic

Nohant-Vic is a commune in the Indre department in central France.

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Norbert-Bertrand Barbe

Norbert-Bertrand Barbe is a French art historian, semiologist, artist and writer.

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Norman Cameron (poet)

Norman Cameron (1905–1953) was a Scottish poet, distantly related to Thomas Babington, Lord Macaulay who, between the two world wars, associated on Majorca with Robert Graves and Laura Riding.

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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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Notorious Woman

Notorious Woman was a 1974 BBC television serial based on the life of the French author George Sand.

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Novel of manners

The French novelist Honoré de Balzac was a founder of literary realism, of which the novel of manners is a subgenre. A novel of manners is work of fiction that re-creates a social world, conveying with finely detailed observation the customs, values, and mores of a highly developed and complex society.

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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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Nucingen House

Nucingen House (French: La maison Nucingen) is a 2008 film directed by Raúl Ruiz.

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Odette de Champdivers

Odette de Champdivers (also known as Oudine or Odinette; c. 1390 - c. 1425) was the chief mistress of Charles VI of France (the Mad).

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Odysseus' scar (Auerbach)

"Odysseus' Scar" is the first chapter of Mimesis: The Representation of Reality in Western Literature, a collection of essays by German-Jewish philologist Erich Auerbach charting out the development of representations of reality in literature.

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Old Maidism Versus Marriage

Old Maidism Versus Marriage is a short story by Susan Petigru King from her collection (New York: Appleton, 1853).

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Olli Ungvere

Olli Ungvere (17 June 1906 - 12 December 1991) was an Estonian stage and film actress and singer whose career spanned more than sixty years on the stages of most of Estonia's largest theaters.

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Olympe Pélissier

Olympe Pélissier (1799-1878) was a French artists' model and the second wife of the Italian composer Gioachino Rossini.

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Omertà (novel)

Omertà is a novel by Mario Puzo, published posthumously in 2000.

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Oreste Cortazzo

Oreste Cortazzo (1836, Rome - 1910/12) was an Italian-born French painter, graphic artist and illustrator.

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Orlando Williams Wight

Orlando Williams Wight (February 19, 1824 – October 19, 1888) was an American physician and translator.

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Orvietan

Orvietan or orviétan was a medical concoction popular during the 17th and 18th centuries.

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Oton Župančič

Oton Župančič (January 23, 1878 – June 11, 1949, pseudonym Gojko) was a Slovene poet, translator and playwright.

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Ouriel Zohar

Ouriel Zohar (born 1952), is an Israeli and French theater director, playwright, poet and translator from French to Hebrew.

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Out 1

Out 1, also referred to as Out 1: Noli Me Tangere, is a 1971 film directed by Jacques Rivette.

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Oviri

Oviri (Tahitian for savage or wild) is an 1894 ceramic sculpture by the French artist Paul Gauguin.

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Pac family

Pacowie (Pacowie, Pacai, Па́цы) was one of the most influential noble families in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania during the era of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.

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Panalphabetic window

A panalphabetic window is a stretch of text that contains all the letters of the alphabet in order.

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Panama Papers case

The Panama Papers case (officially titled Imran Ahmed Khan Niazi v. Mian Muhammad Nawaz Sharif), or the Panamagate case, was a landmark decision by the Supreme Court of Pakistan that disqualified incumbent Prime Minister of Pakistan Nawaz Sharif from holding public office.

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Paolo Brera

Paolo Alberto Brera (born 16 September 1949) is an Italian novelist and journalist.

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Paradis Latin

The Paradis Latin is a theater at number 28, rue du Cardinal Lemoine, in the Latin Quarter of Paris, in the fifth arrondissement, near Notre-Dame, the Panthéon, and the Tour d'Argent restaurant.

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Paris

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

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Paris at Midnight

Paris at Midnight is a surviving 1926 silent film drama starring Jetta Goudal and Lionel Barrymore and was directed by E. Mason Hopper.

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Paris during the Bourbon Restoration

During the Restoration of the Bourbon monarchy (1815–1830) that followed the downfall of Napoleon, Paris was ruled by a royal government which tried to reverse many of the changes made to the city during the French Revolution.

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Paris during the Second Empire

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

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Paris in the Belle Époque

Paris in the Belle Époque was a period in the history of the city between the years 1871 to 1914, from the beginning of the Third French Republic until the First World War.

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Paris in the Twentieth Century

Paris in the Twentieth Century (Paris au XXe siècle) is a science fiction novel by Jules Verne.

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Paris under Louis-Philippe

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

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Park Chan-wook

Park Chan-wook (born August 23, 1963) is a South Korean film director, screenwriter, producer, and former film critic.

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Passion in the Desert

Passion in the Desert, or Simoom: A Passion in the Desert, is a 1998 film from director Lavinia Currier based on the short story "A Passion in the Desert" by Honoré de Balzac.

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Passy

Passy is an area of Paris, France, located in the 16th arrondissement, on the Right Bank.

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Passy, Bridges of Paris

Passy, Bridges of Paris, also called Les ponts de Paris (Passy), or Paysage à Passy, is a painting created in 1912 by the French artist, theorist and writer Albert Gleizes.

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Past and Present (paintings)

Past and Present is the title usually given to the series of three oil paintings made by Augustus Egg in 1858, which are designed to be exhibited together as a triptych.

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Paul Chenavard

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

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Paul et Virginie

Paul et Virginie (or Paul and Virginia) is a novel by Jacques-Henri Bernardin de Saint-Pierre, first published in 1788.

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Paul Faulquemont

Pierre-Charles Lamarle also known as Paul Faulquemont or Paul de Faulquemont (Metz, 14 October 1805 (22 vendémiaire an XIV – 19th arrondissement of Paris, 15 Decembre 1872) was a 19th-century French playwright and journalist.

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Paul Gavarni

Paul Gavarni was the nom de plume of Sulpice Guillaume Chevalier (13 January 1804, Paris – 24 November 1866), a French illustrator, born in Paris.

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Paul Georgescu

Paul Georgescu (November 7, 1923 – October 15, 1989) was a Romanian literary critic, journalist, fiction writer and communist political figure.

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Paul Milliet

Paul Milliet (14 February 1848 - 21 November 1924) was a French playwright and librettist of the Parisian Belle Époque.

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Paul, 6th duc de Noailles

Paul de Noailles, 6th Duke of Noailles (4 January 1802 – 29 May 1885) was a French nobleman and historian.

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Paulette Poujol-Oriol

Paulette Poujol-Oriol (12 May 1926 – 11 March 2011) was a Haitian educator, actress, dramaturge, feminist and writer.

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Paulin Gagne

Étienne-Paulin Gagne, known as Paulin Gagne (June 8, 1808 – August 1876) was a French poet, essayist, lawyer, politician, inventor, and eccentric whose best known poem, The Woman-Messiah, is among the longest poems in French, or any language.

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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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Père Lachaise Cemetery

Cemetery (Cimetière du Père-Lachaise,; formerly,, "Cemetery of the East") is the largest cemetery in the city of Paris, although there are larger cemeteries in the city's suburbs.

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Păstorel Teodoreanu

Păstorel Teodoreanu, or just Păstorel (born Alexandru Osvald (Al. O.) Teodoreanu; July 30, 1894 – March 17, 1964), was a Romanian humorist, poet and gastronome, the brother of novelist Ionel Teodoreanu and brother in law of writer Ștefana Velisar Teodoreanu.

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Pecunia non olet

Pecunia non olet ("money does not stink") is a Latin saying.

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Penguin 60s

To celebrate its 60th anniversary circa 1995, Penguin Books released three boxed sets of "Penguin 60s".

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Penguin Red Classics

Penguin Red Classics is a series of novels published by Penguin Books in the UK.

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Pereira Maintains

Pereira Maintains (Sostiene Pereira) is a 1994 novel by the Italian writer Antonio Tabucchi.

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Persian literature in Western culture

The influence of Persian literature in Western culture is historically significant.

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Peter Lenk

Peter Lenk (born 6 June 1947, in Nuremberg) is a German sculptor based in Bodman-Ludwigshafen on Lake Constance, known for the controversial sexual content of his public art.

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Peter von Bagh

Kari Peter Conrad von Bagh (29 August 1943 – 17 September 2014) was a Finnish film historian and director.

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Peter Woodthorpe

Peter Woodthorpe (25 September 1931 – 12 August 2004) was an English film, television and voice actor who supplied the voice of Gollum in the 1978 Bakshi version of ''The Lord of the Rings'' and BBC's 1981 radio serial.

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Philibert Audebrand

Philibert Audebrand (31 December 1815 - 10 September 1906) was a French writer, journalist, author of medieval chronicles, satirical verses and historical novels.

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Philippe Jullian

Philippe Jullian (real name: Philippe Simounet; 11 July 1919 – 25 September 1977) was a French illustrator, art historian, biographer, aesthete, novelist and dandy.

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Philippe-Claude de Montboissier de Beaufort

Noël-Philippe-Claude de Montboissier de Beaufort, marquis de Canillac (16 February 1695-31 September 1765), was an 18th-century French soldier, diplomat and peer of France.

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Philosophy of psychedelics

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

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Physiognomy

Physiognomy (from the Greek φύσις physis meaning "nature" and gnomon meaning "judge" or "interpreter") is the assessment of character or personality from a person's outer appearance, especially the face often linked to racial and sexual stereotyping.

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Pierre Abraham

Pierre Abraham, (1 March 1892 – 20 May 1974 in Paris) was a French journalist, essayist and military figure in the French Air Force during the world wars.

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Pierre Berton (playwright)

Pierre Berton, (6 March 1842 – 1912) was a French playwright and comedian.

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Pierre Citron

Pierre Citron (19 April 1919 – 10 November 2010) was a French musicologist and university professor, a specialist of novelist Jean Giono.

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Pierre François Lacenaire

Pierre François Lacenaire (20 December 1803 – 9 January 1836) was a French murderer and would-be poet.

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Pierre Grassou

Pierre Grassou is an 1839 short story by French author Honoré de Balzac (1799-1850) and included in the Scènes de la vie privee section of his novel sequence La Comédie humaine.

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Pierre-Georges Jeanniot

Pierre-Georges Jeanniot (1848–1934) was a Swiss-French Impressionist painter, designer, watercolorist, and engraver who was born in Geneva, Switzerland, and died in France.

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Pierre-Gustave Staal

Pierre-Gustave-Eugène Staal (2 September 1817 in Vertus – 19 October 1882 in Ivry), was a French artist, Lithographer, Illustrator and draughtsman.

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Pierre-Jules Hetzel

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

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Pierre-Marie-Charles de Bernard du Grail de la Villette

Pierre-Marie-Charles de Bernard du Grail de la Villette (24 February 1804 – 6 March 1850), better known simply as Charles de Bernard, was a French writer.

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Plays with incidental music

This is an incomplete list of plays for which incidental music has been written.

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Plunkett Lake Press

Plunkett Lake Press is a publishing company based in Lexington, Massachusetts.

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Plympton

Plympton, or Plympton Maurice or Plympton St Maurice or Plympton St Mary or Plympton Erle, in south-western Devon, is a populous, north-eastern suburb of the city of Plymouth of which it officially became part, along with Plymstock, in 1967.

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Pohrebyshche

Pohrebyshche is a small city in Vinnytsia Oblast, Ukraine.

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Pont de Sully

The Pont de Sully (or Pont Sully) is a bridge across the River Seine in Paris, France.

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Pont-de-Ruan

Pont-de-Ruan is a commune in the Indre-et-Loire department in central France.

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Portrait (literature)

The portrait is a literary genre derived from pictorial portraiture.

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Postcolonial literature

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

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Pour un nouveau roman

Pour un nouveau roman (translated as For a New Novel (US), Towards a New Novel (UK)) is a 1963 collection of theoretical writings by French author Alain Robbe-Grillet.

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Prix du Brigadier

The Prix du Brigadier, established in 1960 by the (ART), is an award given to a personality from the world of theater.

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Procopio Cutò

Procopio Cutò, or Francesco Procopio Cutò or Francesco Procopio dei Coltelli (9 February 1651 - 10 February 1727) was an Italian chef from Sicily.

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Professional mourning

Most of the people hired to perform the act of professional mourning were women.

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Profira Sadoveanu

Profira Sadoveanu (May 21, 1906–September 12, 2003) was a Romanian prose writer and poet.

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Proletarian literature

Proletarian literature refers here to the literature created by working-class writers mainly for the class-conscious proletariat.

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Prosper Mérimée

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

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Prostitution in France

Prostitution in France (the exchange of sexual acts for money) was legal until April 2016, but several surrounding activities were illegal, like operating a brothel, living off the avails (pimping), and paying for sex with someone under the age of 18 (the age of consent for sex is 15).

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Pyotr Kozlovsky

Prince Pyotr Borisovich Kozlovsky (Пётр Бори́сович Козло́вский, December 1783 in Moscow – October 26, 1840 in Baden-Baden) was a Russian diplomat and a man of letters.

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Quai Voltaire

The Quai Voltaire is a street located in the 7th arrondissement of Paris.

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Quantum aesthetics

Quantum Aesthetics is a movement that was inaugurated by Gregorio Morales at the end of the 1990s with his work “El cadaver de Balzac” or Balzac's Corpse (1998).

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Queen of the Boulevards

Queen of the Boulevards (German: Glanz und Elend der Kurtisanen) is a 1927 German silent drama film directed by Manfred Noa and starring Paul Wegener, Andrée Lafayette and Werner Fuetterer.

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Rabe v. Washington

Rabe v. Washington, 405 U.S. 313 (1972), was a decision by the United States Supreme Court involving the application of obscenity laws and criminal procedure to the states.

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Ramdane Touhami

Ramdane Touhami (born 23 September 1974 in Montauban, France) is a French-Moroccan artist, fashion designer, product designer, DJ, business man and journalist.

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Realism (art movement)

Realism was an artistic movement that began in France in the 1850s, after the 1848 Revolution.

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Realism (arts)

Realism, sometimes called naturalism, in the arts is generally the attempt to represent subject matter truthfully, without artificiality and avoiding artistic conventions, or implausible, exotic, and supernatural elements.

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Realism in the Balance

"Realism in the Balance" is a 1938 essay by Georg Lukács (written while he lived in Soviet Russia and first published in a German literary journal) in which he defends the "traditional" realism of authors like Thomas Mann in the face of rising Modernist movements, such as Expressionism, Surrealism, and Naturalism.

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Reception history of Jane Austen

The reception history of Jane Austen follows a path from modest fame to wild popularity.

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René Boylesve

René Boylesve (14 April 1867 in La Haye-Descartes – 14 January 1926 in Paris), born René Marie Auguste Tardiveau, was a French writer and a literary critic.

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Rene Ben Sussan

Rene Ben Sussan (born 1895 in Salonika) was an illustrator, active from the 1920s to the 1960s.

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Revue et gazette musicale de Paris

The was a weekly musical review founded in 1827 by the Belgian musicologist, teacher and composer François-Joseph Fétis, then working as professor of counterpoint and fugue at the Conservatoire de Paris.

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Richard Gambier-Parry

Brigadier Sir Richard Gambier-Parry, (20 January 1894 – 19 June 1965) was a British military officer who served in both the army and the air force during World War I. He remained in military service post-war, but then entered into civilian life for more than a decade.

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Richard Hamilton (artist)

Richard William Hamilton CH (24 February 1922 – 13 September 2011) was an English painter and collage artist.

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Richard Oswald

Richard Oswald (5 November 1880 – 11 September 1963) was an Austrian director, producer, and screenwriter.

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Richelieus Stellung in der Geschichte der französischen Litteratur

Richelieus Stellung in der Geschichte der französischen Litteratur: eine litterarische und grammatische Untersuchung (Richelieu’s role in the history of French literature: a grammatical and literary analysis) is a book published in 1889 by Armin Rückoldt, German academic, and published in the same year in Jena.

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Rillettes

Rillettes are a preparation of meat similar to pâté.

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Rivalta di Torino

Rivalta di Torino is a comune (municipality) in the Metropolitan City of Turin in the Italian region Piedmont, located about 14 km southwest of Turin in the valley of the Sangone.

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Robert Cantwell

Robert Emmett Cantwell (January 31, 1908 – December 8, 1978), known as Robert Cantwell, was a novelist and critic.

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Robert Doisneau

Robert Doisneau (14 April 1912 – 1 April 1994) was a French photographer.

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Robert le diable

Robert le diable (Robert the Devil) is an opera in five acts composed by Giacomo Meyerbeer from a libretto written by Eugène Scribe and Germain Delavigne.

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Rocco Di Pietro

Rocco Di Pietro (born 1949) is composer, pianist, author, teacher, and habilitationist whose work crosses multiple disciplinary boundaries.

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Roderick Hudson

Roderick Hudson is a novel by Henry James.

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Rodin Museum

The Rodin Museum is an art museum located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, that contains the largest collection of sculptor Auguste Rodin's works outside Paris.

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Roger Karl

Roger Karl (29 April 1882 – 4 May 1984) was a French actor.

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Roland Barthes

Roland Gérard Barthes (12 November 1915 – 26 March 1980) was a French literary theorist, philosopher, linguist, critic, and semiotician.

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Romanticism

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

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Romanticism in Scotland

Romanticism in Scotland was an artistic, literary and intellectual movement that developed between the late eighteenth and the early nineteenth centuries.

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Rosa Schapire

Rosa Schapire (September 9, 1874 – February 1, 1954) was a Polish-born art historian who lived in Germany and England.

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Roth v. United States

Roth v. United States,, along with its companion case Alberts v. Christopher Sommer, was a landmark case before the United States Supreme Court which redefined the Constitutional test for determining what constitutes obscene material unprotected by the First Amendment.

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Rue de la Chaussée-d'Antin

This "quartier" of Paris got its name from the rue de la Chaussée-d'Antin in the 9th arrondissement of Paris.

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Rue de Seine

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

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Rue Nationale

The Rue Nationale is one of the oldest street and the busiest shopping street in the city of Tours.

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Ruggero Leoncavallo

Ruggero (or Ruggiero) Leoncavallo (23 April 18579 August 1919) was an Italian opera composer and librettist.

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Russell H. Greenan

Russell H. Greenan (born September 17, 1925) is an American author with an established readership in the U.S.A. and Europe, particularly France.

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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 Guimarães

Ruth Guimarães (1920–2014) was the first Afro-Brazilian author to gain a national audience and critical attention for her novels, short stories, and poetry.

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Rzewuski family

Rzewuski family (Rzewuscy) was an important Polish noble family (magnates) in the 17th century during the era of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.

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S/Z

S/Z, published in 1970, is Roland Barthes's structural analysis of "Sarrasine", the short story by Honoré de Balzac.

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Saint-Yves (1808–1871)

Saint-Yves (9 November 1808 – 23 July 1871) was the pen name of Édouard Déaddé, a 19th-century French playwright.

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Sainte-Pélagie Prison

Sainte-Pélagie was a prison in Paris, in active use from 1790 to 1899.

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Sam Crawford

Samuel Earl Crawford (April 18, 1880 – June 15, 1968), nicknamed "Wahoo Sam", was a Major League Baseball outfielder for the Cincinnati Reds and Detroit Tigers from 1899 to 1917.

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Sardinian literature

The literature of Sardinia is the literary production of Sardinian authors, as well as the literary production generally referring to Sardinia as argument, written in various languages.

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Sarrasine

Sarrasine is a novella written by Honoré de Balzac.

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Saumur

Saumur is a commune in the Maine-et-Loire department in western France.

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Sèvres

Sèvres is a commune in the southwestern suburbs of Paris, France.

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Séraphîta

Séraphîta is a French novel by Honoré de Balzac with themes of androgyny.

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School and university in literature

Educational settings as place and/or subject in fiction form the theme of this catalogue of titles and authors.

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Scientific romance

Scientific romance is an archaic term for the genre of fiction now commonly known as science fiction.

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Seara (newspaper)

Seara (meaning "The Evening") was a daily newspaper published in Bucharest, Romania, before and during World War I. Owned by politician Grigore Gheorghe Cantacuzino and, through most of its existence, managed by the controversial Alexandru Bogdan-Pitești, it was an unofficial and unorthodox tribune for the Conservative Party.

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Season (society)

The social season, or Season, has historically referred to the annual period when it is customary for members of a social elite of society to hold debutante balls, dinner parties and large charity events.

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See You Tomorrow

See You Tomorrow is a novel by Norwegian author Tore Renberg.

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Sentimental Education

Sentimental Education (French: L'Éducation sentimentale, 1869) is a novel by Gustave Flaubert.

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September 1966

The following events occurred in September 1966.

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Sergei Eisenstein

Sergei Mikhailovich Eisenstein (p; 11 February 1948) was a Soviet film director and film theorist, a pioneer in the theory and practice of montage.

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Servitude et grandeur militaires

Servitude et grandeur militaires is a book in three parts by Alfred de Vigny, published in 1835.

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Sexual Personae

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

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Short story

A short story is a piece of prose fiction that typically can be read in one sitting and focuses on a self-contained incident or series of linked incidents, with the intent of evoking a "single effect" or mood, however there are many exceptions to this.

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Sigmund Freud

Sigmund Freud (born Sigismund Schlomo Freud; 6 May 1856 – 23 September 1939) was an Austrian neurologist and the founder of psychoanalysis, a clinical method for treating psychopathology through dialogue between a patient and a psychoanalyst.

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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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Slave of Desire

Slave of Desire is a 1923 American silent drama film directed by George D. Baker and produced and distributed by Goldwyn Pictures.

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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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Socionics

Socionics, in psychology and sociology, is a theory of information processing and personality type, distinguished by its information model of the psyche (called "Model A") and a model of interpersonal relations.

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Soho Repertory Theatre

The Soho Repertory Theatre, known as Soho Rep,The official website's now use "Soho", with a lowercase h, as do most articles from the is an Off-Broadway theater company with a 73-seat space located at 46 Walker Street in the TriBeCa district of Manhattan, New York City.

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Spanish Realist literature

Spanish Realist literature is the literature written in Spain during the second half of the 19th century, following the Realist movement which predominated in Europe.

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Splendeurs et misères des courtisanes

Honoré de Balzac's Splendeurs et misères des courtisanes, translated either as The Splendors and Miseries of Courtesans or as A Harlot High and Low, was published in four parts from 1838-1847.

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Squaring the circle

Squaring the circle is a problem proposed by ancient geometers.

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Srpska književna zadruga

The '''Srpska književna zadruga''' (Serbian-Cyrillic: Српска књижевна задруга; English: Serbian Literary Cooperative) is Serbia's second oldest still existing publishing house after Matica srpska.

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St. Barbara's Church, Berdychiv

The Church of Saint Barbara, Berdychiv, usually known as St Barbara's Catholic Church, is an urban Catholic parish church in the City of Berdychiv, now in Ukraine and formerly part of the Russias.

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Stan Douglas

Stan Douglas (born October 11, 1960) is an artist based in Vancouver, British Columbia.

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Stanley Hollingsworth

Stanley Walker Hollingsworth (August 27, 1924, Berkeley, California – October 29, 2003, Rocklin, California) was an American composer and teacher.

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Stéphanie Félicité, comtesse de Genlis

Stéphanie Félicité du Crest de Saint-Aubin, Comtesse de Genlis (25 January 174631 December 1830), known as Madame de Genlis, was a French writer, harpist and educator,, Governess of the Children of France.

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Stefan Zweig

Stefan Zweig (28 November 1881 – 22 February 1942) was an Austrian novelist, playwright, journalist and biographer.

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Stendhal

Marie-Henri Beyle (23 January 1783 – 23 March 1842), better known by his pen name Stendhal, was a 19th-century French writer.

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Stephania Bell

Stephania Bell (born May 20, 1966) is a physical therapist who has become an author, as well as both on-air and online sports commentator at ESPN where she serves as an American football injury analyst.

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Stephen Vizinczey

Stephen Vizinczey, originally István Vizinczey (born 1933, in Káloz, Hungary), is an author and writer.

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Stereotypes of Jews in literature

Stereotypes of Jews in literature have evolved over the centuries.

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Stimulantia

Stimulantia is a 1967 Swedish anthology film directed by Hans Abramson, Hans Alfredson, Arne Arnbom, Tage Danielsson, Lars Görling, Ingmar Bergman, Jörn Donner, Gustaf Molander, and Vilgot Sjöman.

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Stolen Kisses

Stolen Kisses (Baisers volés) is a 1968 French romantic comedy-drama film directed by François Truffaut starring Jean-Pierre Léaud and Claude Jade.

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Svyatoslav Belza

Svyatoslav Igorevich Belza (Святосла́в И́горевич Бэ́лза; 26 April 1942 – 3 June 2014) was a Soviet Russian literary and musical scholar, critic and essayist, and a prominent TV personality who's launched and hosted several TV programs aimed at popularizing classical music, theatre, and ballet, including Music on Air and Masterpieces of the World Music Theatre.

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Sydney Forest

Sydney Forest is an American composer and musician.

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Sydor Rey

Sydor Rey born Izydor Reiss (6 September 1908 – 15 November 1979) was a Polish poet and novelist.

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Symbolist Manifesto

The Symbolist Manifesto (French: Le Symbolisme) was published on 18 September 1886Lucie-Smith, Edward. (1972) Symbolist Art.

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Tatari Oguz Effendi

Tatarî Oğuz Effendi (March 1831 – 19 May 1871) was an Ottoman educationist, literature teacher, translator, art collector and writer.

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Tauragė

Tauragė (see other names) is an industrial city in Lithuania, and the capital of Tauragė County.

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Tavel AOC

Tavel is a wine-growing Appellation d'Origine Contrôlée in the southern Rhône wine region of France, across the Rhône River from Châteauneuf-du-Pape AOC and just north of Avignon.

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Ten Novels and Their Authors

Ten Novels and Their Authors is a 1954 work of literary criticism by William Somerset Maugham.

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Théâtre Édouard VII

The Théâtre Édouard VII, also called théâtre Édouard VII – Sacha Guitry, is located in Paris between the Madeleine and the Opéra Garnier in the 9th arrondissement.

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Théâtre du Gymnase Marie Bell

The Théâtre du Gymnase or Théâtre du Gymnase Marie Bell, is a theatre in Paris, at 38, Boulevard Bonne-Nouvelle in the 10th arrondissement (métro: Bonne Nouvelle).

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Théâtre Historique

The Théâtre Historique, a former Parisian theatre located on the boulevard du Temple, was built in 1846 for the French novelist and dramatist Alexandre Dumas.

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Théâtre Récamier

The théâtre Récamier was a Parisian theatre located at 3 rue Récamier in the 7th arrondissement of Paris, inaugurated in 1908 and closed in 1978.

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Théophile Bra

Théophile François Marcel Bra (23 June 1797, Douai - 1863) was a French Romantic sculptor and exact contemporary of Eugène Delacroix.

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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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The 400 Blows

The 400 Blows (Les Quatre Cents Coups) is a 1959 French New Wave drama film, shot in DyaliScope and the debut by director François Truffaut; it stars Jean-Pierre Léaud, Albert Rémy, and Claire Maurier.

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The Adventures of Tintin

The Adventures of Tintin (Les Aventures de Tintin) is a series of 24 comic albums created by Belgian cartoonist Georges Remi, who wrote under the pen name Hergé.

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The Battle (Patrick Rimbaud novel)

The Battle (French: La Bataille) is a historical novel by the French author Patrick Rambaud that was first published in 1997.

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The Bulwark

The Bulwark is a 1946 (posthumous) novel by Theodore Dreiser.

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The Bureaucrats

The Bureaucrats can refer to.

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The Cask of Amontillado

"The Cask of Amontillado" (sometimes spelled "The Casque of Amontillado") is a short story by Edgar Allan Poe, first published in the November 1846 issue of Godey's Lady's Book.

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The Charterhouse of Parma

The Charterhouse of Parma (La Chartreuse de Parme) is a novel by Stendhal published in 1839.

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The City (novel)

The City (Місто) is an urban novel by Ukrainian writer Valerian Pidmohylny, published in 1928.

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The City of Dreaming Books

The City of Dreaming Books (original title: Die Stadt der Träumenden Bücher) is the fourth novel in the Zamonia series written and illustrated by German author Walter Moers, but the third to be translated into English by John Brownjohn.

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The Conquering Power

The Conquering Power (1921) is an American silent romantic drama directed by Rex Ingram and starring Rudolph Valentino, Alice Terry, and Ralph Lewis.

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The Count of Crow's Nest

The Count of Crow's Nest is a short story by Willa Cather.

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The Death of the Author

"The Death of the Author" (French: La mort de l'auteur) is a 1967 essay by the French literary critic and theorist Roland Barthes (1915–80).

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The Duchess of Langeais

The Duchess of Langeais is a 2007 French-Italian drama film directed by Jacques Rivette.

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The Duchess of Langeais (1942 film)

The Duchess of Langeais (French: La Duchesse de Langeais) is a 1942 French historical drama film directed by Jacques de Baroncelli and starring Edwige Feuillère, Pierre Richard-Willm and Aimé Clariond.

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The English Cat

The English Cat (in German, Die englische Katze) is an opera in two acts by Hans Werner Henze to an English libretto by Edward Bond, based on Les peines de coeur d'une chatte anglaise (The heartbreak of an English cat) by Honoré de Balzac.

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The Godfather

The Godfather is a 1972 American crime film directed by Francis Ford Coppola and produced by Albert S. Ruddy, based on Mario Puzo's best-selling novel of the same name.

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The Godfather (novel)

The Godfather is a crime novel written by American author Mario Puzo.

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The Greatest Frenchman

Le Plus Grand Français de tous les temps ("The Greatest Frenchman of all Time") was a France 2 show of early 2005, based on an original series of Great Britons on the BBC.

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The Hedgehog and the Fox

The Hedgehog and the Fox is an essay by philosopher Isaiah Berlin—one of his most popular essays with the general public—which was published as a book in 1953.

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The Hunchback of Notre-Dame

The Hunchback of Notre-Dame (Notre-Dame de Paris, "Our Lady of Paris") is a French Romantic/Gothic novel by Victor Hugo, published in 1831.

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The Letters of Vincent van Gogh

The Letters of Vincent van Gogh refers to a collection of 903 surviving letters written (820) or received (83) by Vincent van Gogh.

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The Life of Reilly

The Life of Reilly is a 2006 American film adaptation of actor Charles Nelson Reilly's one-man play Save It For the Stage: The Life of Reilly.

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The Lovable Cheat

The Lovable Cheat is a 1949 American comedy film directed by Richard Oswald and starring Charles Ruggles, Peggy Ann Garner and Richard Ney.

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The Market Place

The Market Place is a novel by American author Harold Frederic.

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The Masked Lover

The Masked Lover (Maskovaná milenka) is a 1940 Czechoslovak historical drama film directed by Otakar Vávra.

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The Music Man

The Music Man is a musical with book, music, and lyrics by Meredith Willson, based on a story by Willson and Franklin Lacey.

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The Music of Francis Poulenc

The Music of Francis Poulenc (1899–1963): A Catalogue, abbreviated FP, is a chronological catalogue of Francis Poulenc's works which was published by Carl B. Schmidt in 1995.

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The Mysteries of Paris

The Mysteries of Paris (Les Mystères de Paris) is a novel by the French writer Eugène Sue.

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The Narrow Waters

The Narrow Waters (Les Eaux étroites) is a 1976 essay collection by the French writer Julien Gracq.

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The Opportunists (1960 film)

The Opportunists (French: Les arrivistes, German: Trübe Wasser) is a 1960 French-East German drama film directed by Louis Daquin and starring Madeleine Robinson, Jean-Claude Pascal and Clara Gansard.

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The Prisoner (1949 film)

The Prisoner (German: Der Bagnosträfling) is a 1949 West German historical adventure film directed by Gustav Fröhlich and starring Paul Dahlke, Richard Häussler and Käthe Dorsch.

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The Quest of the Absolute

The Quest of the Absolute (French: La Recherche de l'absolu) is a novel by Honoré de Balzac.

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The Red Inn

The Red Inn is a 1951 French comedy-crime film directed by Claude Autant-Lara, starring Fernandel, Françoise Rosay and Julien Carette.

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The Red Sea Sharks

The Red Sea Sharks (Coke en stock) is the nineteenth volume of The Adventures of Tintin, the comics series by Belgian cartoonist Hergé.

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The Royalists

The Royalists (French: Les Chouans) is a 1947 French historical drama film directed by Henri Calef and starring Paul Amiot, Roland Armontel and Roger Bontemps.

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The Sealed Room

The Sealed Room is an eleven-minute film released in 1909.

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The Second Sex

The Second Sex (Le Deuxième Sexe) is a 1949 book by the French existentialist Simone de Beauvoir, in which the author discusses the treatment of women throughout history.

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The Shagreen Bone

The Shagreen Bone (L'Os de chagrin, Шагреневая кость) Op.

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The Soft Skin

The Soft Skin (La peau douce) is a 1964 French-Portuguese romantic drama film directed by François Truffaut and starring Jean Desailly, Françoise Dorléac, and Nelly Benedetti.

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The Song of the Lark

The Song of the Lark is the third novel by American author Willa Cather, written in 1915.

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The Succubus (short story)

“The Succubus” (French: “Le Succube”) is an 1837 short story by Honoré de Balzac, from Les Contes drolatiques, about the 1271 trial of a succubus disguised as a woman.

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The Sweetest Dream

The Sweetest Dream is a 2001 novel by British Nobel Prize in Literature-winner Doris Lessing.

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The Symbolist Movement in Literature

The Symbolist Movement in Literature, first published in 1899, and with additional material in 1919, is a work by Arthur Symons largely credited with bringing French Symbolism to the attention of Anglo-American literary circles.

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The Tales of Alvin Maker

The Tales of Alvin Maker is a series of alternate history/fantasy novels written by American novelist Orson Scott Card, published from 1987 to 2003 (with one more planned), that explore the experiences of a young man, Alvin Miller, who realizes he has incredible powers for creating and shaping things around him.

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The Tenant of Wildfell Hall

The Tenant of Wildfell Hall is the second and final novel by the English author Anne Brontë.

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The Thing at Ghent

The Thing at Ghent is an 1831 short story written by the acclaimed French author Honoré de Balzac.

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The Thirteenth Man

The Thirteenth Man (La storia dei tredici) is a 1917 silent Italian drama film directed by Carmine Gallone.

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The Tragedy of the Street of Flowers

The Tragedy of the Street of Flowers (Portuguese: A Tragédia da Rua das Flores) is a novel by José Maria de Eça de Queirós (1845 - 1900), also known as Eça de Queiroz.

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The Westbound Train

The Westbound Train is a short story by Willa Cather.

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Themes in Fyodor Dostoevsky's writings

The themes in the writings of Russian writer Fyodor Dostoyevsky, which encompass novels, novellas, short stories, essays, epistolary novels, poetry, spy fiction and suspense, include suicide, poverty, human manipulation and morality.

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Theodor W. Adorno

Theodor W. Adorno (born Theodor Ludwig Wiesengrund; September 11, 1903 – August 6, 1969) was a German philosopher, sociologist, and composer known for his critical theory of society.

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Timeline of Tours

The following is a timeline of the history of the city of Tours, France.

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Timoleon (poems)

Timoleon (full title: Timoleon and Other Ventures in Minor Verse) is a collection of forty-two poems by American writer Herman Melville.

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Tintin in Tibet

Tintin in Tibet (Tintin au Tibet) is the twentieth volume of The Adventures of Tintin, the comics series by Belgian cartoonist Hergé.

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Toby Stephens

Toby Stephens (born 21 April 1969) is an English stage, television, and film actor who has appeared in films in both Hollywood and Bollywood.

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Toby Swift

Toby Swift is a radio drama director and producer for BBC Radio.

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Tony Johannot

Antoine Johannot, known commonly as Tony Johannot (9 November 1803 – 4 August 1852), was a French engraver, illustrator and painter.

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Tore Renberg

Tore Renberg (born 3 August 1972) is an award-winning, bestselling Norwegian writer.

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Torikaebaya Monogatari

, translated into English as The Changelings, is a Japanese tale from the late Heian period (794 to 1185) by an unknown author, or possibly more than one author.

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Toronto Reference Library

The Toronto Reference Library is located at 789 Yonge Street, one block north of Bloor Street, in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

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Torsten Billman

Torsten Edvard Billman (6 May 1909 – 6 April 1989) was a Swedish artist who primarily worked as a graphic artist, book illustrator, and buon fresco painter.

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Touraine

Touraine is one of the traditional provinces of France.

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Touraine AOC

Touraine is an Appellation d'Origine Contrôlée (AOC) in the Loire Valley wine region in France that produce dry, white wines and red wines rich in tannins.

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Tours

Tours is a city located in the centre-west of France.

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Towards a Sociology of the Novel

Towards a Sociology of the Novel (Pour une sociologie du roman) is a 1963 book by Lucien Goldmann.

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Traian Demetrescu

Traian Rafael Radu Demetrescu (also known under his pen name Tradem or, occasionally, as Traian Demetrescu-Tradem; December 5, 1866 – April 17, 1896) was a Romanian poet, novelist and literary critic, considered one of the first symbolist authors in local literature.

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Un épisode sous la Terreur

Un épisode sous la Terreur (English "An Episode under the Terror") is a short story by Honoré de Balzac, published in 1830.

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Un début dans la vie

Un début dans la vie (A Start in Life) is a novel by the French writer Honoré de Balzac.

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Un drame au bord de la mer

Un drame au bord de la mer (English "A Drama on the Seashore") is a short story by Honoré de Balzac.

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Une double famille

Une double famille (A Second Home) is a lengthy short story by Honoré de Balzac, which first appeared in 1830 under the title La femme vertueuse (The Virtuous Woman).

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Une ténébreuse affaire

Une ténébreuse affaire (English "A Murky Business" or "An Historical Mystery") is a novel by Honoré de Balzac, published in 1841.

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Unfinished creative work

An unfinished creative work is a painting, novel, musical composition, or other creative work, that has not been brought to a completed state.

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University of Paris

The University of Paris (Université de Paris), metonymically known as the Sorbonne (one of its buildings), was a university in Paris, France, from around 1150 to 1793, and from 1806 to 1970.

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Ursule Mirouët

Ursule Mirouët, an often overlooked novel, belongs to Honoré de Balzac’s great series of 94 novels and short stories La Comédie humaine.

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Usury

Usury is, as defined today, the practice of making unethical or immoral monetary loans that unfairly enrich the lender.

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V. S. Pritchett

Sir Victor Sawdon Pritchett (also known as VSP; 16 December 1900 – 20 March 1997), was a British writer and literary critic.

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Vasile Demetrius

Vasile Demetrius (pen name of Vasile Dumitrescu; October 1, 1878–March 15, 1942) was an Austro-Hungarian-born Romanian prose writer, poet and translator.

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Vasile Savel

Vasile Savel (January 25, 1885–May 17, 1932) was a Romanian prose writer.

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Vautrin

Vautrin is a character from the novels of French writer Honoré de Balzac in the La Comédie humaine series.

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Vũ Trọng Phụng

Vũ Trọng Phụng (Hanoi, 20 October 1912 - Hanoi, 13 October 1939) was a popular Vietnamese author and journalist, who is considered to be one of the most influential figures of 20th century Vietnamese literature.

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Vendée

The Vendée is a department in the Pays-de-la-Loire region in west-central France, on the Atlantic Ocean.

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Vicar

A vicar (Latin: vicarius) is a representative, deputy or substitute; anyone acting "in the person of" or agent for a superior (compare "vicarious" in the sense of "at second hand").

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Vicente Blasco Ibáñez

Vicente Blasco Ibáñez (29 January 1867 – 28 January 1928) was a journalist, politician and best-selling Spanish novelist in various genres whose most widespread and lasting fame in the English-speaking world is from Hollywood films adapted from his works.

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Victor Ratier

Charles-Victor-Hilaire Ratier (13 January 1807 – 6 August 1898) was a 19th-century French playwright, lithographer and printer.

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Victor Sappey

The French sculptor Victor Sappey was born in Grenoble in Isère on 11 February 1801 and died on 23 March 1856.

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Victor Vignon

Victor Alfred Paul Vignon (25 December 1847, Villers-Cotterêts – 15 March 1909, Meulan) was a French Impressionist landscape painter and graphic artist.

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Vidame de Chartres

Vidame de Chartres was a title in the French nobility.

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Villa Di Negro Rosazza dello Scoglietto

Villa Di Negro Rosazza "dello Scoglietto" or "lo Scoglietto" is a villa located in the quarter of San Teodoro in Genoa, Northwestern Italy.

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Villa Diodati

The Villa Diodati is a mansion in the village of Cologny near Lake Geneva in Switzerland, notable because Lord Byron rented it and stayed there with John Polidori in the summer of 1816.

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Vintilă Russu-Șirianu

Vintilă Russu-Șirianu (April 20, 1897–?) was an Austro-Hungarian-born Romanian journalist, memoirist and translator.

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Vjenceslav Novak

Vjenceslav Novak (11 September 1859 in Senj – 20 September 1905 in Zagreb) was a Croatian Realist writer, dramatist, and music historian.

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Vollard Suite

The Vollard Suite is a set of 100 etchings in the neoclassical style by the Spanish artist Pablo Picasso, produced from 1930-37.

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Wacław Rzewuski

Wacław Piotr Rzewuski (1706–1779) was a Polish dramatist and poet as well as a military commander and a Grand Crown Hetman.

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Waiting for Godot

Waiting for Godot is a play by Samuel Beckett, in which two characters, Vladimir (Didi) and Estragon (Gogo), wait for the arrival of someone named Godot who never arrives, and while waiting they engage in a variety of discussions and encounter three other characters.

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Wakefield Press (US)

Wakefield Press is an American independent publishing house based in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

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Weird fiction

Weird fiction is a subgenre of speculative fiction originating in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

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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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Willa Cather

Willa Sibert Cather (December 7, 1873 Cather's birth date is confirmed by a birth certificate and a January 22, 1874, letter of her father's referring to her. While working at McClure's Magazine, Cather claimed to be born in 1875. After 1920, she claimed 1876 as her birth year. That is the date carved into her gravestone at Jaffrey, New Hampshire. – April 24, 1947 Retrieved March 11, 2015.) was an American writer who achieved recognition for her novels of frontier life on the Great Plains, including O Pioneers! (1913), The Song of the Lark (1915), and My Ántonia (1918).

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William Faulkner

William Cuthbert Faulkner (September 25, 1897 – July 6, 1962) was an American writer and Nobel Prize laureate from Oxford, Mississippi.

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William Hobart Royce

William Hobart Royce (20 March 1878 – 28 January 1963) was an American writer and bookseller who was an expert on Honoré de Balzac.

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William Makepeace Thackeray

William Makepeace Thackeray (18 July 1811 – 24 December 1863) was a British novelist and author.

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William Robson (writer)

William Robson (1785/6–1863) was a British author and translator.

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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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Yuri Khanon

Yuri Khanon is a pen name of Yuri Feliksovich Soloviev-Savoyarov (Юрий Феликсович Соловьёв-Савояров),// Encyclopedia of Cinema & Theatre (Bio) ru a Russian composer.

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Yves Beauchemin

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

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Yves-André Hubert

Yves-André Hubert is a French actor, television film director and theatre metteur en scène.

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Z. Marcas

Z.

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Zarafa (giraffe)

Zarafa (1825 – 12 January 1845) was a female Nubian giraffe who lived in the Jardin des Plantes in Paris for 18 years.

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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 Meisen

Zhou Meisen (born 9 March 1956) is a contemporary Chinese novelist and scriptwriter.

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Zi Zhongyun

Zi Zhongyun (born June 1930) is a Chinese translator and historian who is an expert on US studies with the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

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Zigu Ornea

Zigu Ornea (born Zigu Orenstein Andrei Vasilescu,, in, Vol. II, Nr. 1, January–June 2008, p.85 or OrnsteinGeorge Ardeleanu,, in Observator Cultural, Nr. 363, March 2007 and commonly known as Z. Ornea; August 28, 1930 – November 14, 2001) was a Romanian cultural historian, literary critic, biographer and book publisher.

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Zoltán Ambrus

Zoltán Ambrus (22 February 1861 in Debrecen – 28 February 1932 in Budapest) was a Hungarian writer and translator.

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Zulma Carraud

Zulma Carraud (24 March 1796 - 24 April 1889) was a French author.

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Zurab Tsereteli

Zurab Konstantinovich Tsereteli (ზურაბ კონსტანტინეს ძე წერეთელი, Зураб Константинович Церетели; born January 4, 1934) is a Georgian-Russian painter, sculptor and architect known for large-scale and at times controversial monuments.

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100 Classic Book Collection

100 Classic Book Collection, known in North America as 100 Classic Books, is an e-book collection developed by Genius Sonority and published by Nintendo, which was released for the Nintendo DS handheld video game console.

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1799

No description.

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1799 in France

Events from the year 1799 in France.

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1799 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1799.

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1819 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1819.

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1819 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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1826 in literature

This article presents lists of literary events and publications in 1826.

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1829 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1829.

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1830 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1830.

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1831 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1831.

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1832 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1832.

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1833 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1833.

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1834 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1834.

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1835 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1835.

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1836 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1836.

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1837 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1837.

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1839 in art

Events from the year 1839 in art.

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1839 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1839.

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1841 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1841.

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1842 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1842.

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1844 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1844.

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1845 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1845.

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1846 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1846.

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1847 in literature

This article presents lists of literary events and publications in 1847.

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1849 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1849.

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1850

No description.

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1850 in France

Events from the year 1850 in France.

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1850 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1850.

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1865 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1865.

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1946 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1946.

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19th century

The 19th century was a century that began on January 1, 1801, and ended on December 31, 1900.

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19th century in literature

Literature of the 19th century refers to world literature produced during the 19th century.

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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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2 + 2 = 5

The phrase "two plus two equals five" ("2 + 2.

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20th arrondissement of Paris

The 20th arrondissement of Paris (XXe arrondissement) is one of the 20 arrondissements of the capital city of France.

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7th arrondissement of Paris

The 7th arrondissement of Paris (VIIe arrondissement) is one of the 20 arrondissements of the capital city of France.

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Redirects here:

Ballsac, Balzac, H. Balzac, Honere de Balzac, Honore Balzac, Honore De Balzac, Honore de Balzac, Honoré Balzac, Honoré De Balzac, Lord Rhoone.

References

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

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