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Nobel Prize in Literature

Index Nobel Prize in Literature

The Nobel Prize in Literature (Nobelpriset i litteratur) is a Swedish literature prize that has been awarded annually, since 1901, to an author from any country who has, in the words of the will of Swedish industrialist Alfred Nobel, produced "in the field of literature the most outstanding work in an ideal direction" (original Swedish: "den som inom litteraturen har producerat det mest framstående verket i en idealisk riktning"). [1]

2567 relations: A Bend in the River, A Farewell to Arms (1957 film), A Fish in the Water, A Fringe of Leaves, A Hard Rain's a-Gonna Fall, A History of Western Philosophy, A Page of Madness, A Proper Marriage, A Ripple from the Storm, A. J. Weberman, Aberdaron, About Chekhov, Absalom, Absalom!, Actes Sud, Adamastor, Adolf Frey, Adriaan Roland Holst, Adunis, Afghanistan–Mexico relations, African-American literature, Age of Iron, Ailleurs, Aix-Marseille University, Akhenaten, Dweller in Truth, Aksel Sandemose, Akutagawa Prize, Al-Ahram, Al-Kasaba Theatre, Alan Pasqua, Albert Camus, Albert Russo, Albert Sorel, Albert Verwey, Alberto Moravia, Albino Pierro, Alda Merini, Aldous Huxley, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Ales Adamovich, Alexander Baumgartner, Alfonso Reyes, Alfonso Rumazo González, Alfred Nobel, Algeria, Algerian literature, Alice Munro, Allen Upward, Alois Jirásek, Alternatives to the Ten Commandments, Amarante, Portugal, ..., Amenemhat I, America Award in Literature, American Colony, Jerusalem, American football (disambiguation), American literature, American University in Cairo Press, Aminatou Haidar, Among the Believers, Amy King, An Artist of the Floating World, Anatole France, Anatole France (Paris Métro), And Quiet Flows the Don, André Chamson, André Gide, Andrea Dworkin, Andrei Voznesensky, Andrićgrad, Andrzej Grzegorczyk, Angekommen wie nicht da, Angelo de Gubernatis, Angelos Sikelianos, Animal rights and the Holocaust, Anna Akhmatova, Anna Gustafsson Chen, Anna Seghers, Anne Wiazemsky, Annie Russell Marble, António Correia de Oliveira, António Lobo Antunes, Anti-communism, Anti-nuclear power movement in Japan, Anti-war movement, Anton Wildgans, Antonia Fraser, Antonio Fogazzaro, Antonio Tabucchi, Antonov Apples, April 13, April 15, April 16, April 17, April 19, April 1910, April 1914, April 1972, April 2, April 23, April 24, April 26, April 5, April 7, April 8, Aquilino Ribeiro, Arabian Nights and Days, Arabic literature, Aracataca, Ardiente paciencia, Arequipa, Ariake Kambara, Armenian Americans, Armenians in Italy, Arne Garborg, Arno Holz, Arnold Zweig, Art, Truth and Politics, Artes (magazine), Arts and entertainment in India, Arts by region, Arts in Australia, Artur Lundkvist, Arturo Uslar Pietri, Aruna Asaf Ali, Arvid Mörne, As I Lay Dying, Aschehoug, Asia, Asian literature, Aspekte-Literaturpreis, Assassination of Hrant Dink, Association of Writers & Writing Programs, August 12, August 14, August 15, August 17, August 1943, August 1962, August 20, August 21, August 22, August 25, August 29, August 3, August 30, August 4, August 7, August 9, August Hjalmar Edgren, August Strindberg, Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter, Aurich, Australia, Australian literature, Author surrogate, Auto-da-fé, Avenida Reforma, Azita Raji, Àngel Guimerà, Ágúst Pálsson, École Française Anatole France, École normale supérieure (Paris), Éditions Gallimard, Émile Verhaeren, Émile Zola, Étienne Gilson, Övralid, Đerzelez Alija, Łódź Władysław Reymont Airport, Žižkov, Babi Yar in poetry, Bacardi, Baldur Ragnarsson, Ballaciner, Baltasar and Blimunda, Bambiland, Bangladesh, Bangladeshi English, Bangladeshi English literature, Bank of England £5 note, Banknotes of the Norwegian krone, Barabbas (1961 film), Barbara Gelb, Barbentane, Barfüßiger Februar, Barney Rosset, Basilicata, Bateman's, Begin the Beguine (film), Bei Dao, Beijing No. 4 High School, Beijing Normal University, Belarus, Belarus Free Theatre, Belarusian literature, Belarusian presidential election, 2015, Belgian refugees, Belgium, Belgium in the long nineteenth century, Belgrade, Belgrade New Cemetery, Bellaghy, Benedetto Croce, Bengali renaissance, Benito Pérez Galdós, Benjamin Taylor (author), Bergliot Ibsen, Berlin University of the Arts, Bertel Gripenberg, Bertrand Russell, Beyond Sleep, Bharoto Bhagyo Bidhata, Bibliography of André Gide, Bibliography of works on Che Guevara, Big Two-Hearted River, Bill Mauldin, Bill Sienkiewicz, Bill Tomicki, Billiards at Half-Past Nine, Bird's Shadow, Bishop Wordsworth's School, Bjørnson Festival, Bjørnsonfjellet, Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson, Bleecker Street, Boa Island, Bob Dylan, Bob Dylan discography, Boden Municipality, Bommersvik, Bookforum, Borden Parker Bowne, Boris (given name), Boris Pahor, Boris Pasternak, Boston University, Boys and Girls (short story), Brasenose College, Oxford, Brattleboro, Vermont, Brera Academy, Brian Friel, Brian P. 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M. G. Le Clézio, Copper Canyon Press, Cornell University, Cornwall, Crete, Criticism of Mother Teresa, Cuban Five, Cuban literature, Cultural depictions of elephants, Culture during the Cold War, Culture in Belgrade, Culture in post-communist Poland, Culture in Stockholm, Culture of Asia, Culture of Australia, Culture of Bengal, Culture of Canada, Culture of Egypt, Culture of Finland, Culture of Germany, Culture of Greece, Culture of Hungary, Culture of Indonesia, Culture of Ireland, Culture of New England, Culture of Northern Cyprus, Culture of Norway, Culture of Poland, Culture of Portugal, Culture of South Africa, Culture of the Caribbean, Culture of the Southern United States, Culture of the Soviet Union, Culture of the United Kingdom, Culture of the United States, Culture of Turkey, Cursed Days, Cypriot literature, Cyprus, Czech literature, Czech Republic, Czechs, Czesław Miłosz, Daniel Hamilton (businessman), Danish language, Danish literature, Danny Dyer, Dans la maison d'Edith, Danville, California, Dario Fo, Dark Avenues, David R. Godine, Publisher, David Spelman, Désert (novel), De Grootste Belg, Death in the Andes, Death of a Naturalist, Deaths in 1996, Deaths in 1998, Deaths in 2002, Deaths in April 2014, Deaths in April 2015, Deaths in August 2004, Deaths in August 2006, Deaths in August 2013, Deaths in December 2008, Deaths in February 2012, Deaths in July 2014, Deaths in March 2015, Deaths in March 2017, Deaths in October 2016, Debits and Credits (book), Deborah Porter, December 10, December 11, December 14, December 1901, December 1911, December 1915, December 1916, December 1917, December 1922, December 1923, December 1924, December 1925, December 1926, December 1928, December 1929, December 1930, December 1931, December 1932, December 1934, December 1935, December 1936, December 1937, December 1938, December 1939, December 1944, December 1945, December 1947, December 1948, December 1949, December 1950, December 1968, December 20, December 21, December 22, December 24, December 29, December 30, December 5, December 8, Declaration of Reasonable Doubt, Den Gyldene Freden, Denmark, Dennis O'Driscoll, Der fremde Blick oder das Leben ist ein Furz in der Laterne, Der Fuchs war damals schon der Jäger, Der Herrscher, Der König verneigt sich und tötet, Der Teufel sitzt im Spiegel, Der Wächter nimmt seinen Kamm, Derek Walcott, Desanka Maksimović, Desert Trip, Dharmaraja College, Diamond, Honour and Mercosur Konex Award winners, Die blassen Herren mit den Mokkatassen, Diego et Frida, Disgrace, District and Circle, Dmitry Merezhkovsky, Doctor Zhivago (film), Doctor Zhivago (novel), Dody Weston Thompson, Dollar, Clackmannanshire, Dominican Convent High School, Door into the Dark, Dora Melegari, Doris Lessing, Dorothy Thompson, Drückender Tango, Dream on Monkey Mountain, Dreams (Ivan Bunin), Dry Valley (novel), Dublin, Dusklands, Dylan's Visions of Sin, E. D. Morel, E. M. Forster, East of Eden (novel), Edith Wharton, Edmond Picard, Edmund Blunden, Edvarts Virza, Edward John Thompson, Edward Seidensticker, Edwin Arlington Robinson, Egypt, Egyptian literature, Eine warme Kartoffel ist ein warmes Bett, El Comité 1973 (literary magazine), El Español de la Historia, El Señor Presidente, Electric Light (poetry collection), Elena Cué, Elena Miramova, Eleni Sikelianos, Elfriede Jelinek, Elias Canetti, Elias Wessén, Elie Wiesel, Elisaveta Bagriana, Eliza Orzeszkowa, Elizabeth Costello, Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, Embassy of Poland, Paris, Emir Kusturica, Endorsements in the Australian Marriage Law Postal Survey, Enfances (essay), English literature, English novel, Enitharmon Press, Enrique Laguerre, Enrique Larreta, Erasmus Zahl, Erich Kästner, Erik Axel Karlfeldt, Erkner, Ernest Hecht, Ernest Hemingway, Ernest Lavisse, Ernesto Cardenal, Erno Polgar, Ernst Immanuel Cohen Brandes, Erwin Guido Kolbenheyer, Esperanto, Esperanto literature, Este sau nu este Ion, Estonian literature, Eugen Jebeleanu, Eugene O'Neill, Eugene O'Neill Jr., Eugene O'Neill National Historic Site, Eugenio Montale, Euro gold and silver commemorative coins (Belgium), Eyvind Johnson, Faiz Ahmad Faiz, Fantômes dans la rue, Farris (mineral water), Farsø, Fatelessness, Fausto Pirandello, Fayuan Temple, Fürstlich Sächsischer Hofbuchdruckerei zu Altenburg, February 1, February 10, February 11, February 12, February 16, February 17, February 18, February 19, February 1900, February 2, February 21, February 27, February 7, February 8, February 9, Fedir Bohatyrchuk, Feilitzschstraße, Fela Kuti, Felix Timmermans, Feminist children's literature, Ferenc Herczeg, Ferenc Juhász (poet), Fernando Arrabal, Fernando González (writer), Fernando Romeo Lucas García, Field Work (poetry collection), Finland, Finnish Civil War, Five Dials, Flávio de Carvalho, Flora Fraser (writer), Foe (novel), Foreign support of Finland in the Winter War, Four greats of Chilean poetry, François Mauriac, François Rabelais, Franca Rame, France, Frances Beckett, Francesco Benozzo, Francesco D'Ovidio, Francisco Alonso Liongson, Francisco Matos Paoli, Frankétienne, Frans Eemil Sillanpää, Franz Hellens, Franz Kafka Prize, Franz Kafka Society, Frédéric Mistral, Frédéric Regard, Fredericia, Frederick Wood (historian), Free City of Danzig, Freedom to Dream and Freedom to Speak, French literature, French poetry, Friedenau, Fryken, Gabriel García Márquez, Gabriela Mistral, Galileo (1975 film), Gao (surname), Gao Xingjian, Gaomi, Gary Yourofsky, Gaspar Núñez de Arce, Gaston Paris, Gausdal, Götz Kubitschek, Günter Grass, Genealogies of a Crime, Gens des nuages, Georg Büchner Prize, George Bernard Shaw, George Lansing Raymond, George Meredith, George Soros, Georges Duhamel, Georgios Drossinis, Gerald Martin, Gerhart Hauptmann, German Autumn (book), German Empire, German language, Germans, Germans of Romania, Germán Espinosa, Gert Fylking, Gertrud von Le Fort, Ghent, Ghost Train to the Eastern Star, Giorgi Leonidze State Museum of Literature, Giorgos Seferis, Giosuè Carducci, Girls High School, Harare, Gitanjali, Giwi Margwelaschwili, Gljúfrasteinn, Golden Lane, Golden Twenties, Golders Green Crematorium, Golegã, Gonzague de Reynold, Gotham Book Mart, Gottfried Benn, Graham Greene, Grasse, Grazia Deledda, Great Greeks, Greatest Croatian, Greece, Greed (Jelinek novel), Greek literature, Greek military junta of 1967–1974, Greeks, Gregor Gysi, Greta Garbo, Growth of the Soil, Guadeloupe, Guatemala, Guatemalan Civil War, Guglielmo Ferrero, Gulag, Gunnar Sommerfeldt, Gunturu Seshendra Sarma, Gustave Thibon, H. G. Wells, Haï, Hackney Downs School, Hagen Rether, Haiti, Hal Hartley, Hallaig, Halldór Laxness, Hallucinatory realism, Hamarøy, Hanna Helena Chrzanowska, Hans Asperger, Hans Christian Andersen Award, Hans E. Kinck, Hanseaten (class), Harold Bloom, Harold Hecht, Harold Pinter, Harold Pinter and academia, Harold Pinter and politics, Harold Pinter bibliography, Harriet Bosse, Harry Martinson, Haruki Murakami, Hasard suivi de Angoli Mala, Haverstraw (village), New York, Hämäläis-Osakunta, Hebrew literature, Heidelberg University, Heimat ist das, was gesprochen wird, Heimito von Doderer, Heinrich Böll, Heinrich Böll Foundation, Helena Modjeska, Hem Chandra Chowdhury, Henri Bergson, Henri Bosco, Henriette Roland Holst, Henrik Ibsen, Henrik Pontoppidan, Henry James, Henry James Sr., Henry Woolf, Henryk (given name), Henryk Sienkiewicz, Herbert Spencer, Herbert Thomas Mandl, Herder Prize, Herman Teirlinck, Hermann Broch, Hermann Hesse, Hermann Stehr, Herta Müller, Hibbing, Minnesota, Highgate School, His Dark Materials, Historical fiction, History of Allahabad, History of Australia, History of Avignon, History of Czechoslovakia (1948–89), History of Danish, History of Esperanto, History of Guatemala, History of Rome (Mommsen), History of Sardinia, History of the Jews in Brody, History of the Jews in Poland, History of the University of Chicago, Honours and awards received by Harold Pinter, Honours of Winston Churchill, Horace Engdahl, Hotel Margaret, Howard Goldblatt, Howrah Bridge, Hugo Claus, Human Chain (poetry collection), Humboldt's Gift, Hungarians in Germany, Hunger (Hamsun novel), Hunger und Seide, Hurricane Donna, Hygiene and the Assassin, Iberian federalism, IBM, Iceberg Theory, Iceland, Icelandic literature, Ida Orloff, Idries Shah, IES La Rábida, If—, Igbo Landing, Ignazio Silone, Il Postino (opera), Im Haarknoten wohnt eine Dame, Imagism, Immer derselbe Schnee und immer derselbe Onkel, Impalement in myth and art, Imre, Imre Kertész, In August, In der Falle, In Praise of the Stepmother, Incarceration in the United States, Independent People, India, India–Mexico relations, Indian literature, Indo-Caribbeans, Indonesia, Inger Christensen, International copyright relations of Russia, Intruder in the Dust, Ireland, Ireland Professor of Poetry, Irene Sue Vernon, Irene Vilar, Irish literature, Irish poetry, Irish presidential election, 2011, Irish prose fiction, Irish theatre, Ironic precision, Irreligion in Africa, Irving Layton, Isaac Bashevis Singer, Isaac in America: A Journey with Isaac Bashevis Singer, Isabel Preysler, Isabella, Three Sailing Ships and a Con Man, Isabelle Huppert, Ismail Kadare, Israel, It Is Well with My Soul, Italian literature, Italian poetry, Ivan (name), Ivan Bunin, Ivan Franko, Ivana Brlić-Mažuranić, Iván Mándy, Ivo Andrić, Ivo Michiels, J. C. Bloem, J. M. Coetzee, J. M. G. Le Clézio, J. R. R. Tolkien, J.-H. Rosny aîné, Jaan Kaplinski, Jaan Kross, Jacinto Benavente, Jack and Jill (magazine), Jack Butler Yeats, Jack Mapanje, Jagiellonian University, Jamaica College, James Tait Black Memorial Prize, Jan Lorentowicz, Jan Neruda, Jana Gana Mana, Janet Frame, Janko Muzykant, January 10, January 17, January 18, January 1933, January 1965, January 20, January 23, January 24, January 28, January 29, January 31, January 4, January 5, January Uprising, Japan, Japanese in the United Kingdom, Japanese literature, Japanese people, Japanese science fiction, Jardin du Luxembourg, Jarosław Iwaszkiewicz, Jaroslav Seifert, Jaroslav Vrchlický, Jauch family, Jazz (novel), Jean Anouilh, Jean-Christophe, Jean-Claude Arnault, Jean-Paul Sartre, Jena, Jerzy Andrzejewski, Jewish American literature, Jewish culture, Jewish literature, Jez Butterworth, Jibanananda Das, Jo Riley, João Cabral de Melo Neto, Johan Bojer, Johan Falkberget, Johan Padan and the Discovery of the Americas, Johann Trollmann, Johannes Jørgensen, Johannes Larsen, Johannes V. Jensen, John Banville, John Cowper Powys, John Galsworthy, John Garrett Underhill, John Moors Cabot, John Morley, John O'Hara, John Steinbeck, John Updike, Joint issue, Jorge Guillén, Jorge Luis Borges, Jorge Marchant Lazcano, José Craveirinha, José Echegaray, José Rivera (playwright), José Saramago, José Saramago Foundation, José Saramago Prize, Josep Carner, Josep Vicenç Foix, Joseph Brodsky, Joseph Conrad, Joseph G. Peterson, Josip Kosor, Journey to Portugal, Joyce Carol Oates, Juan Marsé, Juan Ramón Jiménez, Juana de Ibarbourou, Jude Law, Judit Vihar, Judith Wright, Juhani Aho, Jules Romains, Jules Supervielle, Julien Benda, July 10, July 11, July 12, July 13, July 14, July 16, July 17, July 1900, July 1923, July 2, July 20, July 21, July 24, July 25, July 26, July 27, July 29, July 30, July 6, Jun'ichirō Tanizaki, June 10, June 11, June 13, June 14, June 18, June 19, June 1915, June 1918, June 1946, June 1964, June 1968, June 1972, June 1974, June 2, June 26, June 28, June 3, June 30, June 6, June 7, June 9, Junzaburō Nishiwaki, Kaddish for an Unborn Child, Kalundborg, Kamala Surayya, Kamianets-Podilskyi Castle, Kaprun disaster, Karel Čapek, Karen Blixen, Karen Bramson, Karl Adolph Gjellerup, Karl Carstens, Karl Kraus (writer), Karl Löwith, Karnak Café, Karoline Bjørnson, Kashubians, Kawachi, Kumamoto, Kazuo Ishiguro, Kōbō Abe, Kenzaburō Ōe, Kermanshah, Kevin Barry (author), Kim (novel), King's College, Cambridge, Klenät, Knud Pontoppidan, Knut Ødegård, Knut Hamsun, Ko Un, Końskowola, Konstantin Paustovsky, Kostis Palamas, Kristin Lavransdatter, L'Extase matérielle, L'Inconnu sur la Terre, L'oiseau bleu (opera), L. A. Ring, La Fête chantée et autres essais de thème amérindien, La fièvre, La Grande Vie (novella), La Guerre, La Quarantaine (novel), La Ronde et autres faits divers, Lacombe, Lucien, Lajos Koltai, Land of poets, Land of Sin, Landlocked (novel), Languages of France, Lars Gyllensten, Latin America, Latin American Boom, Latin American Commission on Drugs and Democracy, Latin American culture, Latin American literature, Laundry Service, Lautaro, Lawrence Durrell, Lübeck, Le Chercheur d'or, Le Jour où Beaumont fit connaissance avec sa douleur, Le Livre des fuites, Leandro Díaz (composer), Lee Seung-u, Legends and myths regarding RMS Titanic, Legends of Anika, Leipzig, Leopold Staff, Les Éditions de Minuit, Les Géants (novel), Les Murray (poet), Les plus grands Belges, Less Than One: Selected Essays, Letras Libres, Letterkenny University Hospital, Lettre Ulysses Award, Leyla Erbil, Li Kuei-Hsien, Liberal Libertarian Party, Licio Gelli, Life (magazine), Limbo, Lin Yutang, Lisa Sotilis, List of Academy Award records, List of African Nobel laureates, List of African-American firsts, List of agnostics, List of alumni of Aix-Marseille University, List of alumni of Jesuit educational institutions, List of alumni of the University of Cape Town, List of American women's firsts, List of Americans of Irish descent, List of Americans under surveillance, List of Andalusians, List of animal rights advocates, List of Arab Nobel laureates, List of Asian Nobel laureates, List of atheist authors, List of atheists (surnames E to G), List of atheists (surnames R to S), List of Australian of the Year Award recipients, List of Austrian writers, List of autodidacts, List of awards and nominations received by Bob Dylan, List of awards named after people, List of École normale supérieure people, List of Barnard College people, List of Belgians, List of black Nobel laureates, List of book-based war films (1927–45 wars), List of book-based war films (wars before 1775), List of books banned by governments, List of Cairo University alumni, List of Catholic authors, List of Chilean women writers, List of Chinese dissidents, List of Chinese Nobel laureates, List of clowns, List of converts to Christianity from Judaism, List of converts to Christianity from nontheism, List of converts to the Catholic Church, List of Cornell University alumni, List of Cornell University faculty, List of Cornish writers, List of Duke University people, List of Egyptian writers, List of Esperanto speakers, List of female Nobel laureates, List of female poets, List of feminist poets, List of films based on military books (fantasy), List of films based on sports books, List of firsts in India, List of foreign recipients of the Légion d'Honneur, List of former atheists and agnostics, List of Free University of Berlin people, List of Freemasons (A–D), List of French novelists, List of genres, List of Germans, List of Guatemalans, List of Harvard University people, List of Head of Government and State Nobel Laureates, List of Heidelberg University people, List of hispanophones, List of Icelandic writers, List of In Our Time programmes, List of Indian Nobel laureates, List of Indian poets, List of Irish Americans, List of Irish people, List of Israeli Ashkenazi Jews, List of Israeli Nobel laureates, List of Israelis, List of Istanbul Technical University people, List of Italian-language poets, List of Japanese Nobel laureates, List of Jewish American authors, List of Jewish atheists and agnostics, List of Jewish Nobel laureates, List of Latin American writers, List of Latin Americans, List of Latino and Hispanic Nobel laureates, List of Latvians, List of Leipzig University people, List of literary awards, List of Lithuanians, List of longest novels, List of members of the Norwegian Nobel Committee, List of Moscow State University people, List of Mount Holyoke College people, List of Muslim Nobel laureates, List of Muslim writers and poets, List of Nanjing University people, List of National Historic Landmarks in Minnesota, List of New York University alumni, List of New York University faculty, List of Nigerian writers, List of Nigerians, List of Nobel laureates, List of Nobel laureates affiliated with Cornell University, List of Nobel laureates affiliated with Imperial College London, List of Nobel laureates affiliated with Johns Hopkins University, List of Nobel laureates affiliated with King's College London, List of Nobel laureates affiliated with Kyoto University, List of Nobel laureates affiliated with Princeton University, List of Nobel laureates affiliated with the City University of New York, List of Nobel laureates affiliated with the Institute for Advanced Study, List of Nobel laureates affiliated with the University of California, Berkeley, List of Nobel laureates affiliated with the University of California, Santa Barbara, List of Nobel laureates affiliated with the University of Chicago, List of Nobel laureates affiliated with the University of Edinburgh, List of Nobel laureates affiliated with the University of Pennsylvania, List of Nobel laureates affiliated with the University of Tokyo, List of Nobel laureates affiliated with University College London, List of Nobel laureates affiliated with Washington University in St. Louis, List of Nobel laureates in Chemistry, List of Nobel laureates in Literature, List of Nobel laureates in Physiology or Medicine, List of Nobel Peace Prize laureates, List of Non-Summit episodes (2016), List of North European Jews, List of novelists by nationality, List of NYU GSAS people, List of Occitans, List of Old Franciscans, List of people associated with University College London, List of people declared persona non grata, List of people from Adelaide, List of people from Allahabad, List of people from Brattleboro, Vermont, List of people from Budapest, List of people from Cardiff, List of people from Chicago, List of people from Dublin, List of people from Gdańsk, List of people from Ghent, List of people from Hampstead, List of people from Illinois, List of people from Jerusalem, List of people from Madrid, List of people from Marrakesh, List of people from Prague, List of people from Saint Petersburg, List of people from Sicily, List of people from the former eastern territories of Germany, List of people from the London Borough of Hackney, List of people from Vermont, List of people named in the Panama Papers, List of people who have declined a British honour, List of people who survived assassination attempts, List of people with brain tumors, List of people with epilepsy, List of poems by Ivan Bunin, List of poetry awards, List of poets, List of Polish people, List of Polish-language poets, List of Portuguese people, List of Portuguese writers, List of prizes known as the Nobel of a field, List of Puerto Rican writers, List of Puerto Ricans, List of refugees, List of richest literary prizes, List of Romanians, List of Russian people, List of Rutgers University people, List of Scholars of Trinity College, Dublin, List of secular humanists, List of ships and sailors of the Royal Navy, List of short stories by Ivan Bunin, List of South Africans, List of Spaniards, List of Spanish writers, List of Spanish-language poets, List of stutterers, List of Swedish cultural institutions, List of Swiss people, List of The 39 Clues characters, List of travel books, List of Trinity College Dublin people, List of Tufts University people, List of Turkish writers, List of University at Buffalo people, List of University of Adelaide people, List of University of Athens alumni, List of University of Bonn people, List of University of California, Los Angeles people, List of University of East Anglia alumni, List of University of Leeds people, List of University of Maryland, College Park people, List of University of Michigan alumni, List of University of Minnesota people, List of University of Mississippi alumni, List of University of Puerto Rico people, List of University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras people, List of University of Texas at Austin alumni, List of University of Toronto people, List of University of Virginia people, List of University of Wisconsin–Madison people, List of Uppsala University people, List of Welsh Nobel laureates, List of Wesleyan University people, List of women in the Heritage Floor, List of women writers, List of women's firsts, List of works by Harold Pinter, List of Worthing inhabitants, List of years in Australian literature, List of years in poetry, Literary award, Literary realism, Literature, Literature by Galician authors, Literature of New England, Literature of Northern Ireland, Lom, Norway, London School of Economics, Loopy Ears, Lord of the Flies, Lorian Hemingway, Lorna Beers, Los versos del capitán, Lost Generation, Louis Aragon, Louis Paul Boon, Lu Xun, Lucian Blaga, Luciano Petech, Lucio Maria Attinelli, Ludwig Klages, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, Ludwig von Pastor, Lugares colombinos, 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A Bend in the River

A Bend in the River is a 1979 novel by Nobel laureate V. S. Naipaul.

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A Farewell to Arms (1957 film)

A Farewell to Arms is a 1957 American DeLuxe Color CinemaScope drama film directed by Charles Vidor.

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A Fish in the Water

A Fish in the Water (originally published as El pez en el agua in 1993), is the memoir of Peruvian writer Mario Vargas Llosa, who won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2010.

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A Fringe of Leaves

A Fringe of Leaves is the tenth published novel by the Australian novelist and 1973 Nobel Prize-winner, Patrick White.

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A Hard Rain's a-Gonna Fall

"A Hard Rain's a-Gonna Fall" is a song written by Bob Dylan in the summer of 1962 and recorded later that year for his second album, The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan.

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A History of Western Philosophy

A History of Western Philosophy is a 1945 book by philosopher Bertrand Russell.

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A Page of Madness

A Page of Madness is a 1926 Japanese silent film directed by Teinosuke Kinugasa.

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A Proper Marriage

A Proper Marriage (1954) is the second novel in British Nobel Prize in Literature-winner Doris Lessing five volume, semi-autobiographical, series, Children of Violence.

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A Ripple from the Storm

A Ripple in the Storm (1958) is the third novel in British Nobel Prize in Literature-winner Doris Lessing five volume, semi-autobiographical, series, Children of Violence.

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A. J. Weberman

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

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Aberdaron

Aberdaron is a community, electoral ward and former fishing village at the western tip of the Llŷn Peninsula (Penrhyn Llŷn) in the Welsh county of Gwynedd.

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About Chekhov

About Chekhov (translit) is a book of memoirs by a Nobel Prize-winning Russian author Ivan Bunin, devoted to Anton Chekhov, his friend and major influence.

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Absalom, Absalom!

Absalom, Absalom! is a novel by the American author William Faulkner, first published in 1936.

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Actes Sud

Actes Sud is a French publishing house based in Arles.

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Adamastor

Adamastor is a Greek-type mythological character famed by the Portuguese poet Luís de Camões in his epic poem Os Lusíadas (first printed in 1572), as a symbol of the forces of nature Portuguese navigators had to overcome during their discoveries.

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Adolf Frey

Adolf Frey (18 February 1855, Küttigen – 12 February 1920, Zurich) was a Swiss writer and literary historian.

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Adriaan Roland Holst

Adriaan Roland Holst (Amsterdam, 23 May 1888 – Bergen, 5 August 1976) was a Dutch writer, nicknamed the "Prince of Dutch Poets".

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Adunis

Ali Ahmad Said Esber, romanised: ʿAlī Aḥmad Saʿīd 'Isbar (born 1 January 1930), also known by the pen name Adonis or Adunis (أدونيس, Adūnīs), is a Syrian poet, essayist and translator who is considered one of the most influential and dominant Arab poets of the modern era.

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Afghanistan–Mexico relations

Afghanistan–Mexico relations refers to the diplomatic relations between Afghanistan and Mexico.

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African-American literature

African-American literature is the body of literature produced in the United States by writers of African descent.

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Age of Iron

Age of Iron is a 1990 novel by South African Nobel Prize winner J. M. Coetzee.

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Ailleurs

Ailleurs are the transcripts of a series of interviews between Jean-Louis Ezine and the French Nobel laureate J. M. G. Le Clézio.

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Aix-Marseille University

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

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Akhenaten, Dweller in Truth

Akhenaten, Dweller in Truth is a novel written and published by Nobel Prize-winning Egyptian author Naguib Mahfouz in 1985.

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Aksel Sandemose

Aksel Sandemose (né Axel Nielsen; 19 March 1899 – 6 August 1965) was a Danish-Norwegian writer.

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Akutagawa Prize

The is a Japanese literary award presented semi-annually.

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Al-Ahram

Al-Ahram (الأهرام; The Pyramids), founded on 5 August 1875, is the most widely circulating Egyptian daily newspaper, and the second oldest after al-Waqa'i`al-Masriya (The Egyptian Events, founded 1828).

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Al-Kasaba Theatre

Al-Kasaba Theatre is a cinema in the city of Ramallah in the West Bank.

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Alan Pasqua

Alan Pasqua (born June 28, 1952) is an American jazz pianist, educator, and composer.

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Albert Camus

Albert Camus (7 November 1913 – 4 January 1960) was a French philosopher, author, and journalist.

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Albert Russo

Albert Russo (born 26 February 1943) is a Belgian bilingual (English and French) author of novels, short stories, essays and poems, as well as a photographer.

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Albert Sorel

Albert Sorel (13 August 184229 June 1906) was a French historian.

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Albert Verwey

Albert Verwey (May 15, 1865 – March 8, 1937) was a Dutch poet associated with the "Movement of Eighty".

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Alberto Moravia

Alberto Moravia (November 28, 1907 – September 26, 1990), born Alberto Pincherle, was an Italian novelist and journalist.

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Albino Pierro

Albino Pierro (19 November 1916 in Tursi – 23 March 1995 in Rome) was an Italian poet.

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Alda Merini

Alda Merini (Milan, 21 March 1931 – Milan, 1 November 2009) was an Italian writer and poet.

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Aldous Huxley

Aldous Leonard Huxley (26 July 1894 – 22 November 1963) was an English writer, novelist, philosopher, and prominent member of the Huxley family.

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Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn

Aleksandr Isayevich Solzhenitsyn (11 December 1918 – 3 August 2008) was a Russian novelist, historian, and short story writer.

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Ales Adamovich

Ales Adamovich (Алесь Адамовіч, Алесь Адамович, full name: Александр Михайлович Адамович; September 3, 1927 in Hlusha Minsk Voblast, Belarus, USSR – January 26, 1994 in Moscow, Russia) was a Belarusian Soviet writer and a critic, Professor and Corresponding Member of the Academy of Sciences of Belarus, Doctor of Philosophy in philology, Doctorate in 1962 (a degree in Russia corresponding to Habilitation); member of the Supreme Soviet (1989–92).

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Alexander Baumgartner

Alexander Baumgartner (born in St. Gall, Switzerland, 27 June 1841; died Luxembourg, 1910) was a poet and writer on the history of literature.

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Alfonso Reyes

Alfonso Reyes Ochoa (17 May 1889 in Monterrey, Nuevo León – 27 December 1959 in Mexico City) was a Mexican writer, philosopher and diplomat.

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Alfonso Rumazo González

Alfonso Rumazo González (Latacunga, 1903 – Caracas, 2002) was an Ecuadorian writer, historian, essayist and literary critic.

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Alfred Nobel

Alfred Bernhard Nobel (21 October 1833 – 10 December 1896) was a Swedish chemist, engineer, inventor, businessman, and philanthropist.

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Algeria

Algeria (الجزائر, familary Algerian Arabic الدزاير; ⴷⵣⴰⵢⴻⵔ; Dzayer; Algérie), officially the People's Democratic Republic of Algeria, is a sovereign state in North Africa on the Mediterranean coast.

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Algerian literature

Algerian literature has been influenced by many cultures, including the ancient Romans, Arabs, French and Spanish, as well as the indigenous people.

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Alice Munro

Alice Ann Munro (née Laidlaw; born 10 July 1931) is a Canadian short story writer who won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2013.

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Allen Upward

George Allen Upward (20 September 1863 – 12 November 1926) was a poet, lawyer, politician and teacher.

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Alois Jirásek

Alois Jirásek (August 23, 1851, Hronov, Kingdom of Bohemia – March 12, 1930, Prague) was a Czech writer, author of historical novels and plays.

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Alternatives to the Ten Commandments

Several alternatives to the Ten Commandments have been promulgated by different persons and groups, which intended to improve on the lists of laws known as the Ten Commandments that appear in the Bible.

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Amarante, Portugal

Amarante is a municipality and municipal seat in the northern Portuguese district of Porto.

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Amenemhat I

Amenemhat I, also Amenemhet I and the hellenized form Ammenemes, was the first ruler of the Twelfth Dynasty, the dynasty considered to be the golden-age of the Middle Kingdom of Egypt.

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America Award in Literature

The America Award is a lifetime achievement literary award for international writers.

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American Colony, Jerusalem

The American Colony was a colony established in Jerusalem in 1881 by members of a Christian utopian society led by Anna and Horatio Spafford.

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American football (disambiguation)

American football, a sport popularly called football in the United States, is a type of gridiron football.

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American literature

American literature is literature written or produced in the United States and its preceding colonies (for specific discussions of poetry and theater, see Poetry of the United States and Theater in the United States).

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American University in Cairo Press

The American University in Cairo Press (AUCP, AUC Press) is the leading English-language publisher in the Middle East.

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Aminatou Haidar

Aminatou Ali Ahmed Haidar (أحمد علي حيدر أميناتو; born 24 July 1966), sometimes known as Aminetou, Aminatu or Aminetu, is a Sahrawi human rights activist and an advocate of the independence of Western Sahara.

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Among the Believers

Among the Believers: An Islamic Journey is a book by the Nobel laureate V. S. Naipaul.

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Amy King

Amy King (born August 3, 1971) is an American poet, essayist and activist.

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An Artist of the Floating World

An Artist of the Floating World (1986) is a novel by Nobel Prize-winning British author Kazuo Ishiguro.

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Anatole France

italic (born italic,; 16 April 1844 – 12 October 1924) was a French poet, journalist, and successful novelist with several best-sellers.

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Anatole France (Paris Métro)

Anatole France is a station on Paris Métro Line 3.

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And Quiet Flows the Don

And Quiet Flows the Don or Quietly Flows the Don (Тихий Дон, literally "Quiet Don") is an epic novel in four volumes by Russian writer Mikhail Alexandrovich Sholokhov.

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André Chamson

André Chamson (6 June 1900 – 9 November 1983) was a French archivist, novelist and essayist.

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André Gide

André Paul Guillaume Gide (22 November 1869 – 19 February 1951) was a French author and winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature.

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Andrea Dworkin

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

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Andrei Voznesensky

Andrei Andreyevich Voznesensky (Андре́й Андре́евич Вознесе́нский, May 12, 1933 – June 1, 2010) was a Soviet and Russian poet and writer who had been referred to by Robert Lowell as "one of the greatest living poets in any language." He was one of the "Children of the '60s," a new wave of iconic Russian intellectuals led by the Khrushchev Thaw.

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Andrićgrad

Andrićgrad (meaning "Andrić's town") is the name of an ongoing construction project located in Višegrad, Bosnia and Herzegovina by director Emir Kusturica.

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Andrzej Grzegorczyk

Andrzej Grzegorczyk (22 August 1922 – 20 March 2014) was a Polish logician, mathematician, philosopher, and ethicist noted for his work in computability, mathematical logic, and the foundations of mathematics.

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Angekommen wie nicht da

Angekommen wie nicht da is a book by Nobel Prize-winning author Herta Müller.

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Angelo de Gubernatis

Count Angelo de Gubernatis (1840–26 February 1913), Italian man of letters, was born in Turin and educated there and at Berlin, where he studied philology.

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Angelos Sikelianos

Angelos Sikelianos (Άγγελος Σικελιανός; 28 March 1884 – 19 June 1951) was a Greek lyric poet and playwright.

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Animal rights and the Holocaust

Several writers, including Jewish Nobel Prize laureate Isaac Bashevis Singer, and animal rights groups have drawn a comparison between the treatment of animals and the Holocaust.

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Anna Akhmatova

Anna Andreyevna Gorenkoa; Анна Андріївна Горенко, Anna Andriyivna Horenko (– 5 March 1966), better known by the pen name Anna Akhmatova (Анна Ахматова), was one of the most significant Russian poets of the 20th century.

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Anna Gustafsson Chen

Anna Gustafsson Chen (born 18 January 1965) is a Swedish literary translator and sinologist.

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Anna Seghers

Anna Seghers (19 November 1900 – 1 June 1983) was a German writer famous for depicting the moral experience of the Second World War.

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Anne Wiazemsky

Anne Wiazemsky (14 May 1947 - 5 October 2017) was a French actress and novelist.

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Annie Russell Marble

Annie Russell Marble (August 10, 1864 – November 23, 1936) was an American essayist, whose work dealt with early American historical figures, authors of the Transcendental movement, some of whom she knew personally, and commentary on literature in general.

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António Correia de Oliveira

António Correia de Oliveira (1879-1960) was a Portuguese poet.

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António Lobo Antunes

António Lobo Antunes, GCSE, MD (born 1 September 1942) is a Portuguese novelist and medical doctor.

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Anti-communism

Anti-communism is opposition to communism.

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Anti-nuclear power movement in Japan

Long one of the world’s most committed promoters of civilian nuclear power, Japan's nuclear industry was not hit as hard by the effects of the 1979 Three Mile Island accident (USA) or the 1986 Chernobyl disaster (USSR) as some other countries.

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Anti-war movement

An anti-war movement (also antiwar) is a social movement, usually in opposition to a particular nation's decision to start or carry on an armed conflict, unconditional of a maybe-existing just cause.

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Anton Wildgans

Anton Wildgans (17 April 1881 – 3 May 1932) was an Austrian poet and playwright.

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Antonia Fraser

Lady Antonia Margaret Caroline Fraser, (née Pakenham; born 27 August 1932) is a British author of history, novels, biographies and detective fiction.

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Antonio Fogazzaro

Antonio Fogazzaro (25 March 1842 – 7 March 1911) was an Italian novelist.

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Antonio Tabucchi

Antonio Tabucchi (24 September 1943 – 25 March 2012) was an Italian writer and academic who taught Portuguese language and literature at the University of Siena, Italy.

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Antonov Apples

Antonov Apples (Анто′новские я′блоки, Antonovskiye Yabloki, occasionally referred to as The Apple Fragrance, Яблочный аромат) is a short story by a Nobel Prize-winning Russian author Ivan Bunin, written in 1900 and published the same year in the October issue of the Saint Petersburg Zhiznh (Life) magazine, subtitled "Sketches from the Epitaph book".

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April 13

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April 15

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April 16

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April 17

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April 19

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April 1910

The following events occurred in April 1910.

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April 1914

The following events occurred in April 1914.

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April 1972

The following events occurred in April 1972.

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April 2

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April 23

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April 24

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April 26

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April 5

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April 7

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April 8

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Aquilino Ribeiro

Aquilino Gomes Ribeiro, ComL (13 September 1885, Carregal de Tabosa, Sernancelhe – 27 May 1963, Lisbon), was a Portuguese writer and diplomat.

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Arabian Nights and Days

Arabian Nights and Days (1979) is a novel by Egyptian writer Naguib Mahfouz, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature.

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Arabic literature

Arabic literature (الأدب العربي / ALA-LC: al-Adab al-‘Arabī) is the writing, both prose and poetry, produced by writers in the Arabic language.

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Aracataca

Aracataca (colloquially sometimes referred to as "Cataca") is a municipality located in the Department of Magdalena, in Colombia's Caribbean Region.

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Ardiente paciencia

Ardiente Paciencia, or El Cartero De Neruda, is a 1985 novel by Antonio Skármeta.

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Arequipa

Arequipa is the capital and largest city of the Arequipa Region and the seat of the Constitutional Court of Peru.

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Ariake Kambara

was the pen-name of a Japanese poet and novelist active during the Taishō and Shōwa periods of Japan.

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Armenian Americans

Armenian Americans (ամերիկահայեր, amerikahayer) are citizens or residents of the United States who have total or partial Armenian ancestry.

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Armenians in Italy

Armenians in Italy covers the Armenians who live in Italy.

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Arne Garborg

Arne Garborg, born Aadne Eivindsson Garborg (25 January 1851, Time – 14 January 1924) was a Norwegian writer.

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Arno Holz

Arno Holz (26 April 1863 Rastenburg – October 1929, Berlin) was a German naturalist poet and dramatist.

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Arnold Zweig

Arnold Zweig (10 November 1887 – 26 November 1968) was a German writer and anti-war and antifascist activist.

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Art, Truth and Politics

"Art, Truth and Politics" (also referred to and published as "Art, Truth & Politics" and Art, Truth and Politics) is the Nobel Lecture delivered on video by the 2005 Nobel Laureate in Literature Harold Pinter (1930–2008), who was at the time hospitalised and unable to travel to Stockholm to deliver it in person.

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Artes (magazine)

Artes was a Swedish cultural magazine about art, music and literature published between 1975 and 2005 in Sweden.

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Arts and entertainment in India

Arts and entertainment in India have had their course shaped by a synthesis of indigenous and foreign influences that have consequently shaped the course of the arts of the rest of Asia, since ancient times.

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Arts by region

Arts by region.

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Arts in Australia

The Arts in Australia refers to the art produced in the area of, on the subject of, or by the people of the Commonwealth of Australia and its preceding Indigenous and colonial societies.

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Artur Lundkvist

Nils Artur Lundkvist (3 March 1906 in Perstorp Municipality, Skåne County – 11 December 1991 in Solna, Stockholm County) was a Swedish writer, poet and literary critic.

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Arturo Uslar Pietri

Arturo Uslar Pietri (16 May 1906 in Caracas – 26 February 2001) was a Venezuelan intellectual, historian, writer, television producer and politician.

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Aruna Asaf Ali

Aruna Asaf Ali (16 July 1909 – 29 July 1996), born Aruna Ganguly, was an Indian independence activist.

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Arvid Mörne

Arvid Mörne (born 6 May 1876 in Kuopio, dead 15 June 1946 in Kauniainen) was a Finnish author and poet.

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As I Lay Dying

As I Lay Dying is a 1930 novel, in the genre of Southern Gothic, by American author William Faulkner.

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Aschehoug

H.

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Asia

Asia is Earth's largest and most populous continent, located primarily in the Eastern and Northern Hemispheres.

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Asian literature

Asian literature is the literature produced in Asia.

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Aspekte-Literaturpreis

The Aspekte-Literaturpreis (Aspekte Literature Prize) is awarded annually for the best debut novel written in German, as judged by a panel of writers, critics, and scholars.

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Assassination of Hrant Dink

The prominent Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink was assassinated in Istanbul on 19 January 2007.

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Association of Writers & Writing Programs

The Association of Writers & Writing Programs (AWP) is a nonprofit literary organization that provides support, advocacy, resources, and community to nearly 50,000 writers, 500 college and university creative writing programs, and 125 writers’ conferences and centers.

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August 12

It is the peak of the Perseid meteor shower.

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August 14

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August 15

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August 17

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August 1943

The following events occurred in August 1943.

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August 1962

The following events occurred in August 1962.

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August 20

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August 21

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August 22

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August 25

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August 29

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August 3

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August 30

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August 4

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August 7

This day marks the approximate midpoint of summer in the Northern Hemisphere and of winter in the Southern Hemisphere (starting the season at the June solstice).

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August 9

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August Hjalmar Edgren

August Hjalmar Edgren (October 18, 1840 – December 9, 1903) was a Swedish-American linguist, professor, and author.

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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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Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter

Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter (La tía Julia y el escribidor) is the seventh novel by Nobel Prize-winning author Mario Vargas Llosa.

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Aurich

Aurich (Low German: Auerk, West Frisian: Auwerk) is a town in Lower Saxony, Germany.

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Australia

Australia, officially the Commonwealth of Australia, is a sovereign country comprising the mainland of the Australian continent, the island of Tasmania and numerous smaller islands.

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Australian literature

Australian literature is the written or literary work produced in the area or by the people of the Commonwealth of Australia and its preceding colonies.

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Author surrogate

As a literary technique, an author surrogate is a fictional character based on the author.

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Auto-da-fé

An auto-da-fé or auto-de-fé (from Portuguese auto da fé, meaning "act of faith") was the ritual of public penance of condemned heretics and apostates that took place when the Spanish Inquisition, Portuguese Inquisition or the Mexican Inquisition had decided their punishment, followed by the execution by the civil authorities of the sentences imposed.

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Avenida Reforma

Avenida Reforma ("Reform Avenue") is a main boulevard in the east-center part of Guatemala City, the capital of Guatemala.

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Azita Raji

Azita Raji (آزیتا راجی, born September 29, 1961) is an American diplomat, banker and philanthropist.

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Àngel Guimerà

Àngel Guimerà (6 May 1845 or 6 May 1847 or 1849 – 18 July 1924), known also as Ángel Guimerá, was a Spanish writer in Catalan language.

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Ágúst Pálsson

Ágúst Pálsson (3 October 1893 - 25 November 1967) was an Icelandic architect.

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École Française Anatole France

École Française Anatole France (Անատոլ Ֆրանսի անվան Ֆրանսիական Դպրոց), is a French school in Yerevan, Armenia, founded in 2007 as the Ecole Française Internationale en Arménie.

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École normale supérieure (Paris)

The École normale supérieure (also known as Normale sup', Ulm, ENS Paris, l'École and most often just as ENS) is one of the most selective and prestigious French grandes écoles (higher education establishment outside the framework of the public university system) and a constituent college of Université PSL.

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Éditions Gallimard

Éditions Gallimard is one of the leading French publishers of books.

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Émile Verhaeren

Émile Adolphe Gustave Verhaeren (21 May 1855 – 27 November 1916) was a Belgian poet who wrote in the French language, art critic, and one of the chief founders of the school of Symbolism.

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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 Gilson

Étienne Gilson (13 June 1884 – 19 September 1978) was a French philosopher and historian of philosophy.

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Övralid

Övralid is a manor house north of Motala in Östergötland County, Sweden.

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Đerzelez Alija

Gjergj Elez Alia or Đerzelez Alija is a popular legendary hero in epic poetry and literature in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Gora and in northern Albania.

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Łódź Władysław Reymont Airport

Łódź Władysław Reymont Airport, formerly known as Łódź-Lublinek Airport, is a regional airport in central Poland, located approximately southwest of the Łódź city center and about away from the Retkinia block housing estate.

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Žižkov

Žižkov is a cadastral district of Prague, Czech Republic.

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Babi Yar in poetry

Poems about Babi Yar commemorate the massacres committed by the Nazi Einsatzgruppe during World War II at Babi Yar, in a ravine located within the present-day Ukrainian capital of Kiev.

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Bacardi

Bacardi Limited is the largest privately held, family-owned spirits company in the world.

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Baldur Ragnarsson

Baldur Ragnarsson (born 25 August 1930) is an Icelandic poet and author of Esperanto works.

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Ballaciner

Ballaciner is an essay by French Nobel laureate J. M. G. Le Clézio with help from Gilles Jacob.

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Baltasar and Blimunda

Baltasar and Blimunda (Memorial do Convento, 1982) is a novel by the Nobel Prize-winning Portuguese author José Saramago.

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Bambiland

Bambiland is a play by Austrian playwright Elfriede Jelinek, winner of the 2004 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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Bangladesh

Bangladesh (বাংলাদেশ, lit. "The country of Bengal"), officially the People's Republic of Bangladesh (গণপ্রজাতন্ত্রী বাংলাদেশ), is a country in South Asia.

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Bangladeshi English

Bangaldeshi English is one of the dialects of English characteristic of Bangladesh.

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Bangladeshi English literature

Bangladeshi English literature (BEL) refers to the body of literary work written in the English language in Bangladesh and the Bangladeshi diaspora.

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Bank of England £5 note

The Bank of England £5 note, also known as a fiver, is a banknote of the pound sterling.

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Banknotes of the Norwegian krone

Norwegian banknotes are circulated, in addition to Norwegian coins, with a denomination of Norwegian kroner, as standard units of currency in Norway.

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Barabbas (1961 film)

Barabbas is a 1961 religious epic film expanding on the career of Barabbas, from the Christian Passion narrative in the Gospel of Mark and other gospels.

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Barbara Gelb

Barbara Gelb (February 6, 1926 – February 9, 2017) was an American author, playwright, and journalist.

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Barbentane

Barbentane is a French commune of the Bouches-du-Rhône department in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur region of southern France.

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Barfüßiger Februar

Barfüßiger Februar ("Barefoot February") is a book by Nobel Prize-winning author Herta Müller.

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Barney Rosset

Barnet Lee "Barney" Rosset, Jr. (May 28, 1922 – February 21, 2012) was the owner of the publishing house Grove Press, and publisher and editor-in-chief of the magazine Evergreen Review.

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Basilicata

Basilicata, also known with its ancient name Lucania, is a region in Southern Italy, bordering on Campania to the west, Apulia (Puglia) to the north and east, and Calabria to the south.

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Bateman's

Bateman's is a 17th-century house located in Burwash, East Sussex, England.

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Begin the Beguine (film)

Begin the Beguine (Volver a Empezar) is a 1982 Spanish film written and directed by José Luis Garci, starring Antonio Ferrandis.

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Bei Dao

Bei Dao (born August 2, 1949) is the pen name of an American poet Zhao Zhenkai (S: 赵振开, T: 趙振開, P: Zhào Zhènkāi).

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Beijing No. 4 High School

Beijing No. 4 High School, commonly abbreviated as (Beijing) Sizhong, and sometimes referred to as Beijing High School Four (BHSF), is a public beacon high school in Xicheng District, Beijing, China. It is one of the most prestigious high schools in China. It was established in 1907 by the Shuntian Government (Beijing Government) during the Qing dynasty, known as the Shuntian Secondary School. After the Xinhai Revolution, the school was renamed as Capital Public No. 4 Secondary School (京师公立第四中学), which was not changed into the current name until 1949, when the People's Republic of China was proclaimed. The school was among the first to be accredited as a "Municipal Model High School" by the Beijing Municipal Commission of Education. More than 300 students from the school have won medals in municipal, national and international competitions every year. More than 96 percent of its graduates passed the enrolment line of key universities (Tier 1 schools) in National Higher Education Entrance Examination. In a 2016 ranking of Chinese high schools that send students to study in American universities, Beijing No. 4 High School ranked number one in mainland China in terms of the number of students entering top American universities, and number four internationally for high schools outside of the United States. Many Chinese politicians and their children have attended Beijing No. 4.

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Beijing Normal University

Beijing Normal University (BNU), colloquially known as 北师大 or Beishida, is a public research university located in Beijing, China, with a strong emphasis on basic disciplines of the humanities and sciences.

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Belarus

Belarus (Беларусь, Biełaruś,; Беларусь, Belarus'), officially the Republic of Belarus (Рэспубліка Беларусь; Республика Беларусь), formerly known by its Russian name Byelorussia or Belorussia (Белоруссия, Byelorussiya), is a landlocked country in Eastern Europe bordered by Russia to the northeast, Ukraine to the south, Poland to the west, and Lithuania and Latvia to the northwest.

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Belarus Free Theatre

Belarus Free Theatre is a Belarusian underground theatre group.

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Belarusian literature

Belarusian literature (Bielaruskaja litaratura) is the writing produced, both prose and poetry, by speakers (not necessarily native speakers) of the Belarusian language.

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Belarusian presidential election, 2015

Presidential elections were held in Belarus on 11 October 2015.

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Belgian refugees

Following the creation of Belgium as a nation state, Belgian people have sought refuge abroad on several occasions.

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Belgium

Belgium, officially the Kingdom of Belgium, is a country in Western Europe bordered by France, the Netherlands, Germany and Luxembourg.

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Belgium in the long nineteenth century

The history of Belgium from 1789 to 1914, the period dubbed the "Long Nineteenth Century" by the historian Eric Hobsbawm, includes the end of Austrian rule and periods of French and Dutch occupation of the region, leading to the creation of the first independent Belgian state in 1830.

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Belgrade

Belgrade (Beograd / Београд, meaning "White city",; names in other languages) is the capital and largest city of Serbia.

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Belgrade New Cemetery

The New Cemetery (Ново гробље, Novo groblje) is a cemetery complex in Belgrade, Serbia.

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Bellaghy

Bellaghy is a village in County Londonderry, Northern Ireland.

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Benedetto Croce

Benedetto Croce (25 February 1866 – 20 November 1952) was an Italian idealist philosopher, historian and politician, who wrote on numerous topics, including philosophy, history, historiography and aesthetics.

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Bengali renaissance

The Bengali renaissance or simply Bengal renaissance, (বাংলার নবজাগরণ; Bānglār nabajāgaraṇ) was a cultural, social, intellectual and artistic movement in Bengal region of the Indian subcontinent during the period of the British Indian Empire, from the nineteenth century to the early twentieth century.

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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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Benjamin Taylor (author)

Benjamin Taylor (born 1952) is an American writer whose work has appeared in a number of publications including Harper's, Esquire, Bookforum, BOMB, the Los Angeles Times, Le Monde, The Georgia Review, Raritan Quarterly Review, Threepenny Review, Salmagundi, Provincetown Arts and The Reading Room.

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Bergliot Ibsen

Bergliot Ibsen (née Bjørnson; 10 June 1869 – 2 February 1953) was a Norwegian mezzo-soprano singer.

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Berlin University of the Arts

The Universität der Künste Berlin (UdK; Berlin University of the Arts), situated in Berlin, Germany, is the largest art school in Europe.

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Bertel Gripenberg

Bertel Johan Sebastian, Baron Gripenberg, born 19 September 1878 in Saint Petersburg, died 6 May 1947, was a Finland-Swedish poet.

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Bertrand Russell

Bertrand Arthur William Russell, 3rd Earl Russell, (18 May 1872 – 2 February 1970) was a British philosopher, logician, mathematician, historian, writer, social critic, political activist, and Nobel laureate.

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Beyond Sleep

Beyond Sleep (Nooit meer slapen, "Nevermore to Sleep") is a novel by the Dutch writer Willem Frederik Hermans, published in February 1966.

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Bharoto Bhagyo Bidhata

Bharoto Bhagyo Bidhata (ভারত ভাগ্য বিধাতা; Devanagari: भारत भाग्य विधाता Bhārata Bhāgya Vidhātā "Dispenser of the destiny of India") is a five-stanza Brahmo hymn in Bengali language dedicated to Supreme divine God or Para Brahman who is the dispenser of the destiny of India.

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Bibliography of André Gide

André Paul Guillaume Gide (22 November 1869 – 19 February 1951) was a French author and winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1947 "for his comprehensive and artistically significant writings, in which human problems and conditions have been presented with a fearless love of truth and keen psychological insight".

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Bibliography of works on Che Guevara

Ernesto "Che" Guevara (June 14, 1928 – October 9, 1967), was an Argentine Marxist revolutionary, politician, author, intellectual, physician, military theorist, and guerrilla leader.

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Big Two-Hearted River

"Big Two-Hearted River" is a two-part short story written by American author Ernest Hemingway, published in the 1925 Boni & Liveright edition of In Our Time, the first American volume of Hemingway's short stories.

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Bill Mauldin

William Henry "Bill" Mauldin (October 29, 1921 – January 22, 2003) was an American editorial cartoonist.

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Bill Sienkiewicz

Boleslav William Felix Robert Sienkiewicz (born May 3, 1958), better known as Bill Sienkiewicz, is an American artist known for his work in comic books—particularly for Marvel Comics' The New Mutants and Elektra: Assassin.

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Bill Tomicki

William "Bill" Tomicki is an American travel writer.

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Billiards at Half-Past Nine

Billiards at Half-Past Nine (Billard um halb zehn) is a 1959 novel by the German author Heinrich Böll.

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Bird's Shadow

Bird's Shadow (translit) is a collection of short stories by a Nobel Prize-winning Russian author Ivan Bunin, based on memories and impressions of the vast tour over the Middle East he and wife Vera Muromtseva undertook in the 1900s.

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Bishop Wordsworth's School

Bishop Wordsworth's School is a Church of England boys' grammar school in Salisbury, Wiltshire for boys aged 11 to 18.

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Bjørnson Festival

Bjørnson Festival (Bjørnsonfestivalen) is an international literary festival held annually during August / September in Molde and Nesset, Norway.

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Bjørnsonfjellet

Bjørnsonfjellet is a mountain in Nordenskiöld Land at Spitsbergen, Svalbard.

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Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson

Bjørnstjerne Martinius Bjørnson (8 December 1832 – 26 April 1910) was a Norwegian writer who received the 1903 Nobel Prize in Literature "as a tribute to his noble, magnificent and versatile poetry, which has always been distinguished by both the freshness of its inspiration and the rare purity of its spirit", becoming the first Norwegian Nobel laureate.

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Bleecker Street

Bleecker Street is a west–east street in the New York City borough of Manhattan.

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Boa Island

Boa Island is an island near the north shore of Lower Lough Erne in County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland.

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Bob Dylan

Bob Dylan (born Robert Allen Zimmerman, May 24, 1941) is an American singer-songwriter, author, and painter who has been an influential figure in popular music and culture for more than five decades.

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Bob Dylan discography

American singer-songwriter Bob Dylan has released 36 studio albums, 91 singles, 26 notable extended plays, 40 music videos, 12 live albums, 13 volumes comprising The Bootleg Series, 19 compilation albums, 13 box sets, 7 soundtracks as main contributor, 5 music home videos and 2 non-music home videos.

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Boden Municipality

Boden Municipality (Swedish: Bodens kommun) is a municipality in Norrbotten County in northern Sweden.

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Bommersvik

Bommersvik is a Union college (Förbundskola from Förbund meaning union or association and skola meaning school or college) built by the Swedish Social Democratic Youth League (SSU) and is situated outside the municipality of Södertälje in Sweden.

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Bookforum

Bookforum is an American book review magazine devoted to books and the discussion of literature.

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Borden Parker Bowne

Borden Parker Bowne (January 14, 1847April 1, 1910) was an American Christian philosopher, preacher, and theologian in the Methodist tradition.

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Boris (given name)

Boris, Borys or Barys (Bulgarian, Russian, Serbian, Борис; Барыс) is a male name of Bulgarian origin.

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Boris Pahor

Boris Pahor (born 26 August 1913) is a Slovenian novelist best known for his heartfelt descriptions of life as a member of the Slovenian minority in the pre-Second World War increasingly fascist Italy, as well as a Nazi concentration camp survivor.

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Boris Pasternak

Boris Leonidovich Pasternak (|p|æ|s|t|ər|ˌ|n|æ|k) (29 January 1890 - 30 May 1960) was a Soviet Russian poet, novelist, and literary translator.

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Boston University

Boston University (commonly referred to as BU) is a private, non-profit, research university in Boston, Massachusetts.

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Boys and Girls (short story)

"Boys and Girls" (1964 / 1968) is a short story by Alice Munro, the Canadian winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2013 which deals with the making of gender roles.

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Brasenose College, Oxford

Brasenose College (BNC), officially The King's Hall and College of Brasenose, is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford in the United Kingdom.

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Brattleboro, Vermont

Brattleboro, originally Brattleborough, is a town in Windham County, Vermont, United States.

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Brera Academy

The Accademia di Belle Arti di Brera ("academy of fine arts of Brera"), also known as the italic or Brera Academy, is a state-run tertiary public academy of fine arts in Milan, Italy.

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Brian Friel

Brian Patrick Friel (9 January 1929 – 2 October 2015), born in Omagh, Northern Ireland, was a dramatist, short story writer and founder of the Field Day Theatre Company.

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Brian P. Burns

Brian P. Burns (born July 12, 1936) is an American entrepreneur, attorney and philanthropist.

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British diaspora in Africa

The British diaspora in Africa is a population group broadly defined as English-speaking white Africans of mainly (but not only) British descent who live in or come from Sub-Saharan Africa.

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British literature

British literature is literature in the English language from the United Kingdom, Isle of Man, and Channel Islands.

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British philosophy

British philosophy refers to the philosophical tradition of the British people.

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Brodsky Synagogue Odessa

The Brodsky Synagogue in Odessa was built by the Jews from Brody in 1863 in Odessa, Ukraine.

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Brother Blue

Hugh Morgan Hill (born in Cleveland, Ohio, on July 12, 1921, died in Cambridge, Massachusetts, November 3, 2009) who performed as Brother Blue, was an African American educator, storyteller, actor, musician, street performer and living icon in Boston, in Cambridge, at Harvard University, MIT, and in the global oral storytelling community.

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Bryan Malessa

Bryan Joachim Malessa (born May 16, 1964 in Chagrin Falls, Ohio) is an American novelist.

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Buçaco Forest

Buçaco Forest (Portuguese: Mata Nacional do Buçaco) is an ancient, walled arboretum in the Centro region of Portugal and home to one of the finest dendrological collections in Europe.

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Buchenwald concentration camp

Buchenwald concentration camp (German: Konzentrationslager (KZ) Buchenwald,; literally, in English: beech forest) was a German Nazi concentration camp established on Ettersberg hill near Weimar, Germany, in July 1937, one of the first and the largest of the concentration camps on German soil, following Dachau's opening just over four years earlier.

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Buchenwald Resistance

The Buchenwald Resistance was a resistance group of prisoners at Buchenwald concentration camp.

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Bucks County, Pennsylvania

Bucks County is a county located in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.

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Buddenbrooks

Buddenbrooks is a 1901 novel by Thomas Mann, chronicling the decline of a wealthy north German merchant family over the course of four generations, incidentally portraying the manner of life and mores of the Hanseatic bourgeoisie in the years from 1835 to 1877.

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Bulgaria

Bulgaria (България, tr.), officially the Republic of Bulgaria (Република България, tr.), is a country in southeastern Europe.

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Burger's Daughter

Burger's Daughter is a political and historical novel by the South African Nobel Prize in Literature-winner Nadine Gordimer, first published in the United Kingdom in June 1979 by Jonathan Cape.

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Butler Library

Butler Library, located on the Morningside Heights campus of Columbia University at 535 West 114th Street, is the university's largest single library with over 2million volumes.

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Butyrka prison

Butyrka prison (Бутырка, a colloquial term for the official Бутырская тюрьма, Butyrskaya tyurma) is a prison in the Tverskoy District of central Moscow, Russia.

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Cañete, Cuenca

Cañete is a municipality in the Cuenca Province, Castile-La Mancha, Spain.

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Cain (novel)

Cain is the final novel by Nobel Prize-winning author José Saramago; it was first published in 2009.

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Caine Prize

The Caine Prize for African Writing is an annual literary award for the best original short story by an African writer, whether in Africa or elsewhere, published in the English language.

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Cairo

Cairo (القاهرة) is the capital of Egypt.

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Cairo Trilogy

The Cairo Trilogy (الثلاثية (The Trilogy) or ثلاثية القاهرة (The Cairo Trilogy)) is a trilogy of novels written by the Egyptian novelist and Nobel Prize winner Naguib Mahfouz, and one of the prime works of his literary career.

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Cairo University

Cairo University (جامعة القاهرة, known as the Egyptian University from 1908 to 1940, and King Fuad I University from 1940 to 1952) is Egypt's premier public university.

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Calder Publishing

Calder Publications is a publisher of books.

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Camilo José Cela

Camilo José Cela y Trulock, 1st Marquess of Iria Flavia (11 May 1916 – 17 January 2002) was a Spanish novelist, poet, story writer and essayist associated with the Generation of '36 movement.

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Camilo José Cela Conde

Camilo José Arcadio Cela Conde, 2nd Marquess of Iria Flavia (born 17 January 1946), is a Spanish writer.

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Canada

Canada is a country located in the northern part of North America.

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Canadian literature

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

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Canne al vento

Canne al vento (Italian for "Reeds in the wind") is a novel by the Italian author and Nobel Prize winner Grazia Deledda.

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Caravan of Dreams (book)

Caravan of Dreams is a book by Idries Shah first published in 1968 by Octagon Press as part of his presentation of traditional Eastern teachings and Sufi ideas for contemporary society.

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Caribbean literature

Caribbean literature is the term generally accepted for the literature of the various territories of the Caribbean region.

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Caribbean poetry

Caribbean poetry (often used synonymously for West Indian poetry) comprises any form of poem, rhyme, or lyric that derives from the Caribbean region and writers of the Caribbean diaspora.

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Carl Spitteler

Carl Friedrich Georg Spitteler (24 April 1845 – 29 December 1924) was a Swiss poet who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1919 "in special appreciation of his epic, Olympian Spring".

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Carlingue

The Carlingue (or French Gestapo) were French auxiliaries who worked for the Gestapo, Sicherheitsdienst and Geheime Feldpolizei during the occupation of France in the Second World War.

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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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Carlo Bo

Carlo Bo (25 January 1911 – 21 July 2001) was a poet, literary critic, a professor and Life senator of Italy (from 1984).

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Carlos Cuco Rojas

Carlos Rojas Hernandez (San Martin, Meta), better known as Carlos "Cuco" Rojas, is a Colombian harpist and songwriter of joropo.

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Carlos Fuentes

Carlos Fuentes Macías (November 11, 1928 – May 15, 2012) was a Mexican novelist and essayist.

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Carmen Balcells

Carmen Balcells Segala (9 August 1930 – 20 September 2015) was a literary agent of Spanish-language authors from Spain and Latin America, including six Nobel Prize–winning authors.

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Casa de las Américas Prize

The Casa de las Américas Prize (Premio Literario Casa de las Américas) is a literary award given by the Cuban Casa de las Américas.

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Castledawson

Castledawson is a village in County Londonderry, Northern Ireland.

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Catalan literature

Catalan literature is the name conventionally used to refer to literature written in the Catalan language.

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Cécile Tormay

Cécile Tormay (October 8, 1876 in Budapest – April 2, 1937 in Mátraháza) was a Hungarian writer, intellectual, right-wing political activist, feminist, literary translator, and social theorist.

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Cœur brûle et autres romances

Cœur brûle et autres romances is the title of a collection of short stories written in French by French Nobel laureate J. M. G. Le Clézio.

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CCC Film

CCC Film (German: Central Cinema Compagnie-Film GmbH) is a German film production company founded in 1946 by Artur Brauner.

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Cecil Rajendra

Cecil Rajendra (born 1941) is a Malaysian poet and lawyer.

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Cedar Park Cemetery, Emerson

Cedar Park Cemetery is a cemetery located in Emerson and Paramus, in Bergen County, New Jersey, United States.

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Center for Faulkner Studies

"There's a case of the sorry, shabby world that don't quite please you, so you create one of your own.

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Centre Against Expulsions

The Centre Against Expulsions (Zentrum gegen Vertreibungen, ZgV) was a planned German documentation centre for expulsions and ethnic cleansing, particularly the expulsion of Germans after World War II.

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Charlotte Blindheim

Charlotte Blindheim, (née Undset, 6 July 1917 – 5 March 2005) was a Norwegian archaeologist.

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Charon's obol

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

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Chartwell

Chartwell is a country house near the town of Westerham, Kent in South East England.

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Chłopomania

Chłopomania or Khlopomanstvo (Хлопоманство) are historical and literary terms inspired by the Young Poland modernist movement and the Ukrainian Hromady.

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Children of Violence

The Children of Violence is a series of five semi-autobiographical novels by British Nobel Prize in Literature-winner Doris Lessing: Martha Quest (1952), A Proper Marriage (1954), A Ripple from the Storm (1958), Landlocked (1965), and The Four-Gated City (1969).

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Chile

Chile, officially the Republic of Chile, is a South American country occupying a long, narrow strip of land between the Andes to the east and the Pacific Ocean to the west.

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Chilean literature

Chilean literature refers to all written or literary work produced in Chile or by Chilean writers.

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China Sky (film)

China Sky (aka Pearl Buck's China Sky) is a 1945 RKO Pictures film based on the novel by Pearl S. Buck.

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China–United States relations

China–United States relations, more often known as U.S.–Chinese relations, Chinese–U.S. relations, or Sino-American relations, refers to international relations between the People's Republic of China and the United States of America.

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Chinese literature

The history of Chinese literature extends thousands of years, from the earliest recorded dynastic court archives to the mature vernacular fiction novels that arose during the Ming Dynasty to entertain the masses of literate Chinese.

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Chinua Achebe

Chinua Achebe (born Albert Chinụalụmọgụ Achebe, 16 November 1930 – 21 March 2013) was a Nigerian novelist, poet, professor, and critic.

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Chitto Jetha Bhayshunyo

Where the mind is without fear (Bengali: চিত্ত যেথা ভয়শূন্য, pronunciation: t͡ʃit̪t̪o Jet̪hɐ Bhɔyʃunno, English transliteration: Chitto Jetha Bhoyshunno) is a poem written by 1913 Nobel laureate Rabindranath Tagore before India's independence.

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Chris Anyanwu

Christiana "Chris" Anyanwu MFR (born 28 October 1951) is a Nigerian journalist, publisher, author, and politician.

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Christian philosophy

Christian philosophy is a development in philosophy that is characterised by coming from a Christian tradition.

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Christian Rodska

Christian Rodska (born Christian Rodskjaer; 5 September 1945) is an English actor who has appeared in many television and radio series and narrated a number of audiobooks, including Sir Winston Churchill's Nobel Prize winning The Second World War.

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Christophe Jeżewski

Christophe Jezewski, in Polish Krzysztof Andrzej Jeżewski (born 24 April 1939) is a poet, musicologist, essayist and translator of Polish descent who has been living in France since 1970.

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Christopher Columbus in fiction

Here below is a chronology of fictional and semi-fictional stories (including plays, operas, films and TV, as well as literary works) that feature the famous explorer Christopher Columbus.

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Christopher Kasparek

Christopher Kasparek (born 1945) is a Scottish-born writer of Polish descent who has translated works by numerous authors, including Ignacy Krasicki, Bolesław Prus, Florian Znaniecki, Władysław Tatarkiewicz, Marian Rejewski, and Władysław Kozaczuk, as well as the Polish-Lithuanian Constitution of 3 May 1791.

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Chrysophyllum cainito

Chrysophyllum cainito is a tropical tree of the family Sapotaceae.

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Cimarrón (band)

Cimarrón is a Colombian musical group of festive dance music joropo from the plains of the Orinoco River.

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Cimiez

Cimiez is a neighborhood in Nice, southern France.

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Cinema of the United States

The cinema of the United States, often metonymously referred to as Hollywood, has had a profound effect on the film industry in general since the early 20th century.

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Cinque Terre

The Cinque Terre (Çinque Tære, meaning "Five Lands") is a rugged portion of coast on the Italian Riviera.

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Claddagh Records

Claddagh Records is a record label which was founded in 1959 by Garech Browne and Ivor Browne.

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Clamecy, Nièvre

Clamecy is a commune in the Nièvre department in central France.

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Clare Hall, Cambridge

Clare Hall is a constituent college of the University of Cambridge, England.

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Claude Simon

Claude Simon (10 October 1913 – 6 July 2005) was a French novelist and critic, and the 1985 Nobel Laureate in Literature.

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Coast of Poets

The Coast of Poets is a cultural space in the Valparaíso Region of Chile, named for four world-renowned Chilean poets (Pablo Neruda, Vicente Huidobro, Nicanor Parra and Violeta Parra).

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Colette

Colette (Sidonie-Gabrielle Colette, 28 January 1873 – 3 August 1954) was a French novelist nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1948.

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Cologne

Cologne (Köln,, Kölle) is the largest city in the German federal state of North Rhine-Westphalia and the fourth most populated city in Germany (after Berlin, Hamburg, and Munich).

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Colombia

Colombia, officially the Republic of Colombia, is a sovereign state largely situated in the northwest of South America, with territories in Central America.

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Comedy of menace

Comedy of menace is the body of plays written by David Campton, Nigel Dennis, N. F. Simpson, and Harold Pinter.

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Commonwealth of Nations

The Commonwealth of Nations, often known as simply the Commonwealth, is an intergovernmental organisation of 53 member states that are mostly former territories of the British Empire.

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Comparison of United States incarceration rate with other countries

The United States has the highest prison and jail population (2,121,600 in adult facilities in 2016), and the highest incarceration rate in the world (655 per 100,000 population in 2016).

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Complutense University of Madrid

The Complutense University of Madrid (Universidad Complutense de Madrid or Universidad de Madrid, Universitas Complutensis) is a public research university located in Madrid, and one of the oldest universities in the world.

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Confessions of Felix Krull

Confessions of Felix Krull is an unfinished 1954 novel by the German author Thomas Mann.

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Congress for Cultural Freedom

The Congress for Cultural Freedom (CCF) was an anti-communist advocacy group founded in 1950.

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Conrad Festival

The Conrad Festival is an annual literary festival held in Krakow since 2009.

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Conversations avec J. M. G. Le Clézio

"Conversations avec J. M. G. Le Clézio" are the written dialogues in French of Pierre Lhoste interviewing French Nobel Prize in Literature J. M. G. Le Clézio on September 2,1969 and from January 11 until January 16, 1971.

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Copper Canyon Press

Copper Canyon Press is an independent, non-profit small press, specializing in the publication of poetry and located in Port Townsend, Washington.

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Cornell University

Cornell University is a private and statutory Ivy League research university located in Ithaca, New York.

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Cornwall

Cornwall (Kernow) is a county in South West England in the United Kingdom.

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Crete

Crete (Κρήτη,; Ancient Greek: Κρήτη, Krḗtē) is the largest and most populous of the Greek islands, the 88th largest island in the world and the fifth largest island in the Mediterranean Sea, after Sicily, Sardinia, Cyprus, and Corsica.

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Criticism of Mother Teresa

The work of Roman Catholic nun, missionary, and saint Mother Teresa received mixed reactions from prominent people, governments and organizations.

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Cuban Five

The Cuban Five, also known as the Miami Five (Gerardo Hernández, Antonio Guerrero, Ramón Labañino, Fernando González, and René González), are five Cuban intelligence officers who were arrested in September 1998 and later convicted in Miami of conspiracy to commit espionage, conspiracy to commit murder, acting as an agent of a foreign government, and other illegal activities in the United States.

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Cuban literature

Cuban literature is the literature written in Cuba or outside the island by Cubans in Spanish language.

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Cultural depictions of elephants

Elephants have been depicted in mythology, symbolism and popular culture.

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Culture during the Cold War

The Cold War was reflected in culture through music, movies, books, television and other media, as well as sports and social beliefs and behavior.

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Culture in Belgrade

This article is about the culture of Belgrade, Serbia.

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Culture in post-communist Poland

With the fall of communism Polish culture and society began a process of profound transformation, marked by the return of democracy and redevelopment of civil society.

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Culture in Stockholm

Apart from being a large city with an active cultural life, Stockholm, the capital of Sweden, houses many national cultural institutions.

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Culture of Asia

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

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Culture of Australia

The culture of Australia is a Western culture, derived primarily from Britain but also influenced by the unique geography of Australia, the cultural input of Aboriginal, Torres Strait Islander and other Australian people.

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Culture of Bengal

The culture of Bengal encompasses the Bengal region in South Asia, including Bangladesh and the Indian states of West Bengal, Tripura and Assam (Barak Valley), where the Bengali language is the official and primary language.

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Culture of Canada

The culture of Canada embodies the artistic, culinary, literary, humour, musical, political and social elements that are representative of Canada and Canadians.

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Culture of Egypt

The culture of Egypt has thousands of years of recorded history.

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Culture of Finland

The culture of Finland combines indigenous heritage, as represented for example by the country's Uralic national language Finnish and the sauna, with common Nordic, and European culture.

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Culture of Germany

German culture has spanned the entire German-speaking world.

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Culture of Greece

The culture of Greece has evolved over thousands of years, beginning in Mycenaean Greece, continuing most notably into Classical Greece, through the influence of the Roman Empire and its successor the Byzantine Empire.

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Culture of Hungary

The culture of Hungary varies across Hungary, starting from the capital city of Budapest on the Danube, to the Great Plains bordering Ukraine.

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Culture of Indonesia

The culture of Indonesia has been shaped by long interaction between original indigenous customs and multiple foreign influences.

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Culture of Ireland

The culture of Ireland includes customs and traditions, language, music, art, literature, folklore, cuisine and sports associated with Ireland and the Irish people.

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Culture of New England

The culture of New England comprises a shared heritage and culture primarily shaped by its indigenous peoples, early English colonists, and waves of immigration from Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Americas.

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Culture of Northern Cyprus

The culture of Northern Cyprus is the pattern of human activity and symbolism associated with Northern Cyprus and Turkish Cypriots.

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Culture of Norway

The culture of Norway is closely linked to the country's history and geography.

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Culture of Poland

The culture of Poland is the product of its geography and its distinct historical evolution which is closely connected to its intricate thousand-year history.

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Culture of Portugal

The culture of Portugal is the result of a complex flow of different civilizations during the past millennia.

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Culture of South Africa

The culture of South Africa is known for its ethnic and cultural diversity.

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Culture of the Caribbean

The term Caribbean culture summarises the artistic, musical, literary, culinary, political and social elements that are representative of the Caribbean people all over the world.

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Culture of the Southern United States

The culture of the Southern United States, or Southern culture, is a subculture of the United States.

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Culture of the Soviet Union

The culture of the Soviet Union passed through several stages during the Soviet Union's 69-year existence.

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Culture of the United Kingdom

The culture of the United Kingdom is influenced by the UK's history as a developed state, a liberal democracy and a great power; its predominantly Christian religious life; and its composition of four countries—England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland—each of which has distinct customs, cultures and symbolism.

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Culture of the United States

The culture of the United States of America is primarily of Western culture (European) origin and form, but is influenced by a multicultural ethos that includes African, Native American, Asian, Polynesian, and Latin American people and their cultures.

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Culture of Turkey

The culture of Turkey combines a heavily diverse and heterogeneous set of elements that have been derived from the various cultures of the Eastern Mediterranean (West Asian) and Central Asian region and to a lesser degree, Eastern European, and Caucasian traditions.

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Cursed Days

Cursed Days (Окаянные дни, Okayánnye Dni) is a book by a Nobel Prize-winning Russian author Ivan Bunin, compiled of diaries and notes he made while in Moscow and Odessa in 1918-1920.

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Cypriot literature

Cypriot literature covers literature from Cyprus found mainly in Greek, Turkish, English and/or other languages, including French.

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Cyprus

Cyprus (Κύπρος; Kıbrıs), officially the Republic of Cyprus (Κυπριακή Δημοκρατία; Kıbrıs Cumhuriyeti), is an island country in the Eastern Mediterranean and the third largest and third most populous island in the Mediterranean.

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Czech literature

Czech literature is the literature written in the Czech language.

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Czech Republic

The Czech Republic (Česká republika), also known by its short-form name Czechia (Česko), is a landlocked country in Central Europe bordered by Germany to the west, Austria to the south, Slovakia to the east and Poland to the northeast.

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Czechs

The Czechs (Češi,; singular masculine: Čech, singular feminine: Češka) or the Czech people (Český národ), are a West Slavic ethnic group and a nation native to the Czech Republic in Central Europe, who share a common ancestry, culture, history and Czech language.

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Czesław Miłosz

Czesław Miłosz (30 June 1911 – 14 August 2004) was a Polish poet, prose writer, translator and diplomat.

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Daniel Hamilton (businessman)

Sir Daniel Mackinnon Hamilton (6 December 1860 – 6 December 1939) was a Scottish businessman who made Bengal his second home.

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Danish language

Danish (dansk, dansk sprog) is a North Germanic language spoken by around six million people, principally in Denmark and in the region of Southern Schleswig in northern Germany, where it has minority language status.

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Danish literature

Danish literature, a subset of Scandinavian literature, stretches back to the Middle Ages.

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Danny Dyer

Daniel John Dyer (born 24 July 1977) is an English actor who has worked in television, film and theatre.

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Dans la maison d'Edith

Dans la maison d'Edith is an essay written by French Nobel laureate J. M. G. Le Clézio.

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Danville, California

The Town of Danville is located in the San Ramon Valley in Contra Costa County, California.

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Dario Fo

Dario Fo (24 March 1926 – 13 October 2016) was an Italian actor–playwright, comedian, singer, theatre director, stage designer, songwriter, painter, political campaigner for the Italian left-wing and the recipient of the 1997 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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Dark Avenues

Dark Avenues (or Dark Alleys, Tyomnyie alleyi) is a collection of short stories by a Nobel Prize-winning Russian author Ivan Bunin written in 1937–1944, mostly in Grasse, France, first eleven stories of which were published in New York City, United States, in 1943.

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David R. Godine, Publisher

David R. Godine, Publisher is an American book publishing company, founded in 1970 in Boston, Massachusetts.

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David Spelman

David Spelman (born 1966 in Washington, D.C., United States) is an American, New York-based, record producer and curator working in recordings, films and live events.

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Désert (novel)

Désert is a novel written by French Nobel laureate writer J. M. G. Le Clézio, considered to be one of his breakthrough novels.

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De Grootste Belg

De Grootste Belg (The Greatest Belgian) was a 2005 vote conducted by Belgian public TV broadcaster Canvas, public radio broadcaster Radio 1, and newspaper De Standaard, to determine who is the Greatest Belgian of all time.

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Death in the Andes

Death in the Andes (Lituma en los Andes) is a 1993 novel by the Nobel Prize-winning Peruvian author Mario Vargas Llosa.

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Death of a Naturalist

Death of a Naturalist (1966) is a collection of poems written by Seamus Heaney, who received the 1995 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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Deaths in 1996

The following is a list of notable deaths in 1996.

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Deaths in 1998

The following is a list of notable deaths in 1998.

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Deaths in 2002

The following is a list of notable deaths in 2002.

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Deaths in April 2014

The following is a list of notable deaths in April 2014.

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Deaths in April 2015

The following is a list of notable deaths in April 2015.

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Deaths in August 2004

The following is a list of notable deaths in August 2004.

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Deaths in August 2006

The following is a list of notable deaths in August 2006.

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Deaths in August 2013

The following is a list of notable deaths in August 2013.

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Deaths in December 2008

The following is a list of notable deaths in December 2008.

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Deaths in February 2012

The following is a list of notable deaths in February 2012.

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Deaths in July 2014

The following is a list of notable deaths in July 2014.

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Deaths in March 2015

The following is a list of notable deaths in March 2015.

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Deaths in March 2017

The following is a list of notable deaths in March 2017.

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Deaths in October 2016

The following is a list of notable deaths in October 2016.

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Debits and Credits (book)

Debits and Credits is a collection of fourteen stories, nineteen poems, and two scenes from a play by Rudyard Kipling, a British writer who wrote extensively about British colonialism in India and Burma.

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Deborah Porter

Deborah Z Porter (born 1958) is non-profit director best known for founding the Boston Book Festival, which she has run since 2009.

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December 10

No description.

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December 11

No description.

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December 14

No description.

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December 1901

The following events occurred in December 1901.

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December 1911

The following events occurred in December 1911.

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December 1915

The following events occurred in December 1915.

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December 1916

The following events occurred in December 1916.

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December 1917

The following events occurred in December 1917.

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December 1922

The following events occurred in December 1922.

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December 1923

The following events occurred in December 1923.

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December 1924

The following events occurred in December 1924.

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December 1925

The following events occurred in December 1925.

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December 1926

The following events occurred in December 1926.

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December 1928

The following events occurred in December 1928.

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December 1929

The following events occurred in December 1929.

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December 1930

The following events occurred in December 1930.

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December 1931

The following events occurred in December 1931.

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December 1932

The following events occurred in December 1932.

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December 1934

The following events occurred in December 1934.

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December 1935

The following events occurred in December 1935.

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December 1936

The following events occurred in December 1936.

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December 1937

The following events occurred in December 1937.

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December 1938

The following events occurred in December 1938.

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December 1939

The following events occurred in December 1939.

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December 1944

The following events occurred in December 1944.

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December 1945

The following events occurred in December 1945.

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December 1947

The following events occurred in December 1947.

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December 1948

The following events occurred in December 1948.

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December 1949

The following events occurred in December 1949.

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December 1950

The following events occurred in December 1950.

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December 1968

The following events occurred in December 1968.

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December 20

No description.

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December 21

In the Northern Hemisphere, December 21 is usually the shortest day of the year and is sometimes regarded as the first day of winter.

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December 22

No description.

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December 24

No description.

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December 29

No description.

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December 30

No description.

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December 5

No description.

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December 8

No description.

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Declaration of Reasonable Doubt

The Declaration of Reasonable Doubt is an Internet signing petition which seeks to enlist broad public support for the Shakespeare authorship question to be accepted as a legitimate field of academic inquiry.

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Den Gyldene Freden

Den gyldene freden (The Golden Peace) is a restaurant in the old town of Stockholm, Sweden.

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Denmark

Denmark (Danmark), officially the Kingdom of Denmark,Kongeriget Danmark,.

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Dennis O'Driscoll

Dennis O'Driscoll (1 January 1954 – 24 December 2012) was an Irish poet, essayist, critic and editor.

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Der fremde Blick oder das Leben ist ein Furz in der Laterne

Der fremde Blick oder das Leben ist ein Furz in der Laterne is a book by Nobel Prize-winning author Herta Müller.

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Der Fuchs war damals schon der Jäger

Der Fuchs war damals schon der Jäger is a book by Nobel Prize-winning author Herta Müller.

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Der Herrscher

Der Herrscher (Eng: The Master, The Sovereign, or The Ruler) is a 1937 German drama film directed by Veit Harlan.

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Der König verneigt sich und tötet

Der König verneigt sich und tötet (The King Bows and Kills) is an essay book in German by Nobel Prize-winning author Herta Müller.

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Der Teufel sitzt im Spiegel

Der Teufel sitzt im Spiegel (The Devil Sits in the Mirror) is a book by Nobel Prize-winning author Herta Müller.

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Der Wächter nimmt seinen Kamm

Der Wächter nimmt seinen Kamm is a book by Nobel Prize-winning author Herta Müller.

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Derek Walcott

Sir Derek Alton Walcott, KCSL, OBE, OCC (23 January 1930 – 17 March 2017) was a Saint Lucian poet and playwright.

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Desanka Maksimović

Desanka Maksimović (Десанка Максимовић,; 16 May 1898 – 11 February 1993) was a Serbian poet, writer and translator.

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Desert Trip

Desert Trip was a six-day music festival that took place on October 7–9 and 14–16, 2016, at the Empire Polo Club in Indio, California, United States.

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Dharmaraja College

Dharmaraja College (ධර්මරාජ විද්‍යාලය), founded in 1887 is a premier Boys' School in Kandy, Sri Lanka.

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Diamond, Honour and Mercosur Konex Award winners

2017 - Communication-Journalism - Hermenegildo SábatAlso received the Maria Moors Cabot prize.

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Die blassen Herren mit den Mokkatassen

Die blassen Herren mit den Mokkatassen is a book of poems and collage art by Nobel Prize-winning author Herta Müller.

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Diego et Frida

Diego et Frida is a biography of Mexican painters Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo by French Nobel laureate J. M. G. Le Clézio.

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Disgrace

Disgrace is a novel by J. M. Coetzee, published in 1999.

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District and Circle

District and Circle is a poetry collection by Seamus Heaney, who received the 1995 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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Dmitry Merezhkovsky

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

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Doctor Zhivago (film)

Doctor Zhivago is a 1965 British-Italian epic romantic drama film directed by David Lean.

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Doctor Zhivago (novel)

Doctor Zhivagois a novel by Boris Pasternak, first published in 1957 in Italy.

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Dody Weston Thompson

Dody Weston Thompson (April 11, 1923 – October 14, 2012) was a 20th-century American photographer and chronicler of the history and craft of photography.

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Dollar, Clackmannanshire

Dollar (Dolair) is a small town in Clackmannanshire, Scotland.

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Dominican Convent High School

Dominican Convent High School (commonly referred to as Convent) is a private Catholic day school for girls in Harare, Zimbabwe.

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Door into the Dark

Door into the Dark (1969) is a poetry collection by Seamus Heaney, who received the 1995 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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Dora Melegari

Dorette (Dora) Melegari (27 June 1849 – 31 July 1924) was a Swiss writer who wrote in both French and Italian.

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Doris Lessing

Doris May Lessing (22 October 1919 – 17 November 2013) was a British novelist, poet, playwright, librettist, biographer and short story writer.

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Dorothy Thompson

Dorothy Celene Thompson (9 July 1893 – 30 January 1961) was an American journalist and radio broadcaster, who in 1939 was recognized by ''Time'' magazine as the second most influential woman in America next to Eleanor Roosevelt.

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Drückender Tango

Drückender Tango is a book by Nobel Prize-winning author Herta Müller.

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Dream on Monkey Mountain

Dream on Monkey Mountain is a play by the Nobel Prize-winning St. Lucian poet and playwright Derek Walcott.

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Dreams (Ivan Bunin)

"Dreams" (translit) is a novella by a Nobel Prize-winning Russian author Ivan Bunin, written in the late 1903 and first published in the first book of the Znanie (Knowledge) Saint Petersburg literary almanach in 1904, where it was coupled with another short novella, "The Golden Bottom" (Золотое дно), under the common title "Black Earth" (Чернозём).

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Dry Valley (novel)

Dry Valley (translit) is a short novel by a Nobel Prize-winning Russian author Ivan Bunin, first published in the April 1912 issue of the Saint Petersburg Vestnik Evropy magazine.

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Dublin

Dublin is the capital of and largest city in Ireland.

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Dusklands

Dusklands (1974) is the debut novel by J. M. Coetzee, winner of the 2003 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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Dylan's Visions of Sin

Dylan's Visions of Sin is a 2004 book by Christopher Ricks, a British poetry scholar and literary critic, in which he considers the songs of Bob Dylan as works of literature (in 2016 Dylan was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature.) Ricks' analysis of Dylan's songs is organized around the Christian theological categories of the seven deadly sins, four virtues, and three graces.

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E. D. Morel

Edmund Dene Morel (born Georges Eduard Pierre Achille Morel de Ville; 10 July 1873 – 12 November 1924) was a British journalist, author, pacifist, and politician.

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E. M. Forster

Edward Morgan Forster (1 January 18797 June 1970) was an English novelist, short story writer, essayist and librettist.

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East of Eden (novel)

East of Eden is a novel by Nobel Prize winner John Steinbeck, published in September 1952.

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Edith Wharton

Edith Wharton (born Edith Newbold Jones; January 24, 1862 – August 11, 1937) was an American novelist, short story writer, and designer.

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Edmond Picard

Edmond Picard (15 December 1836 – 19 February 1924) was a Belgian jurist and writer.

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Edmund Blunden

Edmund Charles Blunden, CBE, MC (1 November 1896 – 20 January 1974) was an English poet, author and critic.

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Edvarts Virza

Edvarts Virza (born as Jēkabs Eduards Liekna; December 27, 1883, Salgale parish – March 1, 1940, Riga) was a Latvian writer, poet and translator.

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Edward John Thompson

Edward John Thompson (9 April 1886 – 28 April 1946) was a British scholar, novelist, historian and translator.

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Edward Seidensticker

Edward George Seidensticker (February 11, 1921 – August 26, 2007) was a noted post-World War II scholar, historian, and preeminent translator of classical and contemporary Japanese literature.

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Edwin Arlington Robinson

Edwin Arlington Robinson (December 22, 1869 – April 6, 1935) was an American poet.

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Egypt

Egypt (مِصر, مَصر, Khēmi), officially the Arab Republic of Egypt, is a transcontinental country spanning the northeast corner of Africa and southwest corner of Asia by a land bridge formed by the Sinai Peninsula.

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Egyptian literature

Egyptian literature traces its beginnings to ancient Egypt and is some of the earliest known literature.

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Eine warme Kartoffel ist ein warmes Bett

Eine warme Kartoffel ist ein warmes Bett is a book by Nobel Prize-winning author Herta Müller.

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El Comité 1973 (literary magazine)

El Comité 1973 (The Committee 1973) is a Mexican, independent, bimonthly, digital magazine devoted to dissemination, criticism and literary creation, whose mission is to disseminate literary texts and visual works of different creators in order to increase the culture of people around the world.

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El Español de la Historia

El Español de la Historia ("The Spaniard of History") was an Antena 3 show which aired on May 2007, based on the original BBC series 100 Greatest Britons.

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El Señor Presidente

El Señor Presidente (Mister President) is a 1946 novel written in Spanish by Nobel Prize-winning Guatemalan writer and diplomat Miguel Ángel Asturias (1899–1974).

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Electric Light (poetry collection)

Electric Light (Faber and Faber, 2001) is a poetry collection by Seamus Heaney, who received the 1995 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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Elena Cué

Elena Cué (1972) is a Spanish businesswoman, art expert and writer.

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Elena Miramova

Elena Miramova (27 May 1901 – 8 July 1992, California Department of Health Services, Office of Health Information and Research, Vital Statistics Section, RootsWeb.ancestry.com, 1 September 2008.) was a Russian-born actress and playwright.

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Eleni Sikelianos

Eleni Sikélianòs is an American experimental poet with a particular interest in scientific idiom.

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Elfriede Jelinek

Elfriede Jelinek (born 20 October 1946) is an Austrian playwright and novelist.

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Elias Canetti

Elias Canetti (Елиас Канети; 25 July 1905 – 14 August 1994) was a German-language author, born in Ruse, Bulgaria to a merchant family.

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Elias Wessén

Elias Wessén (15 April 1889 – 30 January 1981) was a prominent Swedish linguist and a professor of Scandinavian languages at Stockholm University (1928–1956).

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Elie Wiesel

Eliezer "Elie" Wiesel (’Ēlí‘ézer Vízēl; September 30, 1928 – July 2, 2016) was a Romanian-born American Jewish writer, professor, political activist, Nobel Laureate, and Holocaust survivor.

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Elisaveta Bagriana

Elisaveta Bagryana (Елисавета Багряна) (16 April 1893 – 23 March 1991), born Elisaveta Lyubomirova Belcheva (Елисавета Любомирова Белчева), was a Bulgarian poet who wrote her first verses while living with her family in Veliko Tarnovo in 1907–08.

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Eliza Orzeszkowa

Eliza Orzeszkowa (June 6, 1841 – May 18, 1910) was a Polish novelist and a leading writer, Britannica, Retrieved June 5, 2016 of the Positivism movement during foreign Partitions of Poland.

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Elizabeth Costello

Elizabeth Costello is a 2003 novel by South African-born Nobel Laureate J. M. Coetzee.

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Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine

Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine is an American digest size fiction magazine specializing in crime fiction, particularly detective fiction, and mystery fiction.

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Embassy of Poland, Paris

The Embassy of Poland in Paris is the diplomatic mission of the Republic of Poland to the French Republic.

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Emir Kusturica

Emir Kusturica (Емир Кустурица, born 24 November 1954) is a Serbian filmmaker, actor and musician.

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Endorsements in the Australian Marriage Law Postal Survey

A number of politicians, public figures, media outlets, businesses and other organisations endorsed voting either in favour or against same-sex marriage during the Australian Marriage Law Postal Survey.

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Enfances (essay)

"Enfances" is an essay written by French Nobel laureate J. M. G. Le Clézio for a book of the same name which was co-written by Brigitte Fossey and set to photographs by Christophe Kuhn.

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English literature

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

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English novel

The English novel is an important part of English literature.

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Enitharmon Press

Enitharmon Press is an independent British publishing house specialising in artists’ books, poetry, limited editions and original prints.

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Enrique Laguerre

Enrique Arturo Laguerre Vélez (May 3, 1906 – June 16, 2005) was a teacher, novelist, playwright, critic, and newspaper columnist (for El Vocero) from Moca, Puerto Rico.

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Enrique Larreta

Enrique Rodríguez Larreta (March 4, 1875 — July 6, 1961) was an Argentine writer, academic, diplomat and art collector.

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Erasmus Zahl

Erasmus Benedicter (Benedigt) Kjerschow (Kjerskov) Zahl (19 January 1826 – 29 April 1900) was a privileged trader and an island owner at Kjerringøy in Nordland, Norway.

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Erich Kästner

Emil Erich Kästner (23 February 1899 – 29 July 1974) was a German author, poet, screenwriter and satirist, known primarily for his humorous, socially astute poems and for children's books including Emil and the Detectives.

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Erik Axel Karlfeldt

Erik Axel Karlfeldt (20 July 1864 – 8 April 1931) was a Swedish poet whose highly symbolist poetry masquerading as regionalism was popular and won him the Nobel Prize in Literature posthumously in 1931 after he had been nominated by Nathan Söderblom, member of the Swedish Academy.

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Erkner

Erkner is a town in the Oder-Spree District of Brandenburg, Germany, situated on the south-eastern edge of the German capital city Berlin.

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Ernest Hecht

Ernest Hecht (21 September 1929 – 13 February 2018)Katherine Cowdrey,, The Bookseller, 13 February 2018.

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Ernest Hemingway

Ernest Miller Hemingway (July 21, 1899 – July 2, 1961) was an American novelist, short story writer, and journalist.

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Ernest Lavisse

Ernest Lavisse (17 December 1842 – 18 August 1922) was a French historian.

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Ernesto Cardenal

Ernesto Cardenal Martínez (born 20 January 1925) is a Nicaraguan former Catholic priest, poet, and politician.

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Erno Polgar

Ernő Polgár (born Ernö Csupity; 27 January 1954 in Bácsalmás) is a Radnoti Prize-winning Nagy Lajos Prize-winning In 2007 he won the one of the highest Hungarian prizes:(Knight’s Cross of the Order of the Republic of Hungary) He was nominated for Nobel Prize in Literature in 2017 for the year of 2018.

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Ernst Immanuel Cohen Brandes

Ernst Immanuel Cohen Brandes (1 February 1844 – 6 August 1892) was a Danish economist, writer, and newspaper editor best known for editing the Kjøbenhavns Børs-Tidende, which published articles written by leading Danish men of letters, including future Nobel Prize winner Henrik Pontoppidan, during a period later hailed as the Modern Breakthrough in Danish literature.

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Erwin Guido Kolbenheyer

Erwin Guido Kolbenheyer (December 30, 1878, Budapest – April 12, 1962, Munich) was an Austrian novelist, poet and playwright.

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Esperanto

Esperanto (or; Esperanto) is a constructed international auxiliary language.

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Esperanto literature

Esperanto literature is literature in the Esperanto language.

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Este sau nu este Ion

Este sau nu este Ion is a poetry collection by Nobel Prize-winning author Herta Müller.

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Estonian literature

Estonian literature (eesti kirjandus) is literature written in the Estonian language (c. 1,100,000 speakers) The domination of Estonia after the Northern Crusades, from the 13th century to 1918 by Germany, Sweden, and Russia resulted in few early written literary works in the Estonian language.

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Eugen Jebeleanu

Eugen Jebeleanu (24 April 1911 – 21 August 1991), Romanian poet, was born in Câmpina, where he attended elementary school.

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Eugene O'Neill

Eugene Gladstone O'Neill (October 16, 1888 – November 27, 1953) was an American playwright and Nobel laureate in Literature.

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Eugene O'Neill Jr.

Eugene Gladstone O'Neill Jr. (May 5, 1910 – September 25, 1950) was an American professor of Greek literature and son of Nobel Prize-winning playwright Eugene O'Neill.

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Eugene O'Neill National Historic Site

The Eugene O'Neill National Historic Site, located in Danville, California, preserves Tao House, the Monterey Colonial hillside home of America's only Nobel Prize-winning playwright, Eugene O'Neill.

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Eugenio Montale

Eugenio Montale (12 October 1896 – 12 September 1981) was an Italian poet, prose writer, editor and translator, and recipient of the 1975 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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Euro gold and silver commemorative coins (Belgium)

Euro gold and silver commemorative coins are special euro coins minted and issued by member states of the Eurozone, mainly in gold and silver, although other precious metals are also used in rare occasions.

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Eyvind Johnson

Eyvind Johnson (29 July 1900 – 25 August 1976) was a Swedish novelist and short story writer.

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Faiz Ahmad Faiz

Faiz Ahmad Faiz MBE, NI (فَیض احمد فَیض), (born 13 February 1911 – 20 November 1984) was a Pakistani leftist poet and author, and one of the most celebrated writers of the Urdu language.

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Fantômes dans la rue

Fantômes dans la rue (Ghosts in the Street) is the title of a novella written in French by French Nobel laureate writer J. M. G. Le Clézio.

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Farris (mineral water)

Farris is a brand of mineral water produced in Larvik.

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Farsø

Farsø is a town with a population of 3,299 (1 January 2014) in Region Nordjylland in Denmark in the Vesthimmerland municipality.

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Fatelessness

Fateless or Fatelessness (Sorstalanság, lit. "Fatelessness") is a novel by Imre Kertész, winner of the 2002 Nobel Prize for literature, written between 1969 and 1973 and first published in 1975.

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Fausto Pirandello

Fausto Pirandello (17 June 1899 – 30 November 1975) was an Italian painter belonging to the modern movement of the Scuola romana (Roman School).

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Fayuan Temple

The Fayuan Temple, situated in the southwest quarter of central Beijing, is one of the city's oldest and most renowned Buddhist temples.

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Fürstlich Sächsischer Hofbuchdruckerei zu Altenburg

Fürstlich Sächsischer Hofbuchdruckerei of Altenburg, Germany, is used generically in this article to denote a succession of book printers (sometimes synonymous with "publishers") based in Altenburg, in the German state of Thuringia (formerly East Germany), that — under various capacities, names, and owners – have endured as one continuous printing operation, without interruption (save and except wars), for years — since 1594, the early modern German period.

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February 1

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February 10

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February 11

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February 12

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February 16

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February 17

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February 18

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February 19

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February 1900

The following events occurred in February 1900.

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February 2

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February 21

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February 27

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February 7

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February 8

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February 9

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Fedir Bohatyrchuk

Fedir Parfenovych Bohatyrchuk (also Bogatirchuk, Bohatirchuk, Bogatyrtschuk) (in Ukrainian: Федір Парфенович Богатирчук, Fedir Parfenovych Bohatyrchuk; in Russian: Фёдор Парфеньевич Богатырчук, Fyodor Parfenyevich Bogatyrchuk) (27 November 1892 – 4 September 1984) was a Russian-Soviet-Ukrainian-Canadian International Master of chess, and an International Master of correspondence chess.

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Feilitzschstraße

The Feilitzschstraße is a roughly 450-meter-long street in Munich's Schwabing district.

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Fela Kuti

Fela Anikulapo Kuti (15 October 1938 – 2 August 1997), also professionally known as Fela Kuti, or simply Fela, was a Nigerian multi-instrumentalist, musician, composer, pioneer of the Afrobeat music genre, human rights activist, and political maverick.

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Felix Timmermans

Leopold Maximiliaan Felix Timmermans (5 July 1886 – 24 January 1947) is a much translated author of Flanders.

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Feminist children's literature

Feminist children's literature is the writing of children's literature through a feminist lens.

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Ferenc Herczeg

Ferenc Herczeg (born Franz Herzog, 22 September 1863 in Versec, Kingdom of Hungary, Austrian Empire – 24 February 1954 in Budapest, Hungary) was a Hungarian playwright and author who promoted conservative nationalist opinion in his country.

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Ferenc Juhász (poet)

Ferenc Juhász (16 August 1928 – 2 December 2015) was a Hungarian poet and Golden Wreath laureate (1992).

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Fernando Arrabal

Fernando Arrabal Terán (born August 11, 1932) is a Spanish playwright, screenwriter, film director, novelist and poet.

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Fernando González (writer)

Fernando González Ochoa (April 24, 1895 – February 16, 1964), was a Colombian writer and existentialist philosopher known as "el filósofo de Otraparte" (The Philosopher from somewhere else). He wrote about sociology, history, art, morality, economics, epistemology and theology in a magisterial and creative way, using different genres of literature. González is considered one of the most original writers of Colombia during the 20th century. His ideas were controversial and had a great influence in the Colombian society at his time and today. The González work was the inspiration of Nadaism, a literary movement founded by one of his disciples, Gonzalo Arango. The Otraparte Villa, his house in Envigado, is today a museum and the headquarters of the cultural foundation to preserve and promote his legacy. The place was declared a National Patrimony of Colombia in 2006.

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Fernando Romeo Lucas García

General Fernando Romeo Lucas García (4 July 1924 – 27 May 2006) was the 25th President of Guatemala from 1 July 1978 to 23 March 1982.

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Field Work (poetry collection)

Field Work (1979) is the fifth poetry collection by Seamus Heaney, who received the 1995 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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Finland

Finland (Suomi; Finland), officially the Republic of Finland is a country in Northern Europe bordering the Baltic Sea, Gulf of Bothnia, and Gulf of Finland, between Norway to the north, Sweden to the northwest, and Russia to the east.

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Finnish Civil War

The Finnish Civil War was a conflict for the leadership and control of Finland during the country's transition from a Grand Duchy of the Russian Empire to an independent state.

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Five Dials

Five Dials is a digital literary magazine published from London by Hamish Hamilton, an imprint of Penguin Books.

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Flávio de Carvalho

Flávio de Rezende Carvalho (1899–1973) was a Brazilian architect and artist.

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Flora Fraser (writer)

Flora Fraser Soros (born 30 October 1958) is an English writer of historical biographies.

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Foe (novel)

Foe is a 1986 novel by South African-born Nobel laureate J. M. Coetzee.

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Foreign support of Finland in the Winter War

The foreign support in the Winter War contained material, men and moral support to the Finnish struggle against the Soviet Union in the Winter War.

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Four greats of Chilean poetry

The four greats of Chilean poetry is the name given to the group of most important poets of Chilean literature: Gabriela Mistral, Vicente Huidobro, Pablo de Rokha and Pablo Neruda.

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François Mauriac

François Charles Mauriac (11 October 1885 – 1 September 1970) was a French novelist, dramatist, critic, poet, and journalist, a member of the Académie française (from 1933), and laureate of the Nobel Prize in Literature (1952).

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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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Franca Rame

Franca Rame (18 July 1929 – 29 May 2013) was an Italian theatre actress, playwright and political activist.

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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 Beckett

Frances Beckett (1880-1951), Irish artist, was the paternal aunt of Nobel laureate Samuel Beckett.

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Francesco Benozzo

Francesco Benozzo (born 22 February 1969) is an Italian poet, musician and philologist.

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Francesco D'Ovidio

Francesco D'Ovidio (Campobasso, 5 December 1849 – Naples, 24 November 1925) was an Italian philologist and literary critic.

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Francisco Alonso Liongson

Francisco Alonso Liongson (1896–1965) lived in one of the most exciting periods of Philippine history.

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Francisco Matos Paoli

Francisco Matos Paoli March 9, 1915 – July 10, 2000), was a Puerto Rican poet, critic, and essayist who in 1977 was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature. His books were rooted in three major literary movements in Latin America: Romanticism, Modernism, and Postmodernism. Paoli was also a Secretary General of the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party and a Puerto Rican patriot. In 1950 he was imprisoned for having a Puerto Rican flag in his home, and for speaking on behalf of Puerto Rico's independence.

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Frankétienne

Frankétienne (born Franck Étienne on April 12, 1936 in Ravine-Sèche, Haiti) is a Haitian writer, poet, playwright, painter, musician, activist and intellectual.

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Frans Eemil Sillanpää

Frans Eemil Sillanpää (16 September 1888 – 3 June 1964) was one of the most famous Finnish writers and in 1939 became the first Finnish writer to be awarded the Nobel Prize for literature "for his deep understanding of his country's peasantry and the exquisite art with which he has portrayed their way of life and their relationship with Nature".

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Franz Hellens

Franz Hellens, born Frédéric van Ermengem (8 September 1881, Brussels – 20 January 1972, Brussels) was a prolific Belgian novelist, poet and critic.

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Franz Kafka Prize

The Franz Kafka Prize is an international literary award presented in honour of Franz Kafka, the German language novelist.

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Franz Kafka Society

The Franz Kafka Society is a non-profit organisation established in 1990 to celebrate the heritage of German Language literature in Prague.

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Frédéric Mistral

Frédéric Mistral (Frederic Mistral, 8 September 1830 – 25 March 1914) was a French writer and lexicographer of the Occitan language.

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Frédéric Regard

Frédéric Regard is a professor of English Literature at Paris-Sorbonne University, where he teaches 19th-, 20th- and 21st-century literature and literary theory.

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Fredericia

Fredericia is a town located in Fredericia municipality in the southeastern part of the Jutland peninsula in Denmark, in a sub-region also known as Trekantsområdet (the Triangle Area).

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Frederick Wood (historian)

Frederick Lloyd Whitfeld "Freddie" Wood (29 September 1903 – 11 September 1989) was a notable New Zealand historian and university professor.

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Free City of Danzig

The Free City of Danzig (Freie Stadt Danzig; Wolne Miasto Gdańsk) was a semi-autonomous city-state that existed between 1920 and 1939, consisting of the Baltic Sea port of Danzig (now Gdańsk, Poland) and nearly 200 towns and villages in the surrounding areas.

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Freedom to Dream and Freedom to Speak

"La liberté pour Rêver" and "La liberté pour parler" are essays written in French by French Nobel laureate J. M. G. Le Clézio and translated into English as "Freedom to Dream" and "Freedom to Speak" and published by World Literature Today.

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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 poetry

French poetry is a category of French literature.

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Friedenau

Friedenau is a locality (Ortsteil) within the borough (Bezirk) of Tempelhof-Schöneberg in Berlin, Germany.

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Fryken

Fryken is a chain of three lakes in Värmland, Sweden: Upper, Middle and Lower Fryken.

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Gabriel García Márquez

Gabriel José de la Concordia García Márquez (6 March 1927 – 17 April 2014) was a Colombian novelist, short-story writer, screenwriter and journalist, known affectionately as Gabo or Gabito throughout Latin America.

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Gabriela Mistral

Lucila Godoy Alcayaga (7 April 1889 – 10 January 1957), known by her pseudonym Gabriela Mistral, was a Chilean poet-diplomat, educator and humanist.

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Galileo (1975 film)

Galileo is a 1975 biographical film about the 17th century scientist Galileo Galilei, whose astronomical observations with the newly invented telescope led to a profound conflict with the Roman Catholic Church.

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Gao (surname)

Gao is an East Asian surname of Chinese origin that can be literally translated as "high" or "tall".

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Gao Xingjian

Gao Xingjian (born January 4, 1940) is a Chinese émigré novelist, playwright, and critic who in 2000 was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature “for an oeuvre of universal validity, bitter insights and linguistic ingenuity.” He is also a noted translator (particularly of Samuel Beckett and Eugène Ionesco), screenwriter, stage director, and a celebrated painter.

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Gaomi

Gaomi is a county-level city of eastern Shandong province, China, under the administration of Weifang City.

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Gary Yourofsky

Gary Yourofsky (born August 19, 1970) is an American animal rights activist and lecturer.

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Gaspar Núñez de Arce

Gaspar Núñez de Arce (1834–1903) was a Spanish poet, dramatist and statesman.

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Gaston Paris

Bruno Paulin Gaston Paris (9 August 1839 – 5 March 1903) was a French writer and scholar.

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Gausdal

Gausdal is a municipality in Oppland county, Norway.

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Götz Kubitschek

Götz Kubitschek at a PEGIDA rally on 13 April 2015 Götz Kubitschek (born 17 August 1970) is a German publisher, journalist and right-wing political activist.

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Günter Grass

Günter Wilhelm Grass (16 October 1927 – 13 April 2015) was a German novelist, poet, playwright, illustrator, graphic artist, sculptor, and recipient of the 1999 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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Genealogies of a Crime

Genealogies of a Crime (Généalogies d'un crime, Genealogias de um Crime) is a 1997 French-Portuguese film directed by Raúl Ruiz.

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Gens des nuages

Gens des nuages is a travel journal written in French by the French Nobel laureate J. M. G. Le Clézio and his wife Jémia.

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Georg Büchner Prize

The Georg Büchner Prize (Georg-Büchner-Preis) is—along with the Goethe Prize—the most important literary prize for the German language.

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George Bernard Shaw

George Bernard Shaw (26 July 1856 – 2 November 1950), known at his insistence simply as Bernard Shaw, was an Irish playwright, critic, polemicist, and political activist.

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George Lansing Raymond

George Lansing Raymond, (1839–1929) was a prominent professor of Aesthetic Criticism at Princeton University (1881–1905) and author of a new system of esthetics.

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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 Soros

George Soros, Hon (Soros György,; born György Schwartz; August 12, 1930) is a Hungarian-American investor, business magnate, philanthropist, political activist and author.

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Georges Duhamel

Georges Duhamel (30 June 1884 – 13 April 1966) was a French author, born in Paris.

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Georgios Drossinis

Georgios Drosinis (Γεώργιος Δροσίνης; 9 December 1859 – 3 January 1951) was a Greek author and poet of the New Athenian School (Greek literary Generation of the 1880s), a scholar and an editor.

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Gerald Martin

Gerald Martin (born 1944) is a critic of Latin American fiction.

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Gerhart Hauptmann

Gerhart Johann Robert Hauptmann (15 November 1862 – 6 June 1946) was a German dramatist and novelist.

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German Autumn (book)

German Autumn (original title: Tysk höst) is a book published in 1947 collecting a series of journalistic essays by Swedish novelist Stig Dagerman.

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German Empire

The German Empire (Deutsches Kaiserreich, officially Deutsches Reich),Herbert Tuttle wrote in September 1881 that the term "Reich" does not literally connote an empire as has been commonly assumed by English-speaking people.

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German language

German (Deutsch) is a West Germanic language that is mainly spoken in Central Europe.

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Germans

Germans (Deutsche) are a Germanic ethnic group native to Central Europe, who share a common German ancestry, culture and history.

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Germans of Romania

The Germans of Romania or Rumäniendeutsche are an ethnic group of Romania.

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Germán Espinosa

Germán Espinosa Villareal (April 30, 1938 – October 17, 2007) was a Colombian novelist, poet and author born and based in Cartagena, Colombia.

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Gert Fylking

Gert Åke Fylking, born on 7 October 1945 in Stockholm, is a Swedish actor, journalist, politician (Christian Democrat) and anchorman of the radio programme Gert's Värld on Radio 1 101,9 FM, where he is known by the nickname of Fylking Sverige (a handle translatable as Your Man Fylking from Sweden).

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Gertrud von Le Fort

The Baroness Gertrud von Le Fort (full name Gertrud Auguste Lina Elsbeth Mathilde Petrea Freiin von Le Fort; 11 October 1876 – 1 November 1971) was a German writer of novels, poems and essays.

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Ghent

Ghent (Gent; Gand) is a city and a municipality in the Flemish Region of Belgium.

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Ghost Train to the Eastern Star

Ghost Train to the Eastern Star is a 2008 train travel book by Paul Theroux.

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Giorgi Leonidze State Museum of Literature

Giorgi Leonidze State Museum of Literature, Georgia (Georgian: საქართველოს გიორგი ლეონიძის სახელობის მუზეუმი) was founded in 1930 upon the initiative of David Arsenishvili, a legendary museum-founder, who also was the creator of Tbilisi Theater Museum, and later the famous Andrej Rublow museum in Moscow.

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Giorgos Seferis

Giorgos or George Seferis (Γιώργος Σεφέρης), the pen name of Georgios Seferiades (Γεώργιος Σεφεριάδης; – September 20, 1971), was a Greek poet-diplomat.

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Giosuè Carducci

Giosuè Alessandro Giuseppe Carducci (27 July 1835 – 16 February 1907) was an Italian poet and teacher.

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Girls High School, Harare

Girls High School Harare, commonly referred to as "GHSH", was the first public school for girls founded in 1898 in the then city of Salisbury, Rhodesia, which is now Harare, Zimbabwe.

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Gitanjali

Gitanjali (lit) is a collection of poems by the Bengali poet Rabindranath Tagore.

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Giwi Margwelaschwili

Giwi Margwelaschwili (გივი მარგველაშვილი) (born December 14, 1927 in Berlin) is a German-language Georgian writer and philosopher.

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Gljúfrasteinn

Gljúfrasteinn is a writer's home museum, which was the former home of Halldór Kiljan Laxness, a 1955 Nobel Prize for Literature winner.

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Golden Lane

Golden Lane (Zlatá ulička) is a street situated in Prague Castle, Czech Republic.

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Golden Twenties

The Golden Twenties, also known as The Happy Twenties, is the decade of the 1920s in Germany.

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Golders Green Crematorium

Golders Green Crematorium and Mausoleum was the first crematorium to be opened in London, and one of the oldest crematoria in Britain.

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Golegã

Golegã is a small municipality in Santarém District in Portugal.

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Gonzague de Reynold

Gonzague de Reynold (1880–1970) was a Swiss writer, historian, and right-wing political activist.

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Gotham Book Mart

The Gotham Book Mart was a famous Midtown Manhattan bookstore and cultural landmark that operated from 1920 to 2007.

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Gottfried Benn

Gottfried Benn (2 May 1886 – 7 July 1956) was a German poet, essayist, and physician.

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Graham Greene

Henry Graham Greene (2 October 1904 – 3 April 1991), better known by his pen name Graham Greene, was an English novelist regarded by many as one of the greatest writers of the 20th century.

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Grasse

Grasse (Provençal Grassa in classical norm or Grasso in Mistralian norm; traditional Grassa) is a commune in the Alpes-Maritimes department (of which it is a sub-prefecture), on the French Riviera.

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Grazia Deledda

Grazia Maria Cosima Damiana Deledda (28 September 1871 – 15 August 1936) was an Italian writer who received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1926 "for her idealistically inspired writings which with plastic clarity picture the life on her native island and with depth and sympathy deal with human problems in general".

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Great Greeks

Great Greeks (Μεγάλοι Έλληνες, Megali Ellines) is a television program, produced and broadcast by the Greek television network Skai TV, based on the BBC's equivalent show 100 Greatest Britons.

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Greatest Croatian

The Greatest Croatian (Najveći Hrvat) was a poll conducted over five weeks in 2003 by the Croatian weekly Nacional.

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Greece

No description.

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Greed (Jelinek novel)

Greed (Gier) is a 2000 novel by the Austrian writer Elfriede Jelinek.

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Greek literature

Greek literature dates from ancient Greek literature, beginning in 800 BC, to the modern Greek literature of today.

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Greek military junta of 1967–1974

The Greek military junta of 1967–1974, commonly known as the Regime of the Colonels (καθεστώς των Συνταγματαρχών), or in Greece simply The Junta (or; Χούντα), The Dictatorship (Η Δικτατορία) and The Seven Years (Η Επταετία), was a series of far-right military juntas that ruled Greece following the 1967 Greek coup d'état led by a group of colonels on 21 April 1967.

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Greeks

The Greeks or Hellenes (Έλληνες, Éllines) are an ethnic group native to Greece, Cyprus, southern Albania, Italy, Turkey, Egypt and, to a lesser extent, other countries surrounding the Mediterranean Sea. They also form a significant diaspora, with Greek communities established around the world.. Greek colonies and communities have been historically established on the shores of the Mediterranean Sea and Black Sea, but the Greek people have always been centered on the Aegean and Ionian seas, where the Greek language has been spoken since the Bronze Age.. Until the early 20th century, Greeks were distributed between the Greek peninsula, the western coast of Asia Minor, the Black Sea coast, Cappadocia in central Anatolia, Egypt, the Balkans, Cyprus, and Constantinople. Many of these regions coincided to a large extent with the borders of the Byzantine Empire of the late 11th century and the Eastern Mediterranean areas of ancient Greek colonization. The cultural centers of the Greeks have included Athens, Thessalonica, Alexandria, Smyrna, and Constantinople at various periods. Most ethnic Greeks live nowadays within the borders of the modern Greek state and Cyprus. The Greek genocide and population exchange between Greece and Turkey nearly ended the three millennia-old Greek presence in Asia Minor. Other longstanding Greek populations can be found from southern Italy to the Caucasus and southern Russia and Ukraine and in the Greek diaspora communities in a number of other countries. Today, most Greeks are officially registered as members of the Greek Orthodox Church.CIA World Factbook on Greece: Greek Orthodox 98%, Greek Muslim 1.3%, other 0.7%. Greeks have greatly influenced and contributed to culture, arts, exploration, literature, philosophy, politics, architecture, music, mathematics, science and technology, business, cuisine, and sports, both historically and contemporarily.

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Gregor Gysi

Gregor Gysi (born 16 January 1948) is a German attorney and key politician of the political party The Left (Die Linke).

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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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Growth of the Soil

Growth of the Soil (Norwegian Markens Grøde), is a novel by Knut Hamsun which won him the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1920.

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Guadeloupe

Guadeloupe (Antillean Creole: Gwadloup) is an insular region of France located in the Leeward Islands, part of the Lesser Antilles in the Caribbean.

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Guatemala

Guatemala, officially the Republic of Guatemala (República de Guatemala), is a country in Central America bordered by Mexico to the north and west, the Pacific Ocean to the southwest, Belize to the northeast, the Caribbean to the east, Honduras to the east and El Salvador to the southeast.

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Guatemalan Civil War

The Guatemalan Civil War ran from 1960 to 1996.

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Guglielmo Ferrero

Guglielmo Ferrero (July 21, 1871 — August 3, 1942) was an Italian historian, journalist and novelist, author of the Greatness and Decline of Rome (5 volumes, published after English translation 1907–1909).

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Gulag

The Gulag (ГУЛАГ, acronym of Главное управление лагерей и мест заключения, "Main Camps' Administration" or "Chief Administration of Camps") was the government agency in charge of the Soviet forced labor camp system that was created under Vladimir Lenin and reached its peak during Joseph Stalin's rule from the 1930s to the 1950s.

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Gunnar Sommerfeldt

Gunnar Sommerfeldt (4 September 1890 – 30 August 1947) was a Danish actor and film maker.

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Gunturu Seshendra Sarma

Gunturu Seshendra Sarma B.A. B.L. (20 October 1927 – 30 May 2007), also known as Yuga Kavi, was a Telugu poet, critic and litterateur.

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Gustave Thibon

Gustave Thibon (2 September 1903 – 19 January 2001) was a French philosopher.

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H. G. Wells

Herbert George Wells.

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Haï

“Haï” is an essay written by French Nobel laureate J. M. G. Le Clézio.

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Hackney Downs School

Hackney Downs School was a comprehensive secondary school, located near Hackney Downs off the A104 north of Hackney town centre, in the London Borough of Hackney.

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Hagen Rether

Hagen Rether (born October 8, 1969 in Bucharest) is a German political cabaret artist and musician.

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Haiti

Haiti (Haïti; Ayiti), officially the Republic of Haiti and formerly called Hayti, is a sovereign state located on the island of Hispaniola in the Greater Antilles archipelago of the Caribbean Sea.

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Hal Hartley

Hal Hartley (born November 3, 1959) is an American film director, screenwriter, producer and composer who became a key figure in the American independent film movement of the 1980s and '90s.

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Hallaig

Hallaig is a poem by Sorley MacLean.

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Halldór Laxness

Halldór Kiljan Laxness (born Halldór Guðjónsson; 23 April 1902 – 8 February 1998) was an Icelandic writer.

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Hallucinatory realism

Hallucinatory realism is a term that has been used with various definitions since at least the 1970s by critics in describing works of art.

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Hamarøy

Hamarøy ('Hábmer') is a municipality in Nordland county, Norway.

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Hanna Helena Chrzanowska

Blessed Hanna Helena Chrzanowska (7 October 1902 – 29 April 1973) was a Polish Roman Catholic who served as a nurse and was also a professed member of the Benedictine oblates.

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Hans Asperger

Johann "Hans" Friedrich Karl Asperger (18 February 1906 – 21 October 1980) was an Austrian pediatrician, medical theorist, and medical professor.

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Hans Christian Andersen Award

The Hans Christian Andersen Awards are two literary awards by the International Board on Books for Young People (IBBY), recognising one living author and one living illustrator for their "lasting contribution to children's literature".

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Hans E. Kinck

Hans Ernst Kinck (11 October 1865 – 13 October 1926) was a Norwegian author and philologist who wrote novels, short stories, dramas, and essays.

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Hanseaten (class)

The Hanseaten (Hanseatics) is a collective term for the hierarchy group (so called First Families) consisting of elite individuals and families of prestigious rank who constituted the ruling class of the free imperial city of Hamburg, conjointly with the equal First Families of the free imperial cities Bremen and Lübeck.

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Harold Bloom

Harold Bloom (born July 11, 1930) is an American literary critic and Sterling Professor of Humanities at Yale University.

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Harold Hecht

Harold Hecht (June 1, 1907 – May 26, 1985), born in New York City, was a Hollywood film producer (Best Picture "Marty" 1956), dance director and talent agent.

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Harold Pinter

Harold Pinter (10 October 1930 – 24 December 2008) was a Nobel Prize-winning British playwright, screenwriter, director and actor.

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Harold Pinter and academia

Harold Pinter and academia concerns academic recognition of and scholarship pertaining to Harold Pinter, CH, CBE (1930–2008), English playwright, screenwriter, actor, director, poet, author, political activist, and the 2005 Nobel Laureate in Literature, at the time of his death considered by many "the most influential and imitated dramatist of his generation."New York Times obituary,, by Gussow and Brantley; cf. Adams; Billington's Guardian obituary,; and Dodds.

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Harold Pinter and politics

Harold Pinter and politics concerns the political views, civic engagement, and political activism of British playwright Harold Pinter (1930–2008), the 2005 Nobel Laureate in Literature.

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Harold Pinter bibliography

Bibliography for Harold Pinter is a list of selected published primary works, productions, secondary sources, and other resources related to English playwright Harold Pinter (1930–2008), the 2005 Nobel Laureate in Literature, who was also a screenwriter, actor, director, poet, author, and political activist.

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Harriet Bosse

Harriet Sofie Bosse (19 February 1878 – 2 November 1961) was a Swedish–Norwegian actress.

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Harry Martinson

Harry Martinson (6May 190411February 1978) was a Swedish author, poet and former sailor.

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Haruki Murakami

is a Japanese writer.

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Hasard suivi de Angoli Mala

Hasard suivi de Angoli Mala is the title given to a book with two novellas, written in French by French Nobel laureate writer J. M. G. Le Clézio.

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Haverstraw (village), New York

Haverstraw is a village incorporated in 1854 in the town of Haverstraw in Rockland County, New York, United States.

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Hämäläis-Osakunta

Hämäläis-Osakunta (HO, colloquially Hämis) is one of the 15 student nations at the University of Helsinki, Finnish-speaking and established in 1653 at The Royal Academy of Turku.

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Hebrew literature

Hebrew literature consists of ancient, medieval, and modern writings in the Hebrew language.

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Heidelberg University

Heidelberg University (Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg; Universitas Ruperto Carola Heidelbergensis) is a public research university in Heidelberg, Baden-Württemberg, Germany.

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Heimat ist das, was gesprochen wird

Heimat ist das, was gesprochen wird (Home Is What Is Spoken There) is a book by Nobel Prize-winning author Herta Müller.

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Heimito von Doderer

Franz Carl Heimito, Ritter von Doderer; known as Heimito von Doderer (5 September 1896, Weidlingau (now part of, Penzing, the 14th District of Vienna) 23 December 1966, Vienna) was an Austrian writer.

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Heinrich Böll

Heinrich Theodor Böll (21 December 1917 – 16 July 1985) was one of Germany's foremost post-World War II writers.

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Heinrich Böll Foundation

The Heinrich Böll Foundation (German: Heinrich-Böll-Stiftung e.V., hbs) is a German, legally independent political foundation.

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Helena Modjeska

Helena Modjeska (October 12, 1840 – April 8, 1909), whose actual Polish surname was Modrzejewska, was a renowned actress who specialized in Shakespearean and tragic roles.

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Hem Chandra Chowdhury

Hemchandra Chowdhury (1833-1915) was a Bangladeshi king, educator, builder and social worker.

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Henri Bergson

Henri-Louis Bergson (18 October 1859 – 4 January 1941) was a French-Jewish philosopher who was influential in the tradition of continental philosophy, especially during the first half of the 20th century until World War II.

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Henri Bosco

Henri Bosco (16 November 1888 – 4 May 1976) was a French writer.

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Henriette Roland Holst

Henriette Goverdine Anna "Jet" Roland Holst-van der Schalk (24 December 1869, Noordwijk – 21 November 1952, Amsterdam) was a Dutch poet and council communist.

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Henrik Ibsen

Henrik Johan Ibsen (20 March 1828 – 23 May 1906) was a Norwegian playwright, theatre director, 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 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 James Sr.

Henry James Sr. (June 3, 1811 in Albany, New YorkDecember 18, 1882 in Boston, Massachusetts) was an American theologian and adherent of Swedenborgianism, also known for being the father of the philosopher William James, novelist Henry James, and diarist Alice James.

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Henry Woolf

Henry Woolf, (born 20 January 1930 in Holborn, London) is a British actor, theatre director and teacher of acting, drama and theatre who lives in Canada, and a longtime friend and collaborator of 2005 Nobel Laureate Harold Pinter, having stimulated Pinter to write his first play, The Room (1957), in 1956.

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Henryk (given name)

Henryk is a Polish male given name of Germanic origin.

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Henryk Sienkiewicz

Henryk Adam Aleksander Pius Sienkiewicz (also known by the pseudonym "Litwos"; 5 May 1846 – 15 November 1916) was a Polish journalist, novelist and Nobel Prize laureate.

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Herbert Spencer

Herbert Spencer (27 April 1820 – 8 December 1903) was an English philosopher, biologist, anthropologist, sociologist, and prominent classical liberal political theorist of the Victorian era.

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Herbert Thomas Mandl

Herbert Thomas Mandl (August 18, 1926 - February 22, 2007) was a Czechoslovak-German-Jewish author, concert violinist, professor of music, philosopher, inventor and lecturer.

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Herder Prize

The Herder Prize (Gottfried-von-Herder-Preis), named after the German philosopher Johann Gottfried Herder, was a prestigious international prize awarded every year to scholars and artists from Central and Southeast Europe whose life and work have contributed to the cultural understanding of European countries and their peaceful interrelations.

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Herman Teirlinck

Herman Louis Cesar Teirlinck (Sint-Jans-Molenbeek, 24 February 1879 – Beersel-Lot, 4 February 1967) was a Belgian writer.

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Hermann Broch

Hermann Broch (November 1, 1886 – May 30, 1951) was a 20th-century Austrian writer, considered one of the major Modernists.

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Hermann Hesse

Hermann Karl Hesse (2 July 1877 – 9 August 1962) was a German-born poet, novelist, and painter.

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Hermann Stehr

Hermann Stehr (16 February 1864 – 11 September 1940) was a German novelist, dramatist and poet.

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Herta Müller

Herta Müller (born 17 August 1953) is a Romanian-born German novelist, poet, essayist and recipient of the 2009 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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Hibbing, Minnesota

Hibbing is a city in Saint Louis County, Minnesota, United States.

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Highgate School

Highgate School, formally Sir Roger Cholmeley's School at Highgate, is a British coeducational independent school, founded in 1565 in Highgate, London, England.

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His Dark Materials

His Dark Materials is an epic trilogy of fantasy novels by Philip Pullman consisting of Northern Lights (1995) (published as The Golden Compass in North America), The Subtle Knife (1997), and The Amber Spyglass (2000).

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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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History of Allahabad

Allahabad (Hindi: इलाहाबाद), also known by its original name Prayag (Hindi: प्रयाग), is one of the largest cities of the North Indian state of Uttar Pradesh in India.

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History of Australia

The History of Australia refers to the history of the area and people of the Commonwealth of Australia and its preceding Indigenous and colonial societies.

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History of Avignon

The following is a history of Avignon, France.

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History of Czechoslovakia (1948–89)

From the Communist coup d'état in February 1948 to the Velvet Revolution in 1989, Czechoslovakia was ruled by the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia (Czech: Komunistická strana Československa, KSČ).

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History of Danish

The Danish language developed during the Middle Ages out of the Old East Norse, the common predecessor of Danish and Swedish.

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History of Esperanto

L. L. Zamenhof developed Esperanto in the 1870s and 80s and published the first publication about it, Unua Libro, in 1887.

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History of Guatemala

The Maya civilization (2,000 BC – 250 AD) was among those that flourished in the region, with little contact with cultures outside Mesoamerica.

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History of Rome (Mommsen)

The History of Rome (Römische Geschichte) is a multi-volume history of ancient Rome written by Theodor Mommsen (1817–1903).

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History of Sardinia

Archaeological evidence of prehistoric human settlement on the island of Sardinia is present in the form of nuraghes and others prehistoric monuments, which dot the land.

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History of the Jews in Brody

The Jewish community of Brody (district city in Lviv region of western Ukraine) was one of the oldest and most well-known Jewish communities in the western part of Ukraine (and formerly in Austrian Empire / Poland up to 1939).

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History of the Jews in Poland

The history of the Jews in Poland dates back over 1,000 years.

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History of the University of Chicago

Two years after the closure of the original University of Chicago campus in Bronzeville (1857-1886), supporters succeeded in raising money for a new location.

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Honours and awards received by Harold Pinter

Honours and awards to Harold Pinter lists (in chronological order) honours, awards, prizes, and honorary degrees received by English playwright Harold Pinter (1930–2008), which often acknowledge his international importance and his reach beyond national and regional boundaries.

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Honours of Winston Churchill

Sir Winston Leonard Spencer-Churchill, KG, OM, CH, TD, PC, DL, FRS, RA received numerous honours and awards throughout his career as a British Army officer, statesman and author.

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Horace Engdahl

Horace Oscar Axel Engdahl (born 30 December 1948) is a Swedish literary historian and critic, and has been a member of the Swedish Academy since 1997.

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Hotel Margaret

The Hotel Margaret was a notable building in Brooklyn, New York.

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Howard Goldblatt

Howard Goldblatt (born 1939) is a literary translator of numerous works of contemporary Chinese (mainland China & Taiwan) fiction, including The Taste of Apples by Huang Chunming and The Execution of Mayor Yin by Chen Ruoxi.

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Howrah Bridge

Howrah Bridge is a bridge with a suspended span over the Hooghly River in West Bengal, India.

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Hugo Claus

Hugo Maurice Julien Claus (5 April 1929 – 19 March 2008) was a leading Belgian author who published under his own name as well as various pseudonyms.

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Human Chain (poetry collection)

Human Chain (2010) is the twelfth and final poetry collection by Seamus Heaney, who received the 1995 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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Humboldt's Gift

Humboldt's Gift is a 1975 novel by Canadian-American author Saul Bellow.

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Hungarians in Germany

There are around 120,000 Hungarians in Germany.

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Hunger (Hamsun novel)

Hunger (Sult) is a novel by the Norwegian author Knut Hamsun published in 1890.

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Hunger und Seide

Hunger und Seide is a book of essays (or, "mixed prose") by Nobel Prize-winning author Herta Müller.

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Hurricane Donna

Hurricane Donna was the strongest hurricane of the 1960 Atlantic hurricane season, and caused severe damage to the Lesser Antilles, the Greater Antilles, and the East Coast of the United States, especially Florida, in August–September.

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Hygiene and the Assassin

Hygiene and the Assassin (Hygiène de l'assassin, lit. "The Assassin's Hygiene") is the first novel of the Belgian novelist Amélie Nothomb.

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Iberian federalism

Iberian federalism, Pan-Iberism or simply Iberism (Spanish and Iberismo, Iberisme) are the names for the pan-nationalist ideology supporting the federation of all the territories of the Iberian Peninsula.

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IBM

The International Business Machines Corporation (IBM) is an American multinational technology company headquartered in Armonk, New York, United States, with operations in over 170 countries.

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Iceberg Theory

The Iceberg Theory (sometimes known as the "theory of omission") is a style of writing (turned colloquialism) coined by American writer Ernest Hemingway.

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Iceland

Iceland is a Nordic island country in the North Atlantic, with a population of and an area of, making it the most sparsely populated country in Europe.

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Icelandic literature

Icelandic literature refers to literature written in Iceland or by Icelandic people.

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Ida Orloff

Ida Orloff (also written Ida Orlov, pseudonym of Ida Siegler von Eberswald; 16 February 1889 – 9 April 1945) was an Austrian actress of silent film and the stage.

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Idries Shah

Idries Shah (ادريس شاه, ادریس شاه; 16 June 1924 – 23 November 1996), also known as Idris Shah, né Sayed Idries el-Hashimi (Arabic: سيد إدريس هاشمي) and by the pen name Arkon Daraul, was an author and teacher in the Sufi tradition who wrote over three dozen books on topics ranging from psychology and spirituality to travelogues and culture studies.

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IES La Rábida

The IES (Institute of Secondary Education) La Rábida is a public educational center located in the city of Huelva, Andalusia, Spain.

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If—

"If—" is a poem by English Nobel laureate Rudyard Kipling, written circa 1895 as a tribute to Leander Starr Jameson.

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Igbo Landing

Igbo Landing (alternatively written as Ibo Landing, Ebo Landing, or Ebos Landing) is a historic site at Dunbar Creek on St. Simons Island, Glynn County, Georgia.

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Ignazio Silone

Ignazio Silone (1 May 1900 – 22 August 1978) was the pseudonym of Secondino Tranquilli, a political leader, Italian novelist, and short-story writer, world famous during World War II for his powerful anti-Fascist novels.

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Il Postino (opera)

Il Postino is an opera in three acts by Daniel Catán with a Spanish libretto by the composer.

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Im Haarknoten wohnt eine Dame

Im Haarknoten wohnt eine Dame is a book by Nobel Prize-winning author Herta Müller.

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Imagism

Imagism was a movement in early 20th-century Anglo-American poetry that favored precision of imagery and clear, sharp language.

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Immer derselbe Schnee und immer derselbe Onkel

Immer derselbe Schnee und immer derselbe Onkel (English translation: Always the Same Snow and always the same Uncle) is a book of essays by Nobel Prize-winning author Herta Müller.

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Impalement in myth and art

The use of impalement in myth, art, and literature includes mythical representations of it as a method of execution and other uses in paintings, sculptures, and the like, folklore and other tales in which impalement is related to magical or supernatural properties, and the use of simulated impalement for the purposes of entertainment.

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Imre

Imre is a Hungarian masculine first name, which is also in Estonian use.

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Imre Kertész

Imre Kertész (9 November 192931 March 2016) was a Hungarian author and recipient of the 2002 Nobel Prize in Literature, "for writing that upholds the fragile experience of the individual against the barbaric arbitrariness of history".

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In August

In The August was a short story by a Nobel Prize-winning Russian author Ivan Bunin first published in Russkaya mysl 1901, #8, August issue.

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In der Falle

In der Falle is a book by Nobel Prize-winning author Herta Müller.

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In Praise of the Stepmother

In Praise of the Stepmother is an erotic novel by Peruvian writer Mario Vargas Llosa, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2010.

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Incarceration in the United States

Incarceration in the United States is one of the main forms of punishment and rehabilitation for the commission of felony and other offenses.

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Independent People

Independent People (Sjálfstætt fólk) is an epic novel by Nobel laureate Halldór Laxness, originally published in two volumes in 1934 and 1935; literally the title means "Self-standing folk".

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India

India (IAST), also called the Republic of India (IAST), is a country in South Asia.

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India–Mexico relations

India-Mexico relations refers to the diplomatic relations between India and Mexico.

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Indian literature

Indian literature refers to the literature produced on the Indian subcontinent until 1947 and in the Republic of India thereafter.

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Indo-Caribbeans

Indo-Caribbeans are Caribbean people with roots in the Indian subcontinent.

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Indonesia

Indonesia (or; Indonesian), officially the Republic of Indonesia (Republik Indonesia), is a transcontinental unitary sovereign state located mainly in Southeast Asia, with some territories in Oceania.

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Inger Christensen

Inger Christensen (16 January 1935 – 2 January 2009) was a Danish poet, novelist, essayist and editor.

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International copyright relations of Russia

The international copyright relations of Russia were virtually non-existent for much of the Imperial era continuing into the history of the Soviet Union until the Cold War.

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Intruder in the Dust

Intruder in the Dust is a novel by the Nobel Prize–winning American author William Faulkner published in 1948.

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Ireland

Ireland (Éire; Ulster-Scots: Airlann) is an island in the North Atlantic.

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Ireland Professor of Poetry

The position of Ireland Professor of Poetry is an academic chair, jointly administered in trust by Queen's University Belfast, Trinity College, Dublin, University College Dublin, the Arts Council of Northern Ireland and the Arts Council.

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Irene Sue Vernon

Irene Sue Vernon is a professor of Ethnic Studies Department at Colorado State University.

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Irene Vilar

Irene Vilar (born c. 1969) is a Puerto Rican American editor, literary agent, environmental advocate,and author of several books dealing with national and generational trauma and women's reproductive rights.

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Irish literature

Irish literature comprises writings in the Irish, Latin, and English (including Ulster Scots) languages on the island of Ireland.

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Irish poetry

Irish poetry includes poetry in two languages, Irish and English.

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Irish presidential election, 2011

The Irish presidential election of 2011 was the thirteenth presidential election to be held in Ireland, and the first to be contested by a record seven candidates.

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Irish prose fiction

The first Irish prose fiction, in the form of legendary stories, appeared in the Irish language as early as the seventh century, along with chronicles and lives of saints in Irish and Latin.

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Irish theatre

The history of Irish theatre begins with the rise of the English administration in Dublin at the start of the 17th century.

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Ironic precision

Ironic precision is a literary style utilized by authors such as Gustave FlaubertNabokov (1980), p.256 and poet Wisława Szymborska, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Literature.

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Irreligion in Africa

Irreligion in Africa, encompassing also atheism in Africa, as well as agnosticism, secular humanism, and general secularism, has been estimated at over tens of millions in various polls.

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Irving Layton

Irving Peter Layton, OC (March 12, 1912 – January 4, 2006) was a Romanian-born Canadian poet.

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Isaac Bashevis Singer

Isaac Bashevis Singer (יצחק באַשעװיס זינגער; November 21, 1902 – July 24, 1991) was a Polish-born Jewish writer in Yiddish, awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1978.

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Isaac in America: A Journey with Isaac Bashevis Singer

Isaac in America: A Journey With Isaac Bashevis Singer is a 1986 documentary made by director Amram Nowak and producer Kirk Simon.

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Isabel Preysler

María Isabel Preysler Arrastia (born 18 February 1951), better known as Isabel Preysler, is a Filipina socialite and television host.

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Isabella, Three Sailing Ships and a Con Man

Isabella, Three Sailing Ships and a Con Man (Italian title: Isabella, tre caravelle e un cacciaballe) is a 1963 two-act play by Italian playwright Dario Fo, the recipient of the 1997 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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Isabelle Huppert

Isabelle Anne Madeleine Huppert (born 16 March 1953) is a French actress who has appeared in more than 120 films since her debut in 1971.

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Ismail Kadare

Ismail Kadare (also spelled Kadaré; born 28 January 1936) is an Albanian novelist, poet, essayist and playwright.

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Israel

Israel, officially the State of Israel, is a country in the Middle East, on the southeastern shore of the Mediterranean Sea and the northern shore of the Red Sea.

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It Is Well with My Soul

(Original lyrics) When peace like a river, attendeth my way, When sorrows like sea billows roll; Whatever my lot, Thou hast taught me to knowa It is well, it is well, with my soul.

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Italian literature

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

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Italian poetry

Italian poetry is a category of Italian literature.

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Ivan (name)

Ivan is a Slavic male given name, a variant of the Greek name Iōánnēs (John).

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Ivan Bunin

Ivan Alekseyevich Bunin (or; a; – 8 November 1953) was the first Russian writer awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature.

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Ivan Franko

Ivan Yakovych Franko (Іван Якович Франко) (&ndash) was a Ukrainian poet, writer, social and literary critic, journalist, interpreter, economist, political activist, doctor of philosophy, ethnographer, and the author of the first detective novels and modern poetry in the Ukrainian language.

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Ivana Brlić-Mažuranić

Ivana Brlić-Mažuranić (18 April 1874 – 21 September 1938) was a Croatian writer.

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Iván Mándy

Iván Mándy (23 December 1918 in Budapest – 6 October 1995 in Budapest) was a Hungarian writer.

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Ivo Andrić

Ivo Andrić (Иво Андрић,; born Ivan Andrić; 9 October 1892 – 13 March 1975) was a Yugoslav novelist, poet and short story writer who won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1961.

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Ivo Michiels

Henri Paul René Ceuppens (8 January 1923 – 7 October 2012), who wrote under the pseudonym Ivo Michiels, was a Belgian writer.

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J. C. Bloem

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

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J. M. Coetzee

John Maxwell Coetzee (born 9 February 1940) is a South African novelist, essayist, linguist, translator and recipient of the 2003 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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J. M. G. Le Clézio

Jean-Marie Gustave Le Clézio (born 13 April 1940), usually identified as J. M. G. Le Clézio, is a French writer and professor.

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J. R. R. Tolkien

John Ronald Reuel Tolkien, (Tolkien pronounced his surname, see his phonetic transcription published on the illustration in The Return of the Shadow: The History of The Lord of the Rings, Part One. Christopher Tolkien. London: Unwin Hyman, 1988. (The History of Middle-earth; 6). In General American the surname is also pronounced. This pronunciation no doubt arose by analogy with such words as toll and polka, or because speakers of General American realise as, while often hearing British as; thus or General American become the closest possible approximation to the Received Pronunciation for many American speakers. Wells, John. 1990. Longman pronunciation dictionary. Harlow: Longman, 3 January 1892 – 2 September 1973) was an English writer, poet, philologist, and university professor who is best known as the author of the classic high fantasy works The Hobbit, The Lord of the Rings, and The Silmarillion.

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J.-H. Rosny aîné

J.-H. Rosny aîné was the pseudonym of Joseph Henri Honoré Boex (17 February 1856 – 11 February 1940), a French author of Belgian origin who is considered one of the founding figures of modern science fiction.

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Jaan Kaplinski

Jaan Kaplinski (born 22 January 1941 in Tartu) is an Estonian poet, philosopher, and culture critic.

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Jaan Kross

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

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Jacinto Benavente

Jacinto Benavente y Martínez (12 August 1866 – 14 July 1954) was one of the foremost Spanish dramatists of the 20th century.

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Jack and Jill (magazine)

Jack and Jill is an American bimonthly magazine for children 6 to 12 years old that takes its title from the nursery rhyme of the same name.

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Jack Butler Yeats

John Butler Yeats (29 August 1871 – 28 March 1957) was an Irish artist and Olympic medalist.

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Jack Mapanje

Jack Mapanje (born 25 March 1944), ProQuest Learning: Literature.

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Jagiellonian University

The Jagiellonian University (Polish: Uniwersytet Jagielloński; Latin: Universitas Iagellonica Cracoviensis, also known as the University of Kraków) is a research university in Kraków, Poland.

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Jamaica College

Jamaica College (abbreviated J.C. or JC) is a prominent all-male secondary school located in Kingston, Jamaica.

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James Tait Black Memorial Prize

The James Tait Black Memorial Prizes are literary prizes awarded for literature written in the English language.

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Jan Lorentowicz

Jan Lorentowicz (14 March 1868 – 15 January 1940; occasional pen name, M. Chropieński) was a Polish theatre director, literary critic, publicist, editor and book collector; president of the Polish PEN Club (1925–27); and from 1938, an elected member of the prestigious Polish Academy of Literature.

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Jan Neruda

Jan Nepomuk Neruda (Czech: ˈjan ˈnɛpomuk ˈnɛruda; 9 July 1834 – 22 August 1891) was a Czech journalist, writer, poet, art critic, one of the most prominent representatives of Czech Realism and a member of the "May School".

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Jana Gana Mana

"Jana Gana Mana" is the national anthem of India.

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Janet Frame

Nene Janet Paterson Clutha (28 August 1924 – 29 January 2004) was a New Zealand author who published under the name Janet Frame.

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Janko Muzykant

Janko Muzykant (translated into English as Janko the Musician, and less commonly as Yanko the Musician or Johnny the Musician) is a short story (also described as novella) by Polish writer and winner of 1905 Nobel Prize in Literature, Henryk Sienkiewicz.

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January 10

No description.

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January 17

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January 18

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January 1933

The following events occurred in January 1933.

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January 1965

The following events occurred in January 1965.

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January 20

In the ancient astronomy, it is the cusp day between Capricorn and Aquarius.

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January 23

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January 24

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January 28

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January 29

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January 31

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January 4

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January 5

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January Uprising

The January Uprising (Polish: powstanie styczniowe, Lithuanian: 1863 m. sukilimas, Belarusian: Паўстанне 1863-1864 гадоў, Польське повстання) was an insurrection instigated principally in the Russian Partition of the former Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth against its occupation by the Russian Empire.

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Japan

Japan (日本; Nippon or Nihon; formally 日本国 or Nihon-koku, lit. "State of Japan") is a sovereign island country in East Asia.

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Japanese in the United Kingdom

The Japanese in the United Kingdom include British citizens or permanent residents of Japanese birth, ancestry or citizenship as well as expatriate business professionals and their dependents on limited term employment visas, students, trainees and young people participating in the UK government sponsored Youth Mobility Scheme.

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Japanese literature

Early works of Japanese literature were heavily influenced by cultural contact with China and Chinese literature, often written in Classical Chinese.

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Japanese people

are a nation and an ethnic group that is native to Japan and makes up 98.5% of the total population of that country.

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Japanese science fiction

Science fiction is an important subgenre of modern Japanese literature that has strongly influenced aspects of contemporary Japanese pop culture, including anime, manga, video games, tokusatsu, and cinema.

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Jardin du Luxembourg

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

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Jarosław Iwaszkiewicz

Jarosław Iwaszkiewicz, also known under his literary pseudonym Eleuter (20 February 1894 – 2 March 1980), was a Polish poet, essayist, dramatist and writer.

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Jaroslav Seifert

Jaroslav Seifert (23 September 1901 – 10 January 1986) was a Nobel Prize–winning Czechoslovak writer, poet and journalist.

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Jaroslav Vrchlický

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

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Jauch family

The Jauch family of Germany is a Hanseatic family which can be traced back till the Late Middle Ages.

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Jazz (novel)

Jazz is a 1992 historical novel by Pulitzer and Nobel Prize-winning American author Toni Morrison.

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Jean Anouilh

Jean Marie Lucien Pierre Anouilh (23 June 1910 – 3 October 1987) was a French dramatist whose career spanned five decades.

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Jean-Christophe

Jean-Christophe (1904‒1912) is the novel in 10 volumes by Romain Rolland for which he received the Prix Femina in 1905 and the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1915.

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Jean-Claude Arnault

Jean-Claude Arnault (born 15 August 1946), known in Swedish media as "the cultural profile" (Swedish: kulturprofilen), is a French-Swedish former photographer and artistic director of the cultural center Forum – Nutidsplats för kultur (translation: "Forum – Contemporary Scene of Culture") at Sigtunagatan 14 in Stockholm, who became widely known after being accused of sexual assault in connection with the Me Too movement.

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Jean-Paul Sartre

Jean-Paul Charles Aymard Sartre (21 June 1905 – 15 April 1980) was a French philosopher, playwright, novelist, political activist, biographer, and literary critic.

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Jena

Jena is a German university city and the second largest city in Thuringia.

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Jerzy Andrzejewski

Jerzy Andrzejewski (19 August 1909 – 19 April 1983) was a prolific Polish author.

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Jewish American literature

Jewish American literature holds an essential place in the literary history of the United States.

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Jewish culture

Jewish culture is the culture of the Jewish people from the formation of the Jewish nation in biblical times through life in the diaspora and the modern state of Israel.

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Jewish literature

Jewish literature includes works written by Jews on Jewish themes, literary works written in Jewish languages on various themes, and literary works in any language written by Jewish writers.

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Jez Butterworth

Jeremy "Jez" Butterworth (born March 1969) is an English playwright, screenwriter, and film director.

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Jibanananda Das

Jibanananda Das (জীবনানন্দ দাশ) (17 February 1899 – 22 October 1954) was a Bengali poet, writer, novelist and essayist.

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Jo Riley

Josephine Riley is a British writer, translator, theatre actor, and schoolteacher.

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João Cabral de Melo Neto

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

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Johan Bojer

Johan Bojer (6 March 1872 – 3 July 1959) was a popular Norwegian novelist and dramatist.

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Johan Falkberget

Johan Falkberget, born Johan Petter Lillebakken, (30 September 1879 – 5 April 1967) was a Norwegian author.

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Johan Padan and the Discovery of the Americas

Johan Padan and the Discovery of the Americas is a one-man play by Dario Fo, recipient of the 1997 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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Johann Trollmann

Johann Wilhelm "Rukeli" Trollmann (27 December 1907 – 9 February 1943) was a German Sinto boxer.

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Johannes Jørgensen

Jens Johannes Jørgensen (6 November 1866 in Svendborg – 29 May 1956) was a Danish writer, best known for his biographies of Catholic saints.

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Johannes Larsen

Johannes Larsen (27 December 1867 – 20 December 1961) was a Danish nature painter.

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Johannes V. Jensen

Johannes Vilhelm Jensen (commonly known as Johannes V. Jensen; 20 January 1873 – 25 November 1950) was a Danish author, often considered the first great Danish writer of the 20th century.

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John Banville

William John Banville (born 8 December 1945), who sometimes writes as Benjamin Black, is an Irish novelist, adapter of dramas, and screenwriter.

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John Cowper Powys

John Cowper Powys (8 October 187217 June 1963) was a British philosopher, lecturer, novelist, literary critic, and poet.

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John Galsworthy

John Galsworthy (14 August 1867 – 31 January 1933) was an English novelist and playwright.

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John Garrett Underhill

John Garrett Underhill (January 10, 1876 – May 15, 1946) was an American author and stage producer who translated the works of Jacinto Benavente, a Spanish dramatist and winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature, and a number of other Spanish authors.

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John Moors Cabot

John Moors Cabot (December 11, 1901 – February 24, 1981) was an American diplomat and U.S. Ambassador to four nations during the Eisenhower and Kennedy administration.

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John Morley

John Morley, 1st Viscount Morley of Blackburn, (24 December 1838 – 23 September 1923) was a British Liberal statesman, writer and newspaper editor.

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John O'Hara

John Henry O'Hara (January 31, 1905 – April 11, 1970) was an American writer who earned his early literary reputation for short stories and later became a best-selling novelist before the age of 30 with Appointment in Samarra and Butterfield 8.

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John Steinbeck

John Ernst Steinbeck Jr. --> (February 27, 1902 – December 20, 1968) was an American author.

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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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Joint issue

A joint issue is the release of stamps or postal stationery by two or more countries to commemorate the same topic, event or person.

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Jorge Guillén

Jorge Guillén y Álvarez (18 January 18936 February 1984) was a Spanish poet, a member of the Generation of '27, as well as a university teacher, scholar and literary critic.

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Jorge Luis Borges

Jorge Francisco Isidoro Luis Borges Acevedo (24 August 1899 – 14 June 1986) was an Argentine short-story writer, essayist, poet and translator, and a key figure in Spanish-language literature.

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Jorge Marchant Lazcano

Jorge Marchant Lazcano (born March 9, 1950 in Santiago, Chile) is a Chilean writer, playwright, screenwriter, novelist and journalist.

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José Craveirinha

José Craveirinha (28 May 1922 - 6 February 2003) was a Mozambican journalist, story writer and poet, who is today considered the greatest poet of Mozambique.

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José Echegaray

José Echegaray y Eizaguirre (19 April 1832 – 4 September 1916) was a Spanish civil engineer, mathematician, statesman, and one of the leading Spanish dramatists of the last quarter of the 19th century.

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José Rivera (playwright)

José Rivera (born March 24, 1955) is a playwright and the first Puerto Rican screenwriter to be nominated for an Oscar.

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José Saramago

José de Sousa Saramago, GColSE (16 November 1922 – 18 June 2010), was a Portuguese writer and recipient of the 1998 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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José Saramago Foundation

The José Saramago Foundation is a cultural private institution located in the Casa dos Bicos, in Lisbon (Portugal).

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José Saramago Prize

The José Saramago Literary Prize has been awarded since 1999 by the Circulo de Leitores Foundation to a literary work written in Portuguese by a young author in which the first edition was published in a Lusophone country.It celebrates the attribution of the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1998 to the Portuguese writer José Saramago.

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Josep Carner

Josep Carner i Puigoriol (born Barcelona 9 February 1884 - died Brussels 4 June 1970), was a Catalan poet, journalist, playwright and translator.

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Josep Vicenç Foix

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

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Joseph Brodsky

Iosif Aleksandrovich Brodsky (Ио́сиф Алекса́ндрович Бро́дский; 24 May 1940 – 28 January 1996) was a Russian and American poet and essayist.

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Joseph Conrad

Joseph Conrad (born Józef Teodor Konrad Korzeniowski; 3 December 1857 – 3 August 1924) was a Polish-British writer regarded as one of the greatest novelists to write in the English language.

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Joseph G. Peterson

Joseph G. Peterson (born 1965) is an American novelist and poet from Chicago, Illinois.

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Josip Kosor

Josip Kosor (27 January 1879 – 23 January 1961) was a Croatian novelist and playwright.

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Journey to Portugal

Journey to Portugal is a non-fiction book on Portugal by Nobel Prize-winning author José Saramago.

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Joyce Carol Oates

Joyce Carol Oates (born June 16, 1938) is an American writer.

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Juan Marsé

Juan Marsé Carbó (born 8 January 1933 in Barcelona) is a Spanish novelist, journalist and screenwriter.

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Juan Ramón Jiménez

Juan Ramón Jiménez Mantecón (23 December 1881 – 29 May 1958) was a Spanish poet, a prolific writer who received the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1956 "for his lyrical poetry, which in the Spanish language constitutes an example of high spirit and artistical purity".

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Juana de Ibarbourou

Juana Fernández Morales de Ibarbourou, also known as Juana de América, (1892–1979) was a Uruguayan poet and one of the most popular poets of Spanish America.

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Jude Law

David Jude Heyworth Law (born 29 December 1972) is an English actor.

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Judit Vihar

Judit Vihar (born 28 August 1944) is a Hungarian literary historian, Japanologist, professor emerita, translator, haiku poet and head of The Hungary–Japan Friendship Society.

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Judith Wright

Judith Arundell Wright (31 May 191525 June 2000) was an Australian poet, environmentalist and campaigner for Aboriginal land rights.

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Juhani Aho

Juhani Aho, originally Johannes Brofeldt (11 September 1861 – 8 August 1921), was a Finnish author and journalist.

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Jules Romains

Jules Romains, born Louis Henri Jean Farigoule (26 August 1885 – 14 August 1972), was a French poet and writer and the founder of the Unanimism literary movement.

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Jules Supervielle

Jules Supervielle (16 January 1884 – 17 May 1960) was a Franco-Uruguayan poet and writer born in Montevideo.

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Julien Benda

Julien Benda (26 December 1867 – 7 June 1956) was a French philosopher and novelist.

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July 10

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July 11

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July 12

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July 13

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July 14

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July 16

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July 17

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July 1900

The following events occurred in July 1900.

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July 1923

The following events occurred in July 1923.

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July 2

This day is the midpoint of a common year because there are 182 days before and 182 days after it in common years, and 183 before and 182 after in leap years.

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July 20

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July 21

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July 24

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July 25

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July 26

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July 27

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July 29

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July 30

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July 6

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Jun'ichirō Tanizaki

was one of the major writers of modern Japanese literature, and perhaps the most popular Japanese novelist after Natsume Sōseki.

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June 10

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June 11

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June 13

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June 14

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June 18

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June 19

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June 1915

The following events occurred in June 1915.

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June 1918

The following events occurred in June 1918.

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June 1946

The following events occurred in June 1946.

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June 1964

The following events occurred in June 1964.

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June 1968

The following events occurred in June 1968.

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June 1972

The following events occurred in June 1972.

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June 1974

The following events occurred in June 1974.

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June 2

No description.

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June 26

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June 28

In common years it is always in ISO week 26.

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June 3

No description.

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June 30

It is the last day of the first half of the year.

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June 6

No description.

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June 7

No description.

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June 9

No description.

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Junzaburō Nishiwaki

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

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Kaddish for an Unborn Child

Kaddish for an Unborn Child (Kaddis a meg nem született gyermekért) is a novel by Imre Kertész, first published in 1990.

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Kalundborg

Kalundborg is a Danish city with a population of 16,343 (1 January 2015), the main town of the municipality of the same name and the site of its municipal council.

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Kamala Surayya

Kamala Surayya (born Kamala; 31 March 1934 – 31 May 2009), popularly known by her one-time pen name Madhavikutty and Kamala Das, was an Indian English poet as well as a leading Malayalam author from Kerala, India.

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Kamianets-Podilskyi Castle

Kamianets-Podilskyi Castle (Кам'янець-Подільська фортеця; twierdza w Kamieńcu Podolskim; Каменец-Подольская крепость; Kamaniçe Kalesi) is a former Ruthenian-Lithuanian castle and a later three-part Polish fortress located in the historic city of Kamianets-Podilskyi, Ukraine, in the historic region of Podolia in the western part of the country.

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Kaprun disaster

The Kaprun disaster was a fire that occurred in an ascending train in the tunnel of the Gletscherbahn Kaprun 2 funicular in Kaprun, Austria, on 11 November 2000.

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Karel Čapek

Karel Čapek (9 January 1890 – 25 December 1938) was a Czech writer of the early 20th century.

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Karen Blixen

Baroness Karen Christenze von Blixen-Finecke (née Dinesen; 17 April 1885 – 7 September 1962) was a Danish author who wrote works in Danish and English.

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Karen Bramson

Karen Bramson (née Adler; born 10 August 1875 in Tårbæk, Denmark and died 26 January 1936 in Paris, France) was a Danish author who wrote novels and plays mostly in Danish or French although many of her writings have been translated into English.

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Karl Adolph Gjellerup

Karl Adolph Gjellerup (2 June 1857 – 13 October 1919) was a Danish poet and novelist who together with his compatriot Henrik Pontoppidan won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1917.

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Karl Carstens

Karl Carstens (14 December 1914 – 30 May 1992) was a German politician.

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Karl Kraus (writer)

Karl Kraus (April 28, 1874 – June 12, 1936) was an Austrian writer and journalist, known as a satirist, essayist, aphorist, playwright and poet.

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Karl Löwith

Karl Löwith (9 January 1897 – 26 May 1973) was a German philosopher, a student of Husserl and Heidegger.

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Karnak Café

Karnak Café (Al-Karnak, Arabic: الكرنك) is a novella written in 1974 by Egyptian writer Naguib Mahfouz, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1988.

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Karoline Bjørnson

Karoline Bjørnson (née Reimers, 1 December 1835 – 27 June 1934) was a Norwegian actress.

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Kashubians

The Kashubs (Kaszëbi; Kaszubi; Kaschuben; also spelled Kaszubians, Kassubians, Cassubians, Cashubes, and Kashubians, and formerly known as Kashubes) are a West Slavic ethnic group in Pomerelia, north-central Poland.

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Kawachi, Kumamoto

was a town located in Hōtaku District, Kumamoto Prefecture, Japan.

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Kazuo Ishiguro

Sir Kazuo Ishiguro (born 8 November 1954) is a Nobel Prize-winning British novelist, screenwriter, and short-story writer.

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Kōbō Abe

, pseudonym of, was a Japanese writer, playwright, photographer and inventor.

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Kenzaburō Ōe

is a Japanese writer and a major figure in contemporary Japanese literature.

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Kermanshah

Kermanshah (کرمانشاه, کرماشان, Kirmashan; Kermānshāh; also known as Bākhtarān or Kermānshāhān), the capital of Kermanshah Province, is located from Tehran in the western part of Iran.

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Kevin Barry (author)

Kevin Barry (born 1969) in Limerick City is an Irish writer.

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Kim (novel)

Kim is a novel by Nobel Prize-winning English author Rudyard Kipling.

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King's College, Cambridge

King's College is a constituent college of the University of Cambridge in Cambridge, England.

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Klenät

Klenät, klena, klejne, kleina, kleyna, and fattigmann are all names for a fried pastry common in the Nordic countries.

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Knud Pontoppidan

Knud Pontoppidan (1853–1916) was a Danish psychiatrist and coroner.

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Knut Ødegård

Knut Ødegård (born 6 November 1945) is a Norwegian poet.

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Knut Hamsun

Knut Hamsun (August 4, 1859 – February 19, 1952) was a major Norwegian writer, who was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1920.

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Ko Un

Ko Un (born 1 August 1933) is a South Korean poet whose works have been translated and published in more than fifteen countries.

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Końskowola

Końskowola is a village in southeastern Poland (historic Lesser Poland region), located between Puławy and Lublin, near Kurów on the Kurówka River.

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Konstantin Paustovsky

Konstantin Georgiyevich Paustovsky (p; – July 14, 1968) was a Russian Soviet writer nominated for the Nobel Prize for literature in 1965.

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Kostis Palamas

Kostis Palamas (Κωστής Παλαμάς; – 27 February 1943) was a Greek poet who wrote the words to the Olympic Hymn.

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Kristin Lavransdatter

Kristin Lavransdatter is a trilogy of historical novels written by Nobel laureate Sigrid Undset.

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L'Extase matérielle

L'Extase matérielle is an essay written by French Nobel laureate J. M. G. Le Clézio.

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L'Inconnu sur la Terre

"L'Inconnu sur la Terre" is an essay written by French Nobel laureate J. M. G. Le Clézio.

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L'oiseau bleu (opera)

L'oiseau bleu (The Blue Bird) is an opera in four acts (eight tableaux) by the French composer and conductor Albert Wolff.

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L. A. Ring

Laurits Andersen Ring (Danish) (15 August 1854 – 10 September 1933) was one of the foremost Danish painters of the turn of the 20th century, who pioneered both symbolism and social realism in Denmark.

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La Fête chantée et autres essais de thème amérindien

La Fête chantée et autres essais de thème amérindien is the title of a collection of short stories written in French by French Nobel laureate J. M. G. Le Clézio.

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La fièvre

La fièvre is the title of a set of short stories written in French by French Nobel laureate J. M. G. Le Clézio and translated into English by Daphne Woodward as Fever and published by Atheneum.

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La Grande Vie (novella)

La Grande Vie suivi de Peuple du ciel is the title of two novellas.

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La Guerre

La Guerre is a novel by French Nobel laureate writer J. M. G. Le Clézio and translated into English as War.

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La Quarantaine (novel)

La Quarantaine is a novel written in French by French Nobel laureate writer J. M. G. Le Clézio.

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La Ronde et autres faits divers

La Ronde et autres faits divers is the title of a set of short stories written in French by French Nobel laureate J. M. G. Le Clézio and translated into English as The Round & Other Cold Hard Facts.

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Lacombe, Lucien

Lacombe Lucien (in English, Lacombe, Lucien) is a 1974 French war drama film about a French teenage boy during the German occupation of France in World War II.

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Lajos Koltai

Lajos Koltai, ASC, HSC, (born 2 April 1946) is a Hungarian cinematographer and film director best known for his work with legendary Hungarian director Istvan Szabo, and Italian filmmaker Giuseppe Tornatore.

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Land of poets

The phrase land of poets (país de poetas) is commonly used to describe Chile due to its highly valued poetry tradition.

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Land of Sin

Land of Sin is a novel by Nobel Prize-winning author José Saramago.

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Landlocked (novel)

Landlocked (1965) is the fourth novel in British Nobel Prize in Literature-winner Doris Lessing five volume, semi-autobiographical, series, Children of Violence.

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Languages of France

Of the languages of France, the national language, French, is the only official language according to the second article of the French Constitution, and its standardized variant is by far the most widely spoken.

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Lars Gyllensten

Lars Johan Wictor Gyllensten (12 November 1921 – 25 May 2006) was a Swedish author and physician, and a member of the Swedish Academy, which has the aim of furthering the "purity, vigour and majesty" of the Swedish language and selects the recipient of the Nobel Prize for Literature each year.

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Latin America

Latin America is a group of countries and dependencies in the Western Hemisphere where Spanish, French and Portuguese are spoken; it is broader than the terms Ibero-America or Hispanic America.

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Latin American Boom

The Latin American Boom (Boom Latinoamericano) was a literary movement of the 1960s and 1970s when the work of a group of relatively young Latin American novelists became widely circulated in Europe and throughout the world.

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Latin American Commission on Drugs and Democracy

The Latin American Commission on Drugs and Democracy was a panel of Latin American leaders and intellectuals, co-chaired by former presidents Fernando Henrique Cardoso (Brazil), César Gaviria (Colombia) and Ernesto Zedillo (Mexico).

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Latin American culture

Latin American culture is the formal or informal expression of the people of Latin America and includes both high culture (literature and high art) and popular culture (music, folk art, and dance) as well as religion and other customary practices.

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Latin American literature

Latin American literature consists of the oral and written literature of Latin America in several languages, particularly in Spanish, Portuguese, and the indigenous languages of the Americas as well as literature of the United States written in the Spanish language.

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Laundry Service

No description.

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Lautaro

Lautaro (Lef-Traru "swift hawk") (1534? – April 29, 1557) was a young Araucanian toqui who achieved notoriety for leading the indigenous resistance against Spanish conquest in Chile.

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Lawrence Durrell

Lawrence George Durrell (27 February 1912 – 7 November 1990) was an expatriate British novelist, poet, dramatist, and travel writer.

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Lübeck

Lübeck is a city in Schleswig-Holstein, northern Germany, and one of the major ports of Germany.

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Le Chercheur d'or

Le Chercheur d'or is a novel written in French by French Nobel laureate writer J. M. G. Le Clézio and translated into English as The prospector by Carol Marks and published by David R. Godine, Boston.

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Le Jour où Beaumont fit connaissance avec sa douleur

Le Jour où Beaumont fit connaissance avec sa douleur is a novella written in French by French Nobel laureate writer J. M. G. Le Clézio.

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Le Livre des fuites

Le Livre des fuites was written in French by French Nobel laureate writer J. M. G. Le Clézio and translated into English as The Book of Flights: An Adventure Story by Simon Watson Taylor.

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Leandro Díaz (composer)

Leandro José Díaz Duarte (February 20, 1928 – June 22, 2013) was a Colombian vallenato music composer.

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Lee Seung-u

Lee Seung-u (born 21 February 1959) is a South Korean writer.

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Legends and myths regarding RMS Titanic

There have been several legends and myths surrounding the RMS ''Titanic'' over the years.

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Legends of Anika

Legends of Anika (italic), is a 1954 Yugoslav drama film directed by Vladimir Pogačić.

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Leipzig

Leipzig is the most populous city in the federal state of Saxony, Germany.

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Leopold Staff

Leopold Staff (November 14, 1878 – May 31, 1957) was a Polish poet; one of the greatest artists of European modernism twice granted the Degree of Doctor honoris causa by universities in Warsaw and in Kraków.

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Les Éditions de Minuit

Les Éditions de Minuit (Midnight Press) is a French publishing house which has its origins in the French Resistance of World War II and still publishes books today.

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Les Géants (novel)

Les Géants is a novel written in French by French Nobel laureate J. M. G. Le Clézio and translated into English as The Giants. It was published by Atheneum and Jonathan Cape.

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Les Murray (poet)

Leslie Allan "Les" Murray AO (born 17 October 1938) is an Australian poet, anthologist and critic.

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Les plus grands Belges

Les plus grands Belges (French for The Greatest Belgians), is a television show that aired in 2005 on the Belgian French-speaking public channel RTBF.

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Less Than One: Selected Essays

Less Than One: Selected Essays is a collection of literary and autobiographical essays by the Russian poet and Nobel Prize-winning author Joseph Brodsky.

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Letras Libres

Letras Libres is a Spanish-language monthly literary magazine published in Mexico and Spain.

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Letterkenny University Hospital

Letterkenny University Hospital (LUH) (Ospidéal na hOllscoile Leitir Ceanainn) is an acute university and maternity hospital serving 147,000 inhabitants of County Donegal in Ireland.

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Lettre Ulysses Award

The Lettre Ulysses Award for the Art of Reportage has been given annually since 2003 for the best texts in the genre of literary reportage, which must have been first published during the previous two years.

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Leyla Erbil

Leyla Erbil (Leylâ Erbil (12 January 1931, Istanbul – 19 July 2013, Istanbul) – was one of the leading female contemporary writers of Turkey, author of six novels, three collections of short stories and a book of essays.

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Li Kuei-Hsien

Li Kuei-Hsien (born 1937) is a Taiwanese author and poet.

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Liberal Libertarian Party

The Liberal Libertarian Party (Partido Liberal Libertario) is a political party from Argentina founded in 2009.

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Licio Gelli

Licio Gelli (April 21, 1919 – December 15, 2015) was an Italian financier, liaison officer between the Italian government and Nazi Germany, chiefly known for his role in the Banco Ambrosiano scandal.

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Life (magazine)

Life was an American magazine that ran regularly from 1883 to 1972 and again from 1978 to 2000.

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Limbo

In Catholic theology, Limbo (Latin limbus, edge or boundary, referring to the "edge" of Hell) is a speculative, non-scriptural idea about the afterlife condition of those who die in original sin without being assigned to the Hell of the Damned.

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Lin Yutang

Lin Yutang (October 10, 1895 – March 26, 1976) was a Chinese writer, translator, linguist, philosopher and inventor.

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Lisa Sotilis

Lisa Sotilis is a Greek-Italian sculptor, painter and jewelry maker.

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List of Academy Award records

This is a list of Academy Award records.

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List of African Nobel laureates

The Nobel Prize is an international prize awarded annually since 1901 for achievements in Physics, Chemistry, Physiology or Medicine, Literature, and Peace.

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List of African-American firsts

African Americans (also known as Black Americans and Afro-Americans) are an ethnic group in the United States.

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List of agnostics

Listed here are persons who have identified themselves as theologically agnostic.

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List of alumni of Aix-Marseille University

This list of alumni of Aix-Marseille University includes graduates and non-graduate former students of Aix-Marseille University, Aix-en-Provence/Marseille, France.

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List of alumni of Jesuit educational institutions

Over the last 400 years, the Roman Catholic Jesuit order has established a worldwide network of schools and universities.

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List of alumni of the University of Cape Town

This list of the notable alumni of the University of Cape Town is divided into the six faculties of the university: Commerce, Humanities, Sciences, Health Sciences, Engineering, and Law.

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List of American women's firsts

This is a list of American women's firsts, noting the first time that an American woman or women achieved a given historical feat.

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List of Americans of Irish descent

This is a list of Americans of Irish descent, including both original immigrants who obtained American citizenship and their American-born descendants.

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List of Americans under surveillance

This is a list of some of the prominent U.S. citizens who are known to have been put under surveillance by the federal government of the United States.

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List of Andalusians

The following table groups the list of famous Andalusians listed in alphabetical order within categories.

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List of animal rights advocates

Advocates of animal rights as well as activists for animal liberation hold the view that to deny the most basic needs of sentient creatures—such as the avoidance of pain—to non-human animals, on the basis of species membership alone, is a form of discrimination akin to racism or sexism.

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List of Arab Nobel laureates

The Nobel Prize is an annual, international prize first awarded in 1901 for achievements in Physics, Chemistry, Physiology or Medicine, Literature, and Peace.

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List of Asian Nobel laureates

The Nobel Prize is an annual, international prize first awarded in 1901 for achievements in Physics, Chemistry, Physiology or Medicine, Literature, and Peace.

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List of atheist authors

This is a list of atheist authors.

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List of atheists (surnames E to G)

Category:Lists of atheists.

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List of atheists (surnames R to S)

Atheists with surnames starting o and p, sortable by the field for which they are mainly known and nationality.

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List of Australian of the Year Award recipients

The Australian of the Year Award is given annually on Australia Day.

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List of Austrian writers

This is a list of Austrian writers and poets.

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List of autodidacts

This is a list of notable autodidacts which includes people who have been partially or wholly self-taught.

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List of awards and nominations received by Bob Dylan

Bob Dylan has received many accolades throughout his long career as a songwriter and performing artist.

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List of awards named after people

This is a list of prizes that are named after people.

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List of École normale supérieure people

Here follows a list of notable alumni and faculty of the École normale supérieure.

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List of Barnard College people

The following is a list of notable individuals associated with Barnard College through attendance as a student, service as a member of the faculty or staff, or award of the Barnard Medal of Distinction.

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List of Belgians

This is a list of notable Belgian people who either.

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List of black Nobel laureates

The Nobel Prize is an annual, international prize first awarded in 1901 for achievements in Physics, Chemistry, Physiology or Medicine, Literature, and Peace.

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List of book-based war films (1927–45 wars)

A list of films that are based on war books.

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List of book-based war films (wars before 1775)

A list of films that are based on war books.

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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 Cairo University alumni

Notable alumni and attendees of Cairo University are listed here, first by decade of their graduation (or last attendance) and then alphabetically.

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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 Chilean women writers

This is a list of women writers who were born in Chile or whose writings are closely associated with that country.

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List of Chinese dissidents

This list consists of these activists who are known as Chinese dissidents.

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List of Chinese Nobel laureates

Since 1957, there have been eight Chinese (including Chinese-born) winners of the Nobel Prize.

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List of clowns

No description.

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List of converts to Christianity from Judaism

This is a list of notable converts from Judaism to Christianity.

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List of converts to Christianity from nontheism

This is a list of notable converts to Christianity who were not theists before their conversion.

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List of converts to the Catholic Church

The following is an incomplete list of notable individuals who converted to Catholicism from a different religion or no religion.

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List of Cornell University alumni

This list of Cornell University alumni includes notable graduates, non-graduate former students, and current students of Cornell University, an Ivy League university located in Ithaca, New York.

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List of Cornell University faculty

This list of Cornell University faculty includes notable current and former instructors and administrators of Cornell University, an Ivy League university located in Ithaca, New York.

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List of Cornish writers

This is a list of writers in English and Cornish, who are associated with Cornwall and Cornish linguists (Rol a skriforyon Kernewek).

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List of Duke University people

This list of Duke University people includes alumni, faculty, presidents, and major philanthropists of Duke University, which includes three undergraduate and ten graduate schools.

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List of Egyptian writers

This is a list of Egyptian writers.

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List of Esperanto speakers

An Esperantist (Esperantisto) is a person who speaks Esperanto.

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List of female Nobel laureates

As of 2017, Nobel Prizes have been awarded to 844 men, 48 women (Marie Curie won it twice), and 27 organizations.

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List of female poets

This is a list of female poets organised by the time period in which they were born.

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List of feminist poets

This is a list of feminist poets.

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List of films based on military books (fantasy)

A list of films that are based on war books.

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List of films based on sports books

On occasion, sports books have been used as source material for film adaptations.

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List of firsts in India

This is a list of firsts in India..

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List of foreign recipients of the Légion d'Honneur

The Order of Légion d'Honneur is the highest decoration in France and is divided into five degrees: Chevalier (Knight), Officier (Officer), Commandeur (Commander), Grand Officier (Grand Officer) and Grand Croix (Grand Cross).

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List of former atheists and agnostics

For lists of atheists who converted to Christianity, Islam, or Judaism see the following links.

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List of Free University of Berlin people

A list of Free University of Berlin people.

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List of Freemasons (A–D)

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List of French novelists

This is a list of novelists from France.

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List of genres

This is a list of genres of literature and entertainment, excluding genres in the visual arts.

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List of Germans

This is a list of notable Germans or German-speaking or -writing persons.

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List of Guatemalans

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List of Harvard University people

The list of Harvard University people includes notable graduates, professors, and administrators affiliated with Harvard University.

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List of Head of Government and State Nobel Laureates

This is a list of all the 27 Heads of State and Heads of Government who have received the Nobel prize.

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List of Heidelberg University people

Alumni and faculty of the university include many founders and pioneers of academic disciplines, and a large number of internationally acclaimed philosophers, poets, jurisprudents, theologians, natural and social scientists.

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List of hispanophones

This is a list of some notable Spanish-speaking people.

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List of Icelandic writers

Iceland has a rich literary history, which has carried on into the modern period.

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List of In Our Time programmes

In Our Time is a discussion programme on the history of ideas; it has been hosted since 1998 by Melvyn Bragg on BBC Radio 4 in the United Kingdom.

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List of Indian Nobel laureates

The Nobel Prize is a set of annual international awards bestowed on "those who conferred the greatest benefit on mankind" in the fields of Physics, Chemistry, Physiology or Medicine, Literature, Peace and Economics.

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List of Indian poets

This list of Indian poets consists of poets of Indian ethnic, cultural or religious ancestry either born in India or emigrated to India from other regions of the world.

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List of Irish Americans

This is a list of notable Irish Americans, including both original immigrants who obtained American citizenship and their American-born descendants.

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List of Irish people

This is a list of notable Irish people who were born on the island of Ireland, in either the Republic of Ireland or Northern Ireland, and have lived there for most of their lives.

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List of Israeli Ashkenazi Jews

This is a list of notable Israeli Ashkenazi Jews, including both original immigrants who obtained Israeli citizenship and their Israeli descendants.

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List of Israeli Nobel laureates

Since 1966, there have been twelve Israelis who were awarded Nobel Prize, the most honorable award in various fields including chemistry, economics, literature and peace.

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List of Israelis

This is a list of prominent Israelis.

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List of Istanbul Technical University people

This is a list of people associated with Istanbul Technical University in Turkey.

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List of Italian-language poets

List of poets who wrote in Italian (or Italian dialects).

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List of Japanese Nobel laureates

Since 1949, there have been twenty-six Japanese winners of the Nobel Prize (Nobelpriset).

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List of Jewish American authors

This is a list of notable Jewish American authors.

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List of Jewish atheists and agnostics

Based on Jewish law's emphasis on matrilineal descent, even religiously conservative Orthodox Jewish authorities would accept an atheist born to a Jewish mother as fully Jewish.

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List of Jewish Nobel laureates

As of 2017, Nobel PrizesThe Nobel Prize is an annual, international prize first awarded in 1901 for achievements in Physics, Chemistry, Physiology or Medicine, Literature, and Peace.

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List of Latin American writers

This is a list of some of the most important writers from Latin America, organized by cultural region and nationality.

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List of Latin Americans

This is a list of notable Latin American people, in alphabetical order within categories.

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List of Latino and Hispanic Nobel laureates

The Nobel Prize is an annual, international prize first awarded in 1901 for achievements in Physics, Chemistry, Physiology or Medicine, Literature, and Peace.

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List of Latvians

This is a list of prominent Latvians with Wikipedia articles.

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List of Leipzig University people

The following is a list of notable alumni and faculty of the University of Leipzig.

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List of literary awards

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

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List of Lithuanians

This is a list of Lithuanians, both people of Lithuanian descent and people with the birthplace or citizenship of Lithuania.

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List of longest novels

This is a list of the longest novels over 500,000 words published through a mainstream publisher.

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List of members of the Norwegian Nobel Committee

The five members of the Norwegian Nobel Committee award the Nobel Peace Prize every year.

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List of Moscow State University people

The list of Moscow State University people includes notable alumni, non-graduates, and faculty affiliated with the Lomonosov Moscow State University (also known as "Moscow State University").

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List of Mount Holyoke College people

The following is a list of individuals associated with Mount Holyoke College through attending as a student, or serving as a member of the faculty or staff.

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List of Muslim Nobel laureates

As of 2015, twelve Nobel Prize laureates have been Muslims, more than half in the 21st century.

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List of Muslim writers and poets

No description.

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List of Nanjing University people

The list of Nanjing University people includes notable graduates, non-graduates, professors and other people affiliated with Nanjing University.

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List of National Historic Landmarks in Minnesota

This is a complete List of National Historic Landmarks in Minnesota.

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List of New York University alumni

New York University (NYU) is one of the world's premier residential research and teaching institutions.

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List of New York University faculty

Following is a partial list of notable faculty (either past, present or visiting) of New York University.

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List of Nigerian writers

This is a list of Nigerian writers.

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List of Nigerians

This is a list of notable Nigerian people.

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List of Nobel laureates

The Nobel Prizes (Nobelpriset, Nobelprisen) are prizes awarded annually by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, the Swedish Academy, the Karolinska Institutet, and the Norwegian Nobel Committee to individuals and organizations who make outstanding contributions in the fields of chemistry, physics, literature, peace, and physiology or medicine.

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List of Nobel laureates affiliated with Cornell University

The Nobel Prizes are awarded annually by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, the Karolinska Institute, and the Norwegian Nobel Committee to individuals who make outstanding contributions in the fields of chemistry, physics, literature, peace, and physiology or medicine.

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List of Nobel laureates affiliated with Imperial College London

The Nobel Prizes are awarded annually by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, the Karolinska Institute, and the Norwegian Nobel Committee to individuals who make outstanding contributions in the fields of chemistry, physics, literature, peace, and physiology or medicine.

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List of Nobel laureates affiliated with Johns Hopkins University

The Nobel Prizes are awarded annually by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, the Karolinska Institute, and the Norwegian Nobel Committee to individuals who make outstanding contributions in the fields of chemistry, physics, literature, peace, and physiology or medicine.

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List of Nobel laureates affiliated with King's College London

The Nobel Prizes are awarded annually by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, the Karolinska Institute, and the Norwegian Nobel Committee to individuals who make outstanding contributions in the fields of chemistry, physics, literature, peace, and physiology or medicine.

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List of Nobel laureates affiliated with Kyoto University

The Nobel Prizes are awarded annually by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, the Karolinska Institute, and the Norwegian Nobel Committee to individuals who make outstanding contributions in the fields of chemistry, physics, literature, peace, and physiology or medicine.

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List of Nobel laureates affiliated with Princeton University

This list of Nobel laureates affiliated with Princeton University comprehensively shows the Princeton-affiliated individual winners of the Nobel Prize and the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences since 1901.

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List of Nobel laureates affiliated with the City University of New York

The Nobel Prizes are awarded annually by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, the Karolinska Institute, and the Norwegian Nobel Committee to individuals who make outstanding contributions in the fields of chemistry, physics, literature, peace, and physiology or medicine.

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List of Nobel laureates affiliated with the Institute for Advanced Study

This is a comprehensive list of Nobel Prize winners affiliated the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey as current and former faculty members, visiting scholars, and other affiliates.

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List of Nobel laureates affiliated with the University of California, Berkeley

This list of Nobel laureates affiliated with the University of California, Berkeley comprehensively shows the faculty members and researchers as well as graduates and other students of the University of California, Berkeley, who were awarded the Nobel Prize and the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences.

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List of Nobel laureates affiliated with the University of California, Santa Barbara

The Nobel Prizes are awarded annually by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, the Karolinska Institute, and the Norwegian Nobel Committee to individuals who make outstanding contributions in the fields of chemistry, physics, literature, peace, and physiology or medicine.

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List of Nobel laureates affiliated with the University of Chicago

This list of Nobel laureates affiliated with the University of Chicago comprehensively shows the faculty members and researchers as well as graduates and other students of the University of Chicago, who were awarded the Nobel Prize and the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences.

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List of Nobel laureates affiliated with the University of Edinburgh

This list of Nobel laureates affiliated with the University of Edinburgh includes academic staff and researchers as well as graduates and non-graduate former students of the University of Edinburgh in Scotland, who were bestowed with the Nobel Prize and the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences.

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List of Nobel laureates affiliated with the University of Pennsylvania

The Nobel Prizes are awarded annually by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, the Karolinska Institute, and the Norwegian Nobel Committee to individuals who make outstanding contributions in the fields of chemistry, physics, literature, peace, and physiology or medicine.

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List of Nobel laureates affiliated with the University of Tokyo

The Nobel Prizes are awarded annually by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, the Karolinska Institute, and the Norwegian Nobel Committee to individuals who make outstanding contributions in the fields of chemistry, physics, literature, peace, and physiology or medicine.

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List of Nobel laureates affiliated with University College London

University College London (UCL) is one of the two founding colleges of the University of London.

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List of Nobel laureates affiliated with Washington University in St. Louis

The Nobel Prizes are awarded annually by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, the Karolinska Institute, and the Norwegian Nobel Committee to individuals who make outstanding contributions in the fields of chemistry, physics, literature, peace, and physiology or medicine.

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List of Nobel laureates in Chemistry

The Nobel Prize in Chemistry (Nobelpriset i kemi) is awarded annually by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences to scientists in the various fields of chemistry.

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List of Nobel laureates in Literature

The Nobel Prize in Literature (Swedish: Nobelpriset i litteratur) is awarded annually by the Swedish Academy to authors for outstanding contributions in the field of literature.

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List of Nobel laureates in Physiology or Medicine

The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (Nobelpriset i fysiologi eller medicin) is awarded annually by the Swedish Karolinska Institute to scientists and doctors in the various fields of physiology or medicine.

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List of Nobel Peace Prize laureates

The Norwegian Nobel Committee each year awards the Nobel Peace Prize (Norwegian and Nobels fredspris) "to the person who shall have done the most or the best work for fraternity between nations, for the abolition or reduction of standing armies and for the holding and promotion of peace congresses." It is one of the five Nobel Prizes established by the 1895 will of Alfred Nobel (who died in 1896), awarded for outstanding contributions in chemistry, physics, literature, peace, and physiology or medicine.

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List of Non-Summit episodes (2016)

Non-Summit (Korean: 비정상회담) is a South Korean talk-variety show, part of JTBC's Monday night lineup.

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List of North European Jews

Before the Holocaust, Jews were a significant part of the population in Lithuania where they numbered around 240,000, including approximately 100,000 in Vilnius, or about 45% of that city's pre-World War II population (Vilnius was also once known as the "Jerusalem of Lithuania").

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List of novelists by nationality

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

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List of NYU GSAS people

This is a list of people associated with the New York University Graduate School of Arts and Science.

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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 Old Franciscans

The following is a list of some notable Old Franciscans (Antiguos Franciscanos), being former pupils of Instituto San Isidro in Spain.

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List of people associated with University College London

This is a list of people associated with University College London, including notable staff and alumni associated with the institution.

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List of people declared persona non grata

This is a list of people declared persona non grata.

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List of people from Adelaide

This is a list of notable people from Adelaide, also known as Adelaideans.

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List of people from Allahabad

The people listed below were all born in, residents of, worked in, adopted in or otherwise are closely associated with the city of Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh and its surrounding suburbs.

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List of people from Brattleboro, Vermont

The following list includes notable people who were born or have lived in Brattleboro, Vermont.

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List of people from Budapest

The following list includes notable people who were born or have lived in Budapest, Hungary.

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List of people from Cardiff

Cardiff (Caerdydd) is the capital and largest city of Wales.

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List of people from Chicago

The following list includes notable people who were born or have lived in Chicago, Illinois.

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List of people from Dublin

Dublin, as the capital city of Ireland and the largest city in Ireland, has produced many noted artists, entertainers, politicians and businesspeople.

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List of people from Gdańsk

This is a list of people from Gdańsk (Danzig).

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List of people from Ghent

This is a list of notable people from Ghent, who were either born in Ghent, or spent part of their life there.

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List of people from Hampstead

This is a list of notable people who have lived in Hampstead, an area of northwest London known for its intellectual, liberal, artistic, musical and literary associations.

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List of people from Illinois

Aa–Ag.

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List of people from Jerusalem

This is a list of notable people who were born, lived or are/were famously associated with Jerusalem.

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List of people from Madrid

This article is a list of notable people from Madrid, the capital of Spain.

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List of people from Marrakesh

A List of people from Marrakesh. See also:Category:People from Marrakesh.

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List of people from Prague

Prague, the capital of today's Czech Republic, has been for over a thousand years the centre and the biggest city of the Czech lands.

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List of people from Saint Petersburg

This is a list of famous people who have lived in Saint Petersburg, Russia (1914–1924: Petrograd, 1924–1991: Leningrad).

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List of people from Sicily

Sicily is the largest region in Italy with a population of over five million and has contributed many famous names to all walks of life.

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List of people from the former eastern territories of Germany

Numerous figures in German culture and history (some still living) were either born or resident in the former eastern territories of Germany.

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List of people from the London Borough of Hackney

Among those who were born in the London Borough of Hackney, or have dwelt within the borders of the modern borough are (alphabetical order, within category).

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List of people from Vermont

The following is a list of notable people who were born in the U.S. state of Vermont, live or lived in Vermont, or for whom Vermont is a significant part of their identity and who have entries in Wikipedia.

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List of people named in the Panama Papers

This is a partial list of people named in the Panama Papers as shareholders, directors and beneficiaries of offshore companies.

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List of people who have declined a British honour

The following is a partial list of people who have declined a British honour, such as a knighthood or other grade of honour.

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List of people who survived assassination attempts

List of survivors of unsuccessful assassination attempts, listed chronologically.

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List of people with brain tumors

A brain tumor is an abnormal growth of cells within the brain or inside the skull, and can be cancerous (malignant) or non-cancerous (benign).

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List of people with epilepsy

This is a list of notable people who have, or had, the medical condition epilepsy.

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List of poems by Ivan Bunin

Ivan Alekseyevich Bunin (Ива́н Алексе́евич Бу́нин; – 8 November 1953), the first Russian writer to win the Nobel Prize for Literature (1933), wrote more than 200 poems.

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List of poetry awards

This is a list of awards that are, or have been, given out to writers of poetry, either for a specific poem, collection of poems, or body of work.

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List of poets

This is an alphabetical list of internationally notable poets.

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List of Polish people

This is a partial list of notable Polish or Polish-speaking or -writing persons.

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List of Polish-language poets

List of poets who have written much of their poetry in the Polish language.

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List of Portuguese people

The following is a list of notable and historically significant people from Portugal.

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List of Portuguese writers

This is a list of Portuguese writers, ordered alphabetically by surname.

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List of prizes known as the Nobel of a field

This is a non-exhaustive list of prizes known as "the Nobel Prize of" a given field.

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List of Puerto Rican writers

This is a list of Puerto Rican literary figures, including poets, novelists, short story authors, and playwrights.

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List of Puerto Ricans

This is a list of notable people from Puerto Rico which includes people who were born in Puerto Rico (Borinquen), people who are of full or partial Puerto Rican background.

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List of refugees

This is a list of prominent people who are or were refugees.

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List of richest literary prizes

Many literary awards attract a significant remuneration as part of their prize.

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List of Romanians

Note: Names that cannot be confirmed in Wikipedia database nor through given sources are subject to removal.

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List of Russian people

This is a list of people associated with the modern Russian Federation, the Soviet Union, Imperial Russia, Russian Tsardom, the Grand Duchy of Moscow, and other predecessor states of Russia.

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List of Rutgers University people

This is an enumeration of notable people affiliated with Rutgers University, including graduates of the undergraduate and graduate and professional programs at all three campuses, former students who did not graduate or receive their degree, presidents of the university, current and former professors, as well as members of the board of trustees and board of governors, and coaches affiliated with the university's athletic program.

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List of Scholars of Trinity College, Dublin

This is a list of notable individuals elected as Scholars of Trinity College, Dublin.

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List of secular humanists

This is a partial list of notable secular humanists.

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List of ships and sailors of the Royal Navy

This page is a list of famous ships and sailors of the Royal Navy.

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List of short stories by Ivan Bunin

This is a list of all short stories published by Nobel Prize for Literature laureate Ivan Bunin.

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List of South Africans

This is a list of notable South Africans who are the subjects of Wikipedia articles.

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List of Spaniards

This is a list, in alphabetical order within categories, of notable hispanic people of Spanish heritage and descent born and raised in Spain, or of direct Spanish descent.

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List of Spanish writers

This is a list of writers, including novelists, essayists, poets, playwrights, and journalists, who were born in Spain or whose writings are closely associated with that country.

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List of Spanish-language poets

This is a list of notable poets who have written in the Spanish language.

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List of stutterers

Stuttering (alalia syllabaris), also known as stammering (alalia literalis or anarthria literalis), is a speech disorder in which the flow of speech is disrupted by involuntary repetitions and prolongations of sounds, syllables, words or phrases, and involuntary silent pauses or blocks during which the person who stutters is unable to produce sounds.

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List of Swedish cultural institutions

This is a list of institutions related to the culture of Sweden.

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List of Swiss people

This is a list of people associated with the modern Switzerland and the Old Swiss Confederacy.

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List of The 39 Clues characters

This is the list of fictional and non-fictional characters who appeared in The 39 Clues franchise.

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List of travel books

Travel books have been written since Classical times.

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List of Trinity College Dublin people

This is a list of notable alumni and faculty members of Trinity College, Dublin and the University of Dublin.

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List of Tufts University people

The list of Tufts University people includes alumni, professors, and administrators associated with Tufts University.

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List of Turkish writers

This is a list of Turkish writers who are Ottoman or Turkish nationals and who write in Turkish language.

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List of University at Buffalo people

This is a list of people connected to the State University of New York at Buffalo.

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List of University of Adelaide people

This is an incomplete list of University of Adelaide people including notable alumni and staff associated with the University of Adelaide in Australia.

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List of University of Athens alumni

This is a list of alumni, former staff, and those otherwise associated with the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens.

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List of University of Bonn people

This is a list of University of Bonn people including people who have taught or studied at the University of Bonn.

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List of University of California, Los Angeles people

This is a list of notable present and former faculty, staff, and students of the University of California, Los Angeles − UCLA.

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List of University of East Anglia alumni

This List of University of East Anglia alumni includes graduates and non-graduate former students of the University of East Anglia.

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List of University of Leeds people

This list of University of Leeds people is a selected list of notable past staff and students of the University of Leeds.

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List of University of Maryland, College Park people

This is a list of notable alumni, faculty, and benefactors of the University of Maryland, College Park.

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List of University of Michigan alumni

There are more than 500,000 living alumni of the University of Michigan.

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List of University of Minnesota people

This is a list of notable people associated with the University of Minnesota.

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List of University of Mississippi alumni

The following is a list of notable alumni of the University of Mississippi (Ole Miss).

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List of University of Puerto Rico people

This list of University of Puerto Rico people includes alumni, faculty, and presidents of University of Puerto Rico systemwide.

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List of University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras people

This list of University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras people includes alumni and faculty affiliated with UPRRP.

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List of University of Texas at Austin alumni

This list of University of Texas at Austin alumni includes notable graduates, non-graduate former students, and current students of the University of Texas at Austin.

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List of University of Toronto people

The following is a list of notable persons affiliated with the University of Toronto, including alumni, chancellors, presidents, and current and former faculty members.

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List of University of Virginia people

University of Virginia is one of only two institutions of higher learning in the United States which was founded by a U.S. President, the other being the State University of New York at Buffalo.

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List of University of Wisconsin–Madison people

This is a list of notable people who attended, or taught at, the University of Wisconsin–Madison.

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List of Uppsala University people

This is a list of notable people affiliated with Uppsala University.

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List of Welsh Nobel laureates

Listed below are the Nobel laureates born in Wales, in alphabetical order.

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List of Wesleyan University people

This is a partial list of notable people affiliated with Wesleyan University.

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List of women in the Heritage Floor

This list documents all 999 mythical, historical and notable women who are displayed on the handmade white tiles of the Heritage Floor as part of Judy Chicago's The Dinner Party art installation (1979).

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List of women writers

This is a list of notable women writers.

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List of women's firsts

This is a list of women's firsts noting the first time that a woman or women achieved a given historical feat.

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List of works by Harold Pinter

Works of Harold Pinter provides a list of Harold Pinter's stage and television plays; awards and nominations for plays; radio plays; screenplays for films; awards and nominations for screenwriting; dramatic sketches; prose fiction; collected poetry; and awards for poetry.

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List of Worthing inhabitants

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

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List of years in Australian literature

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

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List of years in poetry

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

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Literary award

A literary award is an award presented in recognition of a particularly lauded literary piece or body of work.

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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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Literature

Literature, most generically, is any body of written works.

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Literature by Galician authors

The literature written by Galician authors has been developed in both Galician language literature and Spanish literature.

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Literature of New England

The literature of New England has had an enduring influence on American literature in general, with themes such as religion, race, the individual versus society, social repression, and nature, emblematic of the larger concerns of American letters.

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Literature of Northern Ireland

That part of the United Kingdom called Northern Ireland was created in 1922, with the partition of the island of Ireland.

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Lom, Norway

Lom is a municipality in Oppland county, Norway.

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London School of Economics

The London School of Economics (officially The London School of Economics and Political Science, often referred to as LSE) is a public research university located in London, England and a constituent college of the federal University of London.

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Loopy Ears

Loopy Ears (Петлистые уши, Petli′stye U′shi) is a short story by a Nobel Prize-winning Russian author Ivan Bunin which was written in 1917 and gave his posthumous 1954 collection its title.

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Lord of the Flies

Lord of the Flies is a 1954 novel by Nobel Prize–winning British author William Golding.

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Lorian Hemingway

Lorian Hemingway (born December 15, 1951) is an American author and free-lance journalist.

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Lorna Beers

Lorna Doone Beers (May 10, 1897 – June 5, 1989) was an American novelist, poet, memoirist, and author of children's books.

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Los versos del capitán

Los versos del capitán is a book by the Chilean poet Pablo Neruda, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1971.

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Lost Generation

The Lost Generation was the generation that came of age during World War I. Demographers William Strauss and Neil Howe outlined their Strauss–Howe generational theory using 1883–1900 as birth years for this generation.

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Louis Aragon

Louis Aragon (3 October 1897 – 24 December 1982) was a French poet, who was one of the leading voices of the surrealist movement in France, who co-founded with André Breton and Philippe Soupault the surrealist review Littérature.

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Louis Paul Boon

Louis Paul Boon (15 March 1912, in Aalst – 10 May 1979, in Erembodegem) was a Flemish novelist and competes only with Hugo Claus (1929-2008) for the title of most important twentieth-century Flemish writer in the Dutch language.

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Lu Xun

Lu Xun (Wade–Giles romanisation: Lu Hsün) was the pen name of Zhou Shuren (25 September 1881 – 19 October 1936), a leading figure of modern Chinese literature.

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Lucian Blaga

Lucian Blaga (9 May 1895 – 6 May 1961) was a Romanian philosopher, poet, playwright and novelist.

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Luciano Petech

Luciano Petech (8 June 1914, Trieste – 29 September 2010, Rome) was an Italian scholar of Himalayan history and the early relations between Tibet, Nepal and Italy.

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Lucio Maria Attinelli

Lucio Maria Attinelli (born on in Palermo, Sicily) is a journalist and an Italian writer.

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Ludwig Klages

Ludwig Klages (10 December 1872 – 29 July 1956) was a German philosopher, psychologist and a theoretician in the field of handwriting analysis.

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Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich

Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich (also referred to as LMU or the University of Munich, in German: Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München) is a public research university located in Munich, Germany.

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Ludwig von Pastor

Ludwig Pastor, later Ludwig von Pastor, Freiherr von Campersfelden (31 January 1854 – 30 September 1928), was a German historian and a diplomat for Austria.

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Lugares colombinos

The Lugares colombinos ("Columbian places") is a tourist route in the Spanish province Huelva, which includes several places that have special relevance to the preparation and realization of the first voyage of Cristopher Columbus.

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Luigi Pirandello

Luigi Pirandello (28 June 1867 – 10 December 1936) was an Italian dramatist, novelist, poet, and short story writer whose greatest contributions were his plays.

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Luino

Luino (Western Lombard: Lüin) is a small town and comune near the border with Switzerland on the eastern shore of Lake Maggiore, in the Province of Varese (Lombardy, northern Italy).

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Lula, Sardinia

Lula (Lùvula) is a comune (municipality) in the Province of Nuoro in the Italian region Sardinia, located about north of the regional capital Cagliari and about northeast of the provincial capital Nuoro.

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Luo Fu (poet)

Mo Yun-tuan (11 May 1928 – 19 March 2018), known by the pen name Luo Fu, was a Taiwanese writer and poet.

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Lycée Janson de Sailly

Lycée Janson de Sailly is a lycée located in the 16th arrondissement of Paris, France.

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Lydia Pasternak Slater

Lydia Leonidovna Pasternak (Лидия Леонидовна Пастернак; March 8, 1902 – May 4, 1989), married name Lydia Pasternak Slater, was a Russian research chemist, poet and translator.

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Lygia Fagundes Telles

Lygia Fagundes Telles (born April 19, 1923) is an award-winning Brazilian novelist and short-story writer.

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Lyudmila Ulitskaya

Lyudmila Evgenyevna Ulitskaya (Людмила Евгеньевна Улицкая, born February 21, 1943) is an internationally acclaimed modern Russian novelist and short-story writer who, in 2014, was awarded the prestigious Austrian State Prize for European Literature for her oeuvre.

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Mabel Lee

Mabel Lee is a translator of the works of Nobel Prize-winning author Gao Xingjian.

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Macavity

Macavity is a fictional character who is described in a poem in Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats, by T. S. Eliot.

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Maila Talvio

Maila Talvio née Winter, married Mikkola (October 17, 1871, Hartola – January 6, 1951, Helsinki), was a Finnish writer.

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Maillane

Maillane (name in French; Malhana in Occitan language) is a commune in the Bouches-du-Rhône department in southern France in the former province of Provence.

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Main Street (novel)

Main Street is a satirical novel written by Sinclair Lewis, and published in 1920.

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Malcolm Cowley

Malcolm Cowley (August 24, 1898 – March 27, 1989) was an American writer, editor, historian, poet, and literary critic.

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Malwida von Meysenbug

Malwida von Meysenbug (28 October 1816 — 23 April 1903) was a German writer, her work including Memories of an Idealist, the first volume of which she published anonymously in 1869.

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Manfred George

Manfred George (October 22, 1893 – December 30, 1965), born Manfred Georg Cohn, later shortened to Manfred Georg, was a German journalist, author and translator.

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Mann family

The Mann family is a German Hanseatic family, members of the small ruling class of the city republic of Lübeck.

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Manoly Lascaris

Emmanuel George "Manoly" Lascaris (Μανόλη Λάσκαρη; 5 August 191213 November 2003) was the life partner of the Australian novelist and dramatist Patrick White.

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Mansaku Itami

Mansaku Itami (伊丹万作; real name Yoshitoyo Ikeuchi 池内義豊; 2 January 1900 – 21 September 1946) was a Japanese film director and screenwriter known for his critical, sometimes satirical portraits of Japan and its history.

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Manual of Painting and Calligraphy

Manual of Painting and Calligraphy is a novel by Nobel Prize-winning author José Saramago.

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Marcelino Menéndez y Pelayo

Marcelino Menéndez y Pelayo (3 November 1856 – 19 May 1912) was a Spanish scholar, historian and literary critic.

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March 13

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March 15

In the Roman calendar, March 15 was known as the Ides of March.

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March 16

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March 18

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March 1914

The following events occurred in March 1914.

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March 1915

The following events occurred in March 1915.

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March 1926

The following events occurred in March 1926.

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March 23

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March 24

March 24th is the 365th and last day of the year in many European implementations of the Julian calendar.

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March 25

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March 26

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March 28

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March 31

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March 6

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March on the Drina

The March to the Drina (Марш на Дрину) is a Serbian patriotic march which was composed by Stanislav Binički during World War I. Binički dedicated it to his favourite commander in the Serbian Army, Col.

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Margarita Aguirre

Margarita Aguirre (30 December 1925 – 15 December 2003) was a Chilean writer and critic.

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Maria Björnson

Maria Elena Björnson (16 February 1949 – 13 December 2002) was a theatre designer.

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Maria Dąbrowska

Maria Dąbrowska (6 October 1889 – 19 May 1965) was a Polish writer, novelist, essayist, journalist and playwright,Marcel Cornis-Pope, John Neubauer, Benjamins Publishing, 2010.

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Maria Luisa Spaziani

Maria Luisa Spaziani (21 June 1923 – 30 June 2014) was an Italian poet.

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Maria Tănase

Maria Tănase (25 September 1913 – 22 June 1963) was a Romanian singer and actress.

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Marie Luise Kaschnitz

Marie Luise Kaschnitz (born Marie Luise von Holzing-Berslett; 31 January 1901 – 10 October 1974) was a German short story writer, novelist, essayist and poet.

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Mario Luzi

Mario Luzi (20 October 1914 – 28 February 2005) was an Italian poet.

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Mario Vargas Llosa

Jorge Mario Pedro Vargas Llosa, 1st Marquess of Vargas Llosa (born March 28, 1936), more commonly known as Mario Vargas Llosa, is a Peruvian writer, politician, journalist, essayist and college professor.

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Marital rape

Marital rape (or spousal rape) is the act of sexual intercourse with one's spouse without the spouse's consent.

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Mark Aldanov

Mark Aldanov (Марк Алда́нов) (Mark Alexandrovich Landau) (Марк Алекса́ндрович Ланда́у) (1888, or 1889 – 25 February 1957) was a Russian writer and critic, known for his historical novels.

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Mark Linz

Werner Mark Linz (6 April 1935 – 9 February 2013) was a German-American publisher who specialised in educational and international publishing in the Americas, Europe and the Middle East.

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Marlborough Royal Free Grammar School

Marlborough Royal Free Grammar School, previously known as Marlborough Grammar School and King Edward's School, Marlborough, was a grammar school in the town of Marlborough, in Wiltshire, England, founded in 1550.

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Marriage and Morals

Marriage and Morals is a 1929 book by philosopher Bertrand Russell, in which the author questions the Victorian notions of morality regarding sex and marriage.

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Martha Quest

Martha Quest (1952) is the second novel of British Nobel Prize in Literature-winner Doris Lessing, and the first of the five-volume semi-autobiographical The Children of Violence series, which traces Martha Quest’s life to middle age.

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Martin Buber

Martin Buber (מרטין בובר; Martin Buber; מארטין בובער; February 8, 1878 – June 13, 1965) was an Austrian-born Israeli Jewish philosopher best known for his philosophy of dialogue, a form of existentialism centered on the distinction between the I–Thou relationship and the I–It relationship.

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Matilde Serao

Matilde Serao, by Rossi Matilde Serao (7 March, 1856 – 25 July 1927) was a Greek-born Italian journalist and novelist.

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Maurice Bowra

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

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Maurice Maeterlinck

Maurice Polydore Marie Bernard Maeterlinck (also called Comte (Count) Maeterlinck from 1932; in Belgium, in France; 29 August 1862 – 6 May 1949) was a Belgian playwright, poet, and essayist who was Flemish but wrote in French.

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Mauritian literature

The island of Mauritius is home to many languages, and Mauritian literature exists in French, English, Creole and Indian languages.

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Maxim Gorky

Alexei Maximovich Peshkov (Алексе́й Макси́мович Пешко́в or Пе́шков; – 18 June 1936), primarily known as Maxim (Maksim) Gorky (Макси́м Го́рький), was a Russian and Soviet writer, a founder of the socialist realism literary method and a political activist.

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May 11

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May 12

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May 18

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May 1912

The following events occurred in May 1912.

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May 1914

The following events occurred in May 1914.

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May 1916

The following events occurred in May 1916.

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May 20

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May 23

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May 24

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May 28

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May 29

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May 30

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May 31

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May 5

This day marks the approximate midpoint of spring in the Northern Hemisphere and of autumn in the Southern Hemisphere (starting the season at the March equinox).

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May 6

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May 7

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May Swenson

Anna Thilda May "May" Swenson (May 28, 1913 – December 4, 1989) was an American poet and playwright.

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Mazagón

Mazagón is a beach town in Andalusia, Spain near Huelva.

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Mårbacka

Mårbacka is a mansion in Sunne Municipality in Värmland, Sweden.

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Mürzzuschlag

Mürzzuschlag is a town in northeastern Styria, Austria, the capital of the former Mürzzuschlag District.

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Meanings of minor planet names: 7001–8000

013 | 7013 Trachet || || Tim Trachet (born 1958), Belgian journalist and science writer.

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Mehmed Paša Sokolović Bridge

The Mehmed Paša Sokolović Bridge (Bosnian and Serbian: Most Mehmed-paše Sokolovića/Мост Мехмед-паше Соколовића; Sokollu Mehmet Paşa Köprüsü) is a historic bridge in Višegrad, over the Drina River in eastern Bosnia and Herzegovina.

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Mel Odom (artist)

Mel Odom (born September 2, 1950) is an American artist who has created book covers for numerous novels, including a number of paperback editions of the novels of Patrick White, the Australian winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature, and several books by fantasy author Guy Gavriel Kay such as The Fionavar Tapestry trilogy, Tigana, A Song for Arbonne, and The Lions of Al-Rassan.

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Meliton (Ivan Bunin)

"Meliton" is a novella by a Nobel Prize-winning Russian author Ivan Bunin.

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Memed, My Hawk (film)

Memed My Hawk is a 1984 British-Yugoslav drama film directed by Peter Ustinov (the final film he directed) and starring Ustinov, Herbert Lom, Denis Quilley and Michael Elphick.

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Memoria viva de la transición

Living memory of the Spanish transition It is until now the only political memories book written by a president of the government during the Spanish transition.

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Memories of My Youth

Memories of my Youth (Small Memories) is an autobiography by Nobel Prize-winning author José Saramago.

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Men of Maize

Men of Maize (Hombres de maíz) is a 1949 novel by Guatemalan Nobel Prize in Literature winner Miguel Ángel Asturias.

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Merton College, Oxford

Merton College (in full: The House or College of Scholars of Merton in the University of Oxford) is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford in England.

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Metropolitan University of Educational Sciences

The Metropolitan University of Educational Sciences (Universidad Metropolitana de Ciencias de la Educación (UMCE), is a public and traditional university located in the commune of Ñuñoa, Chile. It is the fourth oldest university in the country, founded in 1889 as college of the University of Chile.

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Mexican literature

Mexican literature is one of the most prolific and influential of Spanish language literatures along with those of Spain, Argentina and Cuba.

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Miłosz

Miłosz is a Slavic masculine given name found in Poland, a variant of the name Miloš.

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Michael Billington (critic)

Michael Keith Billington OBE (born 16 November 1939) is a British author and arts critic.

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Michael Saxell

Michael Saxell (born 1 October 1956) is a singer-songwriter, composer, lyricist, multi-instrumentalist and producer.

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Michalis Karaolis

Michalis Karaolis (Μιχαλάκης Καραολής;13 February 1933 – 10 May 1956) was born in the village of Palaichori of Pitsilia, Cyprus.

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Michel Tournier

Michel Tournier (19 December 1924 − 18 January 2016) was a French writer.

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Michiel van Kempen

Michaël Henricus Gertrudis (Michiel) van Kempen (born 4 April 1957) is a Dutch writer, art historian and literary critic.

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Midaq Alley (novel)

This article is about the Naguib Mahfouz novel.

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Middlesex (novel)

Middlesex is a Pulitzer Prize-winning novel by Jeffrey Eugenides published in 2002.

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Miguel Ángel Asturias

Miguel Ángel Asturias Rosales (October 19, 1899 – June 9, 1974) was a Nobel Prize-winning Guatemalan poet-diplomat, novelist, playwright and journalist.

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Miguel Ángel Asturias National Prize in Literature

The Miguel Ángel Asturias National Prize in Literature (officially in Spanish language: Premio Nacional de Literatura "Miguel Ángel Asturias") is the most important literary award in Guatemala.

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Miguel de Cervantes Prize

The Miguel de Cervantes Prize (Premio de Literatura en Lengua Castellana Miguel de Cervantes) is awarded annually to honour the lifetime achievement of an outstanding writer in the Spanish language.

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Miguel de la Espriella

Miguel de la Espriella (born November 14, 1947), more commonly known by his artistic name, Noble, is a self-taught painter and sculptor from Sucre, Colombia, whose art has been presented widely within his country and throughout the world.

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Miguel Romero Esteo

Miguel Romero García, better known as Miguel Romero Esteo (born 1930, Montoro, Córdoba) is a Spanish writer and university professor, whose work is part of the so-called Spanish post-war theatre.

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Mika (singer)

Mika (born Michael Holbrook Penniman Jr.; 18 August 1983), stylised as MIKA, is a Lebanese-born English singer and songwriter.

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Mikhail Mikhailovich Sholokhov

Mikhail Mikhailovich Sholokhov (Михаил Михайлович Шолохов; 23 May 1935, Moscow — 21 October 2013, Vyoshenskaya, Rostov Oblast) was a Russian scientist.

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Mikhail Sholokhov

Mikhail Aleksandrovich Sholokhov (p; – February 21, 1984) was a Soviet/Russian novelist and winner of the 1965 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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Milan Kundera

Milan Kundera (born 1 April 1929) is a Czech-born French writer who went into exile in France in 1975, and became a naturalised French citizen in 1981.

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Milan Rúfus

Milan Rúfus (December 10, 1928 – January 11, 2009) was a Slovak poet, essayist, translator, children's writer and academic.

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Milano-Roma

Milano-Roma was a reality show broadcast on the Italian television channel Rai Tre at the end of the 1990s.

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Milly-la-Forêt

Milly-la-Forêt is a commune in the Essonne department in Île-de-France in northern France.

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Milorad Pavić

Milorad Pavić (Милорад Павић,; 15 October 1929 – 30 November 2009) was a Serbian novelist, poet, short story writer, and literary historian.

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Minnesota

Minnesota is a state in the Upper Midwest and northern regions of the United States.

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Miodrag Pavlović

Miodrag Pavlović (Serbian Cyrillic: Миодраг Павловић;; 28 November 1928 – 17 August 2014), was a Serbian poet, writer and critic.

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Mississippi State University

The Mississippi State University for Agriculture and Applied Science, commonly known as Mississippi State University (MSU), is a comprehensive land-grant and public research university located adjacent to the city of Starkville in an unincorporated area of Oktibbeha County, Mississippi.

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Mitya's Love

Mitya's Love (Митина любовь, Mi′tina Lyubo′v) is a short novel by a Nobel Prize-winning Russian author Ivan Bunin written in 1924 and first published in books XXIII and XXIV of the Sovremennye Zapiski Paris-based literary journal in 1925.

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Mladen Stojanović

Mladen Stojanović (Младен Стојановић; 7 April 1896 – 1 April 1942) was a Bosnian Serb physician who led a detachment of Partisans on and around Mount Kozara in northwestern Bosnia during World War II in Yugoslavia.

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Mo (Chinese surname)

The Chinese family name Mo (莫) is pronounced in Mandarin as "Mò" (4th tone), in Cantonese as "Mok6" (6th tone).

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Mo Yan

Guan Moye (born 17 February 1955), better known by the pen name Mo Yan, is a Chinese novelist and short story writer.

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Moa Martinson

Moa Martinson, born Helga Maria Swarts sometimes spelt Swartz, (2November 18905August 1964) was one of Sweden's most noted authors of proletarian literature.

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Modelo Brewery

Modelo Brewery designed by the Cuban architect, Enrique Luis Varela, was built in 1948 for Compañia Ron Bacardi S.A..

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Modern Greek literature

Modern Greek literature refers to literature written in common Modern Greek, emerging from the late Byzantine era in the 11th century AD.

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Modica

Modica (Sicilian: Muòrica, Greek: Μότουκα, Motouka, Latin: Mutyca or Motyca) is a city and comune of 54.456 inhabitants in the Province of Ragusa, Sicily, southern Italy.

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Moguer

Moguer is a municipality and small city located in the province of Huelva, Andalusia, Spain.

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Mohandessin

Mohandessin ("The Engineers"), is a district in Giza.

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Moina Mathers

Moina Mathers, born Mina Bergson (28 February 1865 – 25 July 1928), was an artist and occultist at the turn of the 20th century.

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Molde

Molde is a town and municipality in Romsdal in Møre og Romsdal county, Norway.

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Mommsen

Mommsen is a surname, and may refer to one of a family of German historians, see Mommsen family.

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Mommsen family

The Mommsen family is a German family of influential historians.

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Monarchy of Sweden

The Monarchy of Sweden concerns the monarchical head of state of Sweden,See the Instrument of Government, Chapter 1, Article 5.

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Mono no aware

, literally "the pathos of things", and also translated as "an empathy toward things", or "a sensitivity to ephemera", is a Japanese term for the awareness of, or transience of things, and both a transient gentle sadness (or wistfulness) at their passing as well as a longer, deeper gentle sadness about this state being the reality of life.

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Montelupich Prison

The Montelupich prison, so called from the street in which it is located, the ulica Montelupich ("street of the Montelupi family"),Ulica Montelupich or "street of the Montelupis" itself is named after the Montelupi manor house (kamienica) located at Montelupich street Number 7, the so called Kamienica Montelupich built in the 16th century, and in the 19th century adapted as part of the Austrian military tribunal.

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Mr. Thank You

is a 1936 Japanese drama film written and directed by Hiroshi Shimizu.

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Mukul Dey

Mukul Chandra Dey (মুকুলচন্দ্র দে) (23 July 1895 – 1 March 1989) was one of five children of Purnashashi Devi and Kula Chandra Dey.

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Mulheres Africanas – A Rede Invisível

Mulheres Africanas – A Rede Invisível is a 2012 Brazilian documentary film written and directed by Carlos Nascimbeni.

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Munro (surname)

Notable people with the surname Munro include.

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Munro's Books

Munro's Books is a large independent bookstore in Victoria, British Columbia.

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Museum of Jurassic Technology

The Museum of Jurassic Technology is a museum located at 9341 Venice Boulevard in the Palms district of Los Angeles, California.

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My Century

My Century (German: Mein Jahrhundert, 1999) is a novel written by German author Günter Grass.

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My Name Is Red

My Name Is Red (Benim Adım Kırmızı) is a 1998 Turkish novel by writer Orhan Pamuk translated into English by Erdağ Göknar in 2001.

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My Son's Story

My Son's Story is the ninth novel by South African novelist Nadine Gordimer.

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Myanmar National Literature Award for Translation

Burma National Literature Awards for Translation (အမျိုးသားစာပေဆု - ဘာသာပြန်) is a literary prize awarded each year for an author who has translated from the foreign language by the government committee.

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Mydriase

"Mydriase" is an essay written by French Nobel laureate J. M. G. Le Clézio.

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Mykola Rohozhynskyy

Mykola Volodymyrovych Rogozhynsky (Миколай Володимирович Рогатинський) was a self-nominated candidate in the 2004 Ukrainian presidential election.

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Nader Naderpour

Nader Naderpour (نادر نادرپور; June 6, 1929 – February 18, 2000) was an Iranian poet.

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Nadine Gordimer

Nadine Gordimer (20 November 1923 – 13 July 2014) was a South African writer, political activist and recipient of the 1991 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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Nadirs (autobiography)

Nadirs is a collection of largely autobiographical short stories by Romanian-German writer and Nobel laureate Herta Müller.

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Naguib Mahfouz

Naguib Mahfouz (نجيب محفوظ,; December 11, 1911 – August 30, 2006) was an Egyptian writer who won the 1988 Nobel Prize for Literature.

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Naguib Pasha Mahfouz

Naguib Pasha Mahfouz (نجيب باشا محفوظ / ALA-LC: Nagīb Bāshā Maḥfūẓ; 5 January 1882 – 25 July 1974) is known as the father of obstetrics and gynaecology in Egypt and was a pioneer in obstetric fistula.

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Nanjing Jinling High School

Jinling High School (or Jin-Zhong/金中 for short) is a public high school located in Gulou District, Nanjing, Jiangsu, China.

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National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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

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National anthem

A national anthem (also state anthem, national hymn, national song, etc.) is generally a patriotic musical composition that evokes and eulogizes the history, traditions, and struggles of its people, recognized either by a nation's government as the official national song, or by convention through use by the people.

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National Association of Seadogs

The National Association of Seadogs, popularly known as Pyrates Confraternity is a confraternity organization in Nigeria that is nominally University-based.

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National Autonomous University of Mexico

The National Autonomous University of Mexico (Spanish: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, - literal translation: Autonomous National University of Mexico, UNAM) is a public research university in Mexico.

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National Sun Yat-sen University

National Sun Yat-sen University (NSYSU) is a public research-intensive university renowned as a seat of oceanology and management studies, located in Sizihwan, Kaohsiung, Taiwan and Pratas Islands, South China Sea.

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National University of San Marcos

The National University of San Marcos (Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos, UNMSM) is a public research university in Lima, capital of Peru.

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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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Nausicaa

Nausicaa (Ναυσικάα or Ναυσικᾶ,; also Nausicaä, Nausikaa) is a character in Homer's Odyssey.

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Néstor Amarilla

Néstor Salvador Amarilla Acosta (b July 24, 1980) is a playwright from Paraguay.

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Nørholm

Nørholm, also called Nørholmen, is a manor house and agricultural property on in the municipality of Grimstad in Aust-Agder county, Norway.

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Největší Čech

Největší Čech (The Greatest Czech) is the Czech spin-off of the BBC ''Greatest Britons'' show; a television poll of the populace to name the greatest Czech in history.

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Nellie Y. McKay

Nellie Yvonne McKay (May 12, 1930 – January 22, 2006) was an American academic and author who was the Evjue-Bascom Professor of American and African-American Literature at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, where she also taught in English and women's studies, and is best known as the co-editor (with Henry Louis Gates, Jr.) of the Norton Anthology of African-American Literature.

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Nelly Sachs

Nelly Sachs (10 December 1891 – 12 May 1970) was a Swedish poet and playwright of Jewish German birth.

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Nelson Estupiñán Bass

Nelson Estupiñán Bass (1912–2002) was born in Sua, a city in the predominantly Afro-Ecuadorian province of Esmeraldas in Ecuador.

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Nemanja Raičević

Nemanja Raičević, born 1976 in Novi Sad, capital of Vojvodina, is a Serbian writer of short stories.

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Neustadt International Prize for Literature

The Neustadt International Prize for Literature is a biennial award for literature sponsored by the University of Oklahoma and its international literary publication, World Literature Today.

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Never Let Me Go (novel)

Never Let Me Go is a 2005 dystopian science fiction novel by Nobel Prize-winning British author Kazuo Ishiguro.

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New European Ensemble

New European Ensemble is an ensemble, currently based in the Netherlands, that specializes in contemporary music.

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New Ross

New Ross (formerly Ros Mhic Treoin) is a town in southwest County Wexford, Ireland.

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New Selected Poems 1966–1987

New Selected Poems 1966–1987 is a poetry collection by Seamus Heaney, who received the 1995 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o

Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o (born 5 January 1938) is a Kenyan writer, formerly working in English and now working in Gikuyu.

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Nişantaşı

Nişantaşı is a quarter of the Şişli district on the European side of Istanbul, Turkey.

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Nicanor Parra

Nicanor Segundo Parra Sandoval (5 September 1914 – 23 January 2018) was a Chilean poet, mathematician, and physicist.

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Nicholas Bethell, 4th Baron Bethell

Nicholas William Bethell, 4th Baron Bethell (19 July 1938 – 8 September 2007) was a British politician.

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Nițchidorf

Nițchidorf (Nitzkydorf; Niczkyfalva) is a commune in Timiș County in the Banat region of Romania.

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Nigeria

Nigeria, officially the Federal Republic of Nigeria is a federal republic in West Africa, bordering Benin in the west, Chad and Cameroon in the east, and Niger in the north.

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Nigerian literature

Nigerian literature is the literature of Nigeria which is written by Nigerians, for Nigerians and addresses Nigerian issues.

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Niigata Prefecture

is a prefecture located in the Chūbu region of Japan.

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Nik Welter

Nikolaus “Nik” Welter (2 January 1871, Mersch – 13 July 1951, Luxembourg City) was a Luxembourgish writer, playwright, poet, professor, literary critic (Germanic and Romance languages), and statesman.

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Nikita Khrushchev

Nikita Sergeyevich Khrushchev (15 April 1894 – 11 September 1971) was a Soviet statesman who led the Soviet Union during part of the Cold War as the First Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union from 1953 to 1964, and as Chairman of the Council of Ministers, or Premier, from 1958 to 1964.

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Nikolaus Lenau High School

Nikolaus Lenau High School (Nikolaus-Lenau-Lyzeum, Liceul Teoretic „Nikolaus Lenau”) is a German language high school, located in Timişoara, Romania.

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Nikos Kazantzakis

Nikos Kazantzakis (Νίκος Καζαντζάκης; 18 February 188326 October 1957) was a Greek writer.

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Nitish Chandra Laharry

Nitish Chandra Laharry (1892–1964) was an Indian lawyer, social worker and film producer from Kolkata.

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No One Writes to the Colonel

No One Writes to the Colonel (El coronel no tiene quien le escriba) is a novella written by the Colombian novelist and Nobel Prize in Literature winner Gabriel García Márquez.

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No One Writes to the Colonel (film)

No One Writes to the Colonel is a 1999 Spanish-language film directed by Arturo Ripstein.

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Nobel Committee

A Nobel Committee is a working body responsible for most of the work involved in selecting Nobel Prize laureates.

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Nobel laureates per capita

This article includes lists of sovereign countries, territories, autonomous regions, organisations, continents, and ethnoreligious group/religions or lack thereof by Nobel laureates per capita.

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Nobel Library

The Nobel Library (Nobelbiblioteket or, officially, Svenska Akademiens Nobelbibliotek, e.g. "Nobel Library of the Swedish Academy") is the public library of the Swedish Academy instituted to assist the evaluation of Nobel laureates to the Prize in Literature and other awards granted by the academy.

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Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences

The Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences (officially Sveriges riksbanks pris i ekonomisk vetenskap till Alfred Nobels minne, or the Swedish National Bank's Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel), commonly referred to as the Nobel Prize in Economics, is an award for outstanding contributions to the field of economics, and generally regarded as the most prestigious award for that field.

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Nobel Peace Prize

The Nobel Peace Prize (Swedish, Norwegian: Nobels fredspris) is one of the five Nobel Prizes created by the Swedish industrialist, inventor, and armaments manufacturer Alfred Nobel, along with the prizes in Chemistry, Physics, Physiology or Medicine, and Literature.

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Nobel Prize

The Nobel Prize (Swedish definite form, singular: Nobelpriset; Nobelprisen) is a set of six annual international awards bestowed in several categories by Swedish and Norwegian institutions in recognition of academic, cultural, or scientific advances.

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Nobel Prize controversies

After his death in 1896, the will of Swedish industrialist Alfred Nobel established the Nobel Prizes.

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Nobel Prize effect

The Nobel Prize effect is an observation about the adverse effects of winning the Nobel Prize on laureates and their careers.

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Nobel Prize in Chemistry

The Nobel Prize in Chemistry (Nobelpriset i kemi) is awarded annually by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences to scientists in the various fields of chemistry.

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Nobel Prize in Physics

The Nobel Prize in Physics (Nobelpriset i fysik) is a yearly award given by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences for those who conferred the most outstanding contributions for mankind in the field of physics.

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Nobelinstitut

Nobelinstitut is a term for a number of scientific institutes created in the various institutions that appoint laureates of the various Nobel prizes.

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Non-Summit

Non-Summit, also known as Abnormal Summit, is a South Korean television program on JTBC which first aired on July 7, 2014.

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Nora Aunor

No description.

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Nora Ibsen

Nora Bergliot Ibsen (born 1951) is a Norwegian theatrical producer, noted for being the producer of the 2006 Ibsen Year, Norway's major anniversary of playwright Henrik Ibsen's death 100 years earlier, including high profile celebrations in multiple countries.

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Nord-Aurdal

Nord-Aurdal is a municipality in Oppland county, Norway.

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Nordic countries

The Nordic countries or the Nordics are a geographical and cultural region in Northern Europe and the North Atlantic, where they are most commonly known as Norden (literally "the North").

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Norman Manea

Norman Manea (born July 19, 1936) is a Jewish Romanian writer and author of short fiction, novels, and essays about the Holocaust, daily life in a communist state, and exile.

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North (poetry collection)

North (1975) is a collection of poems written by Seamus Heaney, who received the 1995 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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Northern Cyprus

Northern Cyprus (Kuzey Kıbrıs), officially the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC; Kuzey Kıbrıs Türk Cumhuriyeti), is a partially recognised state that comprises the northeastern portion of the island of Cyprus.

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Northwestern University Press

Northwestern University Press is affiliated with Northwestern University in Evanston, IL.

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Norway

Norway (Norwegian: (Bokmål) or (Nynorsk); Norga), officially the Kingdom of Norway, is a unitary sovereign state whose territory comprises the western portion of the Scandinavian Peninsula plus the remote island of Jan Mayen and the archipelago of Svalbard.

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Norwegian new realism

The Norwegian new realism was a literary movement that dominated Norwegian literature in the first half of the 20th century.

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Norwegian of the Century

Norwegian of the Century (Århundrets nordmann) was a poll carried out by the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation in 2005, the 100-year anniversary of Norwegian independence.

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Nouveau roman

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

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November 1

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November 15

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November 17

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November 1911

The following events occurred in November 1911.

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November 1913

The following events occurred in November 1913.

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November 1916

The following events occurred in November 1916.

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November 1923

The following events occurred in November 1923.

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November 1926

The following events occurred in November 1926.

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November 1950

The following events occurred in November 1950.

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November 2

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November 20

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November 21

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November 22

In the ancient astronomy, it is the cusp day between Scorpio and Sagittarius.

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November 25

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November 27

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November 30

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November 7

This day marks the approximate midpoint of autumn in the Northern Hemisphere and of spring in the Southern Hemisphere (starting the season at the September equinox).

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November 8

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November 9

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Nuclear weapons in popular culture

Since their public debut in August 1945, nuclear weapons and their potential effects have been a recurring motif in popular culture, to the extent that the decades of the Cold War are often referred to as the "atomic age".

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Nuruddin Farah

Nuruddin Farah (Nuuradiin Faarax, نورالدين فارح) (born 24 November 1945) is a Somali novelist.

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Nyboder

Nyboder (English: New Houses) is a historic row house district of former Naval barracks in Copenhagen, Denmark.

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Nyt Tidsskrift

Nyt Tidsskrift is a former Norwegian literary, cultural and political periodical issued from 1882 to 1887, and with a second series from 1892 to 1895.

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Oak Park and River Forest High School

Oak Park and River Forest High School, or OPRF, is a public four-year high school located in Oak Park, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago, Illinois, in the United States.

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Occitania

Occitania (Occitània,,,, or) is the historical region and a nation, in southern Europe where Occitan was historically the main language spoken, and where it is sometimes still used, for the most part as a second language.

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Octagon Press

Octagon Press was a cross-cultural publishing house based in London, UK.

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Octavio Paz

Octavio Paz Lozano (March 31, 1914 – April 19, 1998) was a Mexican poet and diplomat.

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October 10

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October 11

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October 12

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October 13

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October 16

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October 18

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October 19

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October 1927

The following events occurred in October 1927.

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October 1946

The following events occurred in October 1946.

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October 1964

The following events occurred in October 1964.

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October 1965

The following events occurred in October 1965.

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October 20

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October 22

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October 3

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October 9

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Odell Waller

Odell Waller (1917 – July 2, 1942) was an African-American sharecropper from Gretna, Virginia, executed for the fatal shooting of his white landlord, Oscar Wheldon Davis, on July 15, 1940.

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Odysseas Elytis

Odysseus Elytis (Οδυσσέας Ελύτης,, pen name of Odysseus Alepoudellis, Οδυσσέας Αλεπουδέλλης; 2 November 1911 – 18 March 1996) was regarded as a major exponent of romantic modernism in Greece and the world.

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Ola Sandström

Ola Sandström is a Swedish singer, songwriter and musician guitarist.

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Olaf Bull

Olaf Jacob Martin Luther Breda Bull (10 November 1883 - 29 June 1933) was a Norwegian poet.

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Olav Duun

Olav Duun (November 21, 1876 – September 13, 1939) was a noteworthy author of Norwegian fiction.

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Omar Sharaf

Omar Abdel Aziz Sharaf (22 October 1925 – 8 September 1993) (عمر شرف) was an Egyptian career diplomat, an Assistant Secretary General of the Arab League, a Deputy Representative of the UNHCR for the Middle East, as well as an Omani and international diplomat.

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Omeros

Omeros is an epic poem by Caribbean writer Derek Walcott, first published in 1990.

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On Reading as True Travel

On reading as true travel (De la lecture comme seul voyage was the original title of this essay written in French) by French Nobel laureate J. M. G. Le Clézio.

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One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich

One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich (Оди́н день Ива́на Дени́совича Odin den' Ivana Denisovicha) is a novel by Russian writer Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, first published in November 1962 in the Soviet literary magazine Novy Mir (New World).

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One Hundred Years of Solitude

One Hundred Years of Solitude (Cien años de soledad) is a landmark 1967 novel by Colombian author Gabriel García Márquez that tells the multi-generational story of the Buendía family, whose patriarch, José Arcadio Buendía, founds the town of Macondo, a fictitious town in the country of Colombia.

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Onitsha (novel)

Onitsha is a novel by French Nobel laureate writer J. M. G. Le Clézio.

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Opinions That DL Had

Opinions That DL Had is a novel by Nobel Prize-winning author José Saramago.

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Order of Saint Stephen of Hungary

The Royal Hungarian Order of Saint Stephen (Magyar Királyi Szent István Iovagrend; Königlich Ungarischer Sankt-Stephans-Orden) was an order of knighthood founded by Holy Roman Empress Maria Theresa in 1764.

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Orhan Pamuk

Ferit Orhan Pamuk (generally known simply as Orhan Pamuk; born 7 June 1952) is a Turkish novelist, screenwriter, academic and recipient of the 2006 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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Ortobene

Mount Ortobene (Orthobene in the local dialect) is a mountain in the province of Nuoro, in central Sardinia, Italy, close to the town of Nuoro.

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Oslo

Oslo (rarely) is the capital and most populous city of Norway.

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Osman Türkay

Osman Türkay (born February 16, 1927 in Ozanköy – 2001) was a Turkish Cypriot poet and was a nominee for the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1988.

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Our Lady of Charity

Our Lady of Charity also known as Our Lady of El Cobre or Nuestra Senora de la Caridad del Cobre or "la Virgen de la Caridad" is a popular Marian title of the Blessed Virgin Mary known in many Catholic countries.

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Our Lady of Guadalupe

Our Lady of Guadalupe (Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe), also known as the Virgin of Guadalupe (Virgen de Guadalupe), is a Catholic title of the Blessed Virgin Mary associated with a venerated image enshrined within the Minor Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Mexico City.

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Ourania (novel)

Ourania is a novel written in French by French Nobel laureate J. M. G. Le Clézio.

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Oxford Professor of Poetry

The Professor of Poetry is an academic appointment at the University of Oxford.

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Pablo Neruda

Ricardo Eliécer Neftalí Reyes Basoalto (12 July 1904 – 23 September 1973), better known by his pen name and, later, legal name Pablo Neruda, was a Chilean poet-diplomat and politician.

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Pachuco

Pachuco refers to a subculture of Chicanos and Mexican-Americans, associated with zoot suits, street gangs, nightlife, and flamboyant public behavior.

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Palace of Mafra

The Palace of Mafra (Palácio de Mafra) is a monumental Baroque and Italianized Neoclassical palace-monastery located in Mafra, Portugal, some 28 kilometres from Lisbon.

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Panama Papers

The Panama Papers are 11.5 million leaked documents that detail financial and attorney–client information for more than 214,488 offshore entities.

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Pantaleon (disambiguation)

Pantaleon was an early 2nd century BC Greco-Bactrian king Pantaleon may also refer to.

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Paradise (novel)

Paradise is a 1997 novel by Toni Morrison, and her first novel since winning the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1993.

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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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Parral, Chile

Parral is a city and commune in the Linares Province of Chile's Maule Region.

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Patricia Highsmith

Patricia Highsmith (January 19, 1921 – February 4, 1995) was an American novelist and short story writer best known for her psychological thrillers, including her series of five novels based on the character of Tom Ripley.

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Patrick D. Smith

Patrick Davis Smith (October 8, 1927 – January 26, 2014) was an American author.

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Patrick Modiano

Jean Patrick Modiano (born 30 July 1945), generally known as Patrick Modiano, is a French novelist and recipient of the 2014 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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Patrick White

Patrick Victor Martindale White (28 May 191230 September 1990) was an Australian writer who, from 1935 to 1987, published 12 novels, three short-story collections and eight plays.

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Patrick White Award

The Patrick White Award is an annual literary prize established by Patrick White.

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Patti Smith

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

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Paul Bourget

Paul Charles Joseph Bourget (2 September 185225 December 1935) was a French novelist and critic.

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Paul Cézanne University

Paul Cézanne University (also referred to as Paul Cézanne University Aix-Marseille III) (French: Université Paul Cézanne Aix-Marseille III) was a public research university based in the heart of Provence (South East of France), in both Aix-en-Provence and Marseille.

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Paul Claudel

Paul Claudel (6 August 1868 – 23 February 1955) was a French poet, dramatist and diplomat, and the younger brother of the sculptress Camille Claudel.

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Paul Heyse

Paul Johann Ludwig von Heyse (15 March 1830 – 2 April 1914) was a distinguished German writer and translator.

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Paul Muldoon

Paul Muldoon (born 20 June 1951) is an Irish poet.

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Paul Sabatier (theologian)

Charles Paul Marie Sabatier (3 or 9 August 1858 – 5 March 1928), was a French clergyman and historian who produced the first modern biography of St.

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Paul Valéry

Ambroise Paul Toussaint Jules Valéry (30 October 1871 – 20 July 1945) was a French poet, essayist, and philosopher.

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Paul West (writer)

Paul West (23 February 1930 – 18 October 2015) was a British-born American novelist, poet, and essayist.

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Paula de Odivelas

Mother Paula of Odivelas, religious name of Paula Teresa da Silva e Almeida (17 June 1701 – 4 July 1768), was a Portuguese nun and royal mistress.

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Paultons Square

Paultons Square is a Georgian terraced garden square in Chelsea, London, SW3.

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Pawana

Pawana (or: Awaité Pawana) is a short story written in French by French Nobel laureate J. M. G. Le Clézio.

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Pär Lagerkvist

Pär Fabian Lagerkvist (23 May 1891 – 11 July 1974) was a Swedish author who received the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1951.

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Pearl S. Buck

Pearl Sydenstricker Buck (June 26, 1892 – March 6, 1973; also known by her Chinese name Sai Zhenzhu) was an American writer and novelist.

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Pearl S. Buck Birthplace

The Pearl S. Buck Birthplace is a historic home in Hillsboro, West Virginia where American writer Pearl S. Buck was born.

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Penfield Books

Penfield Books is a book publishing company that was founded in 1979 in Iowa City, Iowa by Joan Liffring-Zug Bourret and late husband John Zug.

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Per Egil Hegge

Per Egil Hegge (born 6 March 1940) is a Norwegian journalist.

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Per Hallström

Per August Leonard Hallström (29 September 1866, Stockholm – 18 February 1960) was a Swedish author, short-story writer, dramatist, poet and member of the Swedish Academy.

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Petar II Petrović-Njegoš

Petar II Petrović-Njegoš (Петар II Петровић-Његош,; –), commonly referred to simply as Njegoš, was a Prince-Bishop (vladika) of Montenegro, poet and philosopher whose works are widely considered some of the most important in Montenegrin literature.

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Petar Kočić

Petar Kočić (Петар Кочић; 29 June 1877 – 27 August 1916) was a Bosnian Serb writer, playwright, poet and politician.

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Peter Carey (novelist)

Peter Philip Carey AO (born 7 May 1943) is an Australian novelist.

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Peter Gries

Peter Hays Gries is the Lee Kai Hung Chair and Director of the Manchester China Institute at the University of Manchester where he is also Professor of Chinese politics.

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Peter Handke

Peter Handke (born 6 December 1942) is an Austrian novelist, playwright and translator.

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Peter Rosegger

Peter Rosegger (original Roßegger) (31 July 1843 – 26 June 1918) was an Austrian writer and poet from Krieglach in the province of Styria.

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Philip Sherrard

Philip Owen Arnould Sherrard (23 September 1922 – 30 May 1995) was a British author, translator and philosopher.

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Philosopher

A philosopher is someone who practices philosophy, which involves rational inquiry into areas that are outside either theology or science.

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Piedra de Sol

"Piedra de Sol" ("Sunstone") is a poem by Octavio Paz, written in 1957.

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Pier Paolo Pasolini

Pier Paolo Pasolini (5 March 1922 – 2 November 1975) was an Italian film director, poet, writer, and intellectual.

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Pierre Jean Jouve

Pierre Jean Jouve (11 October 1887 – 8 January 1976) was a French writer, novelist and poet.

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Pierrot

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

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Pietro Ubaldi

Pietro Ubaldi (August 18, 1886 in Foligno, Italy – February 29, 1972 in São Vicente, Brazil) was an Italian author, teacher and philosopher.

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Pisa University System

The Pisa University System (Sistema Universitario Pisano) is a network of higher education institutions in Pisa, Italy.

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Pispala

Pispala is a city area 2.5 km from the centre of Tampere, Finland.

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Pitești Prison

The Pitești Prison (Închisoarea Pitești) was a penal facility in Pitești, Romania, best remembered for the reeducation experiments (also known as Experimentul Pitești – the "Pitești Experiment" or Fenomenul Pitești – the "Pitești Phenomenon") carried out between December 1949 and September 1951, during Communist party rule.

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Platero

Platero is the eponymous donkey of the 1914 children’s story Platero y yo (Spanish for Platero and I).

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Ploumanac'h

Ploumanac'h (or plumana, and in Breton pluˈmãːnax) is a village port in a natural harbour, part of the commune of Perros-Guirec, in the arrondissement of Lannion, in the Côtes-d'Armor department of the Brittany region of France.

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Poet-diplomat

Poet-diplomats are poets who have also served their countries as diplomats.

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Poetry and People International Poetry Prize

The Poetry and People International Poetry Prize is an annual international lifetime achievement award given to poets around the world by the poetry magazine Poetry and People and its founder Huang Lihai.

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Poetry in Africa

African Poetry encompasses the wide variety of traditions arising from Africa's 55 countries and from evolving trends within different literary genres.

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Poisson d'or (novel)

Poisson d'or (meaning "Fish of Gold" in English) is a novel by the French Nobel laureate writer J. M. G. Le Clézio.

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Poland

Poland (Polska), officially the Republic of Poland (Rzeczpospolita Polska), is a country located in Central Europe.

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Poles

The Poles (Polacy,; singular masculine: Polak, singular feminine: Polka), commonly referred to as the Polish people, are a nation and West Slavic ethnic group native to Poland in Central Europe who share a common ancestry, culture, history and are native speakers of the Polish language.

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Polish Consulate General, New York City

The Consulate General of the Republic of Poland in New York City is a consular mission of the Republic of Poland in the United States.

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Polish literature

Polish literature is the literary tradition of Poland.

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Polish poetry

Polish poetry has a centuries-old history, similar to the Polish literature.

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Polskie Radio

Polskie Radio Spółka Akcyjna (PR S.A.; English: Polish Radio) is Poland's state-owned national publicly funded radio broadcasting organization.

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Portora Royal School

Portora Royal School located in Enniskillen, County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland, was one of the 'free schools' founded by the Royal Charter in 1608, by James I. Originally called Enniskillen Royal School, the school was established some ten years after the Royal Decree, in 1618, 15 miles outside Enniskillen at Ballybalfour, before moving to Enniskillen in 1661.

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Portugal

Portugal, officially the Portuguese Republic (República Portuguesa),In recognized minority languages of Portugal: Portugal is the oldest state in the Iberian Peninsula and one of the oldest in Europe, its territory having been continuously settled, invaded and fought over since prehistoric times.

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Postcolonial literature

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

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Pow! (novel)

Pow! is a 2003 novel by the Chinese author and Nobel laureate Mo Yan. The novel's protagonist is Luo Xiaotong, a village boy with a passion for story-telling. It is set in a temple, where Luo recounts the story of his life to an old monk. He describes the difficult circumstances of his childhood in the "Slaughterhouse Village," a fictional town in which the population is obsessed with the consumption of meat and where corruption is rife. The novel has been interpreted as an allegorical commentary on the state of contemporary Chinese society, though Mo himself maintains that he is merely a storyteller, uninterested in ideology.

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Pramoedya Ananta Toer

Pramoedya Ananta Toer (EYD: Pramudya Ananta Tur) (6 February 1925 – 30 April 2006) was an Indonesian author of novels, short stories, essays, polemics and histories of his homeland and its people.

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Præstø

Præstø is a town with a population of 3,821 (1 January 2015) and a former municipality (Danish, kommune) in Vordingborg Municipality in Region Sjælland on the east coast of the island of Zealand (Sjælland) near its southwestern tip in south Denmark.

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Premio Planeta de Novela

The Premio Planeta de Novela is a Spanish literary prize, awarded since 1952 by the Spanish publisher Grupo Planeta to an original novel written in Spanish (Castilian).

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Prince Kamal el Dine Hussein

Prince Kamal el Dine Hussein (20 December 1874 – 6 August 1932) was the son of Sultan Hussein Kamel of Egypt.

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Printed media in the Soviet Union

Printed media in the Soviet Union, i.e., newspapers, magazines and journals, were under strict control of the Communist Party and the Soviet state.

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Printemps et autres saisons

Printemps et autres saisons is the title of a collection of short stories written in French by French Nobel laureate J. M. G. Le Clézio.

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Prix Brentano

The Prix Brentano was a literary award given annually by the American bookstore chain Brentano's to a French novel that "illustrate eminently the French cultural ideal".

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Prohibition of drugs

The prohibition of drugs through sumptuary legislation or religious law is a common means of attempting to prevent the recreational use of certain harmful drugs and other intoxicating substances.

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Project of Translation from Arabic

The Project of Translation from Arabic (or PROTA) is an academic project initiated by Dr Salma Khadra Jayyusi in 1980 in order to translate, and publish, works of Arabic literature into the English language.

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Prominent Americans series

The Prominent Americans series is a set of definitive stamps issued by the United States Post Office Department (and later the United States Postal Service) between 1965 and 1978.

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Prose of Turkey

Prose of the Republic of Turkey covers the "Turkish Prose" beginning with 1911 with the national literature movement.

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Prose poetry

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

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Provence

Provence (Provençal: Provença in classical norm or Prouvènço in Mistralian norm) is a geographical region and historical province of southeastern France, which extends from the left bank of the lower Rhône River to the west to the Italian border to the east, and is bordered by the Mediterranean Sea to the south.

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Pulp magazine

Pulp magazines (often referred to as "the pulps") were inexpensive fiction magazines that were published from 1896 to the 1950s.

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Puterbaugh Conference on World Literature

The Puterbaugh Conference on World Literature (or Puterbaugh Festival of World Literature and Culture) is an annual conference presented by the magazine World Literature Today and the University of Oklahoma.

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Qingdao University of Science and Technology

Qingdao University of Science and Technology (acronym QUST) is a university located in Qingdao, China, colloquially known as Qingkeda (青科大).

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Queen Mary University of London

Queen Mary University of London (QMUL) is a public research university in London, England, and a constituent college of the federal University of London.

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Quo Vadis (novel)

Quo Vadis: A Narrative of the Time of Nero, commonly known as Quo Vadis, is a historical novel written by Henryk Sienkiewicz in Polish.

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R. K. Narayan

R.

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R. S. Thomas

Ronald Stuart Thomas (29 March 1913 – 25 September 2000), published as R. S. Thomas, was a Welsh poet and Anglican priest who was noted for his nationalism, spirituality and deep dislike of the anglicisation of Wales.

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Rabindranath Tagore

Rabindranath Tagore FRAS, also written Ravīndranātha Ṭhākura (7 May 1861 – 7 August 1941), sobriquet Gurudev, was a Bengali polymath who reshaped Bengali literature and music, as well as Indian art with Contextual Modernism in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

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Rabindranath Tagore (film)

Rabindranath Tagore is a 1961 black-and-white short film directed by an Indian director Satyajit Ray on the life and works of noted Bengali author Rabindranath Tagore.

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Racławice Panorama

The Racławice Panorama (Polish: Panorama racławicka) is a monumental (15 × 114 meter) cycloramic painting depicting the Battle of Racławice, during the Kościuszko Uprising.

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Radomsko

Radomsko is a town in central Poland with 46,583 inhabitants (2016).

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Radzymin

Radzymin is a town in Poland and is one of the distant suburbs of the city of Warsaw.

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Ragnar Jonsson

Ragnar Jónsson (né Einar Ragnar Jónsson, February 7, 1904 – July 11, 1984), commonly known as Ragnar í Smára, was a key figure in the cultural life of Iceland as a major art patron, book publisher and art collector.

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Rainis

Rainis was the pseudonym of Jānis Pliekšāns (September 11, 1865 – September 12, 1929), a Latvian poet, playwright, translator, and politician.

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Ram Loevy

Ram Loevy (Hebrew: רם לוי, born 1940) is an Israeli television director and screenwriter.

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Ramón Menéndez Pidal

Ramón Menéndez Pidal (13 March 1869 - 14 November 1968) was a Spanish philologist and historian.

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Ramón Pérez de Ayala

Ramón Pérez de Ayala (9 August 1880, in Oviedo – 5 August 1962, in Madrid) was a Spanish writer.

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Randolph College

Randolph College is a private liberal arts and sciences college in Lynchburg, Virginia.

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Révolutions (novel)

Révolutions is a novel by French writer and Nobel laureate J. M. G. Le Clézio.

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Rómulo Gallegos

Rómulo Ángel del Monte Carmelo Gallegos Freire (2 August 1884 – 5 April 1969) was a Venezuelan novelist and politician.

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Rómulo Guardia

Rómulo Guardia Granier (born 13 September 1961) is a Venezuelan film producer.

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Reactionary

A reactionary is a person who holds political views that favor a return to the status quo ante, the previous political state of society, which they believe possessed characteristics (discipline, respect for authority, etc.) that are negatively absent from the contemporary status quo of a society.

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Records of Prime Ministers of the United Kingdom

The article lists the records of Prime Ministers of Great Britain and of the United Kingdom since 1721.

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Red Harvest

Red Harvest (1929) is a novel by Dashiell Hammett.

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Red Sorghum (TV series)

Red Sorghum (Chinese: 红高粱) is a 2014 Chinese television series based on Nobel laureate Mo Yan's 1986 novel of the same name.

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Red Wing, Minnesota

Red Wing is a city in Goodhue County, Minnesota, United States, along the upper Mississippi River.

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Reginald Beck

Reginald Beck (5 February 1902 – 12 July 1992) was a British film editor with forty-nine credits from 1932 to 1985.

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Regional literature of France

The Regional literature of France, besides literature written in the French language, may include literature written in other languages of France.

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Rein Gold

rein GOLD.

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Rendsburg

Rendsburg (Rendsborg) is a town on the River Eider and the Kiel Canal in the central part of Schleswig-Holstein, Germany.

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Republic of Ireland

Ireland (Éire), also known as the Republic of Ireland (Poblacht na hÉireann), is a sovereign state in north-western Europe occupying 26 of 32 counties of the island of Ireland.

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Resistance through culture

Resistance through culture (also called cultural resistance, resistance through the aesthetic, or intellectual resistance) is a form of nonconformism.

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Reyhaneh Jabbari

Reyhaneh Jabbari (ریحانه جباری; 1988 – 25 October 2014) was a woman convicted of murdering Morteza Abdolali Sarbandi, in Iran.

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Ricarda Huch

Ricarda Huch (18 July 1864 – 17 November 1947) was a pioneering German intellectual.

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Riccardo Bacchelli

Riccardo Bacchelli (19 April 1891 – 8 October 1985) was an Italian writer.

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Richard E. Kim

Richard Eun Kook Kim (1932–2009) was a Korean–American writer and professor of literature.

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Richard Ryan (biographer)

Richard Ryan (18 April 1797 – 20 October 1849) was a British writer of Irish descent.

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Riders in the Chariot

Riders in the Chariot is the sixth published novel by Australian Author Patrick White, Nobel Prize winner of 1973.

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Riksmål Society

Riksmålsforbundet (official translation: "The Riksmaal Society - The Society for the Preservation of Traditional Standard Norwegian") is the main organisation for Riksmål, an unofficial variety of the Norwegian language, based on the official Bokmål standard as it was before 1938 (see Norwegian language conflict).

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Ringsaker

is a municipality in Hedmark county, Norway.

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Rita Guibert

Rita Guibert (December 5, 1916 in Buenos Aires, Argentina – December 5, 2007 in New York, USA) was an American Author, Journalist (Print, Television, Radio), Editor, Researcher and Translator.

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Ritournelle de la faim

Ritournelle de la faim (The Same Old Story of Hunger, or The Refrain of Hunger) is a novel written in French by French Nobel laureate J. M. G. Le Clézio.

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Roads to Moscow

"Roads to Moscow" is 1973 song by Scottish rock singer Al Stewart.

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Robert College

Robert College of Istanbul (İstanbul Özel Amerikan Robert Lisesi or Robert Kolej) is an independent privateThe Turkish education system divides schools into two classes: public or private.

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Robert Frost

Robert Lee Frost (March26, 1874January29, 1963) was an American poet.

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Robert Giroux

Robert Giroux (April 8, 1914 – September 5, 2008) was an American book editor and publisher.

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Robert Graves

Robert Graves (24 July 1895 – 7 December 1985), also known as Robert von Ranke Graves, was an English poet, historical novelist, critic, and classicist.

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Robert Hass

Robert L. Hass (born March 1, 1941) is an American poet.

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Robert Musil

Robert Musil (or; 6 November 1880 – 15 April 1942) was an Austrian philosophical writer.

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Robert Twigger

Robert Twigger (born 30 October 1962) is a British author.

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Roberto Bracco

Roberto Bracco (1861–1943) was an Italian playwright, screenwriter and journalist.

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Roberto Clemente Community Academy

Roberto Clemente Community Academy (commonly known as Clemente, Roberto Clemente High School) is a public 4–year high school located in the West Town community area of Chicago, Illinois, United States.

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Robinson Crusoes of Warsaw

Robinson Crusoes of Warsaw were German Jews and non-Jewish Poles who, after the end of the 1944 Warsaw Uprising and the subsequent planned destruction of Warsaw by Nazi Germany, decided to stay and hide in the ruins of the German-occupied city.

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Rodrigo Asturias

Rodrigo Asturias Amado (30 October 1939 – 15 June 2005) was a Guatemalan guerrilla leader and politician.

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Roger Martin du Gard

Roger Martin du Gard (23 March 1881 – 22 August 1958) was a French novelist, winner of the 1937 Nobel Prize for Literature.

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Roholte

Roholte is a village and parish in Faxe Municipality, Region Zealand, Denmark.

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Roholte Church

Roholte Church (Roholte Kirke) is a church located in the village of Roholte, between Faxe and Præstø in Roholte Parish, Faxe Municipality, Region Zealand, Denmark.

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Role of Christianity in civilization

The role of Christianity in civilization has been intricately intertwined with the history and formation of Western society.

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Romain Rolland

Romain Rolland (29 January 1866 – 30 December 1944) was a French dramatist, novelist, essayist, art historian and mystic who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1915 "as a tribute to the lofty idealism of his literary production and to the sympathy and love of truth with which he has described different types of human beings".

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Romania

Romania (România) is a sovereign state located at the crossroads of Central, Eastern, and Southeastern Europe.

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Romanian literature

Romanian literature is literature written by Romanian authors, although the term may also be used to refer to all literature written in the Romanian language.

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Ron Whitehead

Ron Whitehead is an American poet, author and activist.

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Ronald Burkle

Ronald Wayne Burkle (born November 12, 1952) is an American investor and philanthropist.

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Royal Central School of Speech & Drama

The Royal Central School of Speech & Drama was founded by Elsie Fogerty in 1906 to offer a new form of training in speech and drama for young actors and other students.

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Rubén Marshall Tikalova

Ruben Jose Marshall Tikalova (born 1969, in Mexico City) since 2003 has been the editorial director and founder of the contemporary arts and lifestyle magazine FAHRENHEITº.

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Rudolf Alexander Schröder

Rudolf Alexander Schröder (26 January 1878 – 22 August 1962) was a German translator and poet.

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Rudolf Christoph Eucken

Rudolf Christoph Eucken (5 January 1846 – 15 September 1926) was a German philosopher.

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Rudolf Hans Bartsch

Rudolf Hans Bartsch (born 11 February 1873 in Graz, Styria – died 7 February 1952 in St. Peter in Graz), was an Austrian military officer, and writer.

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Rudolf Kassner

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

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Rudolf Maria Holzapfel

Rudolf Maria Holzapfel (April 26, 1874, Cracow – February 8, 1930, Muri (Kanton Bern)) was a Poland-born Austrian psychologist, philosopher.

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Rudyard Kipling

Joseph Rudyard Kipling (30 December 1865 – 18 January 1936)The Times, (London) 18 January 1936, p. 12 was an English journalist, short-story writer, poet, and novelist.

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Rufino Blanco-Fombona

Rufino Blanco-Fombona (1874–1944) was a Venezuelan literary historian and man of letters who played a major role in bringing the works of Latin American writers to world attention.

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Running from Crazy

Running from Crazy is a 2013 television documentary film by director Barbara Kopple about the family of Mariel Hemingway, grand daughter of Nobel Prize-winning author Ernest Hemingway.

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Ruse, Bulgaria

Ruse (also transliterated as Rousse, Russe or Rusçuk; Русе) is the fifth largest city in Bulgaria.

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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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Ryhor Baradulin

Ryhor Ivanavič Baradulin (Belarusian: Рыго́р Іва́навіч Бараду́лін; 24 February 1935 – 2 March 2014) was a Belarusian poet, essayist and translator.

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Ryszard Kapuściński

Ryszard Kapuściński (March 4, 1932 – January 23, 2007) was a Polish journalist, photographer, poet and author.

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S. Fischer Verlag

The German publishing house S. Fischer Verlag (today in Frankfurt am Main) was founded in 1886 by Samuel Fischer in Berlin and is a leading German address for literary publications, fine literature and fiction.

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Saab Automobile

Saab Automobile AB was a manufacturer of automobiles that was founded in Sweden in 1945 when its parent company, SAAB AB, began a project to design a small automobile.

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Sacco and Vanzetti

Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti were Italian-born American anarchists who were controversially convicted of murdering a guard and a paymaster during the April 15, 1920 armed robbery of the Slater and Morrill Shoe Company in Braintree, Massachusetts, United States.

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Safia Shah

Safia Nafisa Shah (سفیا شاه, સફિયા શાહ; born 16 November 1966), now Safia Thomas, is a British writer, editor, television news producer and member of the Afghan-Indian Shah family.

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Saint James, Trinidad and Tobago

Saint James is a district of Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago.

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Saint Lucia

Saint Lucia (Sainte-Lucie) is a sovereign island country in the West Indies in the eastern Caribbean Sea on the boundary with the Atlantic Ocean.

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Saint Petersburg

Saint Petersburg (p) is Russia's second-largest city after Moscow, with 5 million inhabitants in 2012, part of the Saint Petersburg agglomeration with a population of 6.2 million (2015).

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Saint-John Perse

Saint-John Perse (also Saint-Leger Leger,; pseudonyms of Alexis Leger) (31 May 1887 – 20 September 1975) was a French poet-diplomat, awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1960 "for the soaring flight and evocative imagery of his poetry." He was a major French diplomat from 1914 to 1940, after which he lived primarily in the United States until 1967.

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Salinas, California

Salinas is the county seat and largest municipality of Monterey County, California.

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Sally Salminen

Sally Alina Ingeborg Salminen (25 April 1906 – 18 July 1976), from 1940 Salminen-Dührkop, was an internationally renowned author from the Åland Islands, Finland.

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Salman Schocken

Salman Z. Schocken (שלמה זלמן שוקן) (October 29, 1877, Margonin, Province of Posen, German Empire (today Poland) – August 6, 1959, Pontresina, Switzerland) was a German Jewish publisher and businessman.

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Salvador de Madariaga

Salvador de Madariaga y Rojo (23 July 1886 – 14 December 1978) was a Spanish diplomat, writer, historian and pacifist.

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Salvatore Farina

Salvatore Farina (10 January 1846 – 15 December 1918) was an Italian novelist whose style of sentimental humor has been compared to that of Charles Dickens.

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Salvatore Quasimodo

Salvatore Quasimodo (August 20, 1901 – June 14, 1968) was an Sicilian novelist and poet.

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Samuel Beckett

Samuel Barclay Beckett (13 April 1906 – 22 December 1989) was an Irish avant-garde novelist, playwright, theatre director, poet, and literary translator who lived in Paris for most of his adult life.

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Sandinista National Liberation Front

The Sandinista National Liberation Front (Frente Sandinista de Liberación Nacional, FSLN) is a democratic socialist political party in Nicaragua.

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Santander, Spain

The port city of Santander (Cántabru: Sanander) is the capital of the autonomous community and historical region of Cantabria situated on the north coast of Spain.

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Sardinia

| conventional_long_name.

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Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan

Dr.

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Satire

Satire is a genre of literature, and sometimes graphic and performing arts, in which vices, follies, abuses, and shortcomings are held up to ridicule, ideally with the intent of shaming individuals, corporations, government, or society itself into improvement.

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Sauk Centre, Minnesota

Sauk Centre is a city in Stearns County, Minnesota, United States.

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Saul Bellow

Saul Bellow (born Solomon Bellows; 10 June 1915 – 5 April 2005) was a Canadian-American writer.

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Saunders Lewis

Saunders Lewis (born John Saunders Lewis) (15 October 1893 – 1 September 1985) was a Welsh poet, dramatist, historian, literary critic, and political activist.

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Scandinavian literature

Scandinavian literature or Nordic literature is the literature in the languages of the Nordic countries of Northern Europe.

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Schöneberg

is a locality of Berlin, Germany.

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Science fiction

Science fiction (often shortened to Sci-Fi or SF) is a genre of speculative fiction, typically dealing with imaginative concepts such as advanced science and technology, spaceflight, time travel, and extraterrestrial life.

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Scottish Americans

Scottish Americans or Scots Americans (Scottish Gaelic: Ameireaganaich Albannach; Scots-American) are Americans whose ancestry originates wholly or partly in Scotland.

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Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa

The Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa (SNS) is a public higher learning institution in Pisa, Italy.

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Seamus Heaney

Seamus Justin Heaney (13 April 1939 – 30 August 2013) was an Irish poet, playwright and translator.

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Seamus Heaney Centre for Poetry

The Seamus Heaney Centre for Poetry is located at Queen's University Belfast, and named after the late Seamus Heaney, recipient of the 1995 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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Seeing (novel)

Seeing (Ensaio sobre a Lucidez, lit. Essay on Lucidity) is a novel by Nobel Prize-winning Portuguese author José Saramago.

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Seeing Things (poetry collection)

Seeing Things is the ninth poetry collection by Seamus Heaney, who received the 1995 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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Selected Poems 1965–1975

Selected Poems 1965–1975 is a poetry collection by Seamus Heaney, who received the 1995 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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Selma Lagerlöf

Selma Ottilia Lovisa Lagerlöf (20 November 1858 – 16 March 1940) was a Swedish author and teacher.

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Selma Lagerlöf Prize

The Selma Lagerlöf Prize is a Swedish literary prize awarded to an author writing in the spirit of Selma Lagerlöf who was the first woman to win the Nobel Prize in Literature.

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September 1

No description.

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September 12

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September 14

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September 15

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September 16

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September 19

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September 1911

The following events occurred in September 1911.

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September 1916

The following events occurred in September 1916.

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September 1981

The following events occurred in September 1981.

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September 20

No description.

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September 23

It is frequently the day of the autumnal equinox in the Northern Hemisphere and the day of the vernal equinox in the Southern Hemisphere.

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September 25

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September 26

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September 27

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September 30

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September 6

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September 8

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Serbia

Serbia (Србија / Srbija),Pannonian Rusyn: Сербия; Szerbia; Albanian and Romanian: Serbia; Slovak and Czech: Srbsko,; Сърбия.

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Serbia–Spain relations

Serbian-Spanish relations are foreign relations between Serbia and Spain.

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Serbian culture

Serbian culture refers to the culture of Serbia and of ethnic Serbs.

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Serbs

The Serbs (Срби / Srbi) are a South Slavic ethnic group that formed in the Balkans.

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Serpent's Tail

Serpent's Tail is a British independent publishing firm founded in 1986 by Pete Ayrton.

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Seville

Seville (Sevilla) is the capital and largest city of the autonomous community of Andalusia and the province of Seville, Spain.

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Shandong people

The people of Shandong province or Shandong people refers to those who are native to Shandong province, the majority (99%) of whom are Han Chinese.

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Shandong University

Shandong University (abbreviated as Shanda,, English acronym SDU) is a public comprehensive university in Shandong, China.

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Shen Congwen

Shen Congwen (28 December 1902 – 10 May 1988), formerly romanized as Shen Ts'ung-wen, is considered to be one of the greatest modern Chinese writers, on par with Lu Xun.

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Shesher Kabita

Shesher Kabita (Bengali: শেষের কবিতা) is a novel by Rabindranath Tagore, widely considered a landmark in Bengali literature.

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Shi Tiesheng

Shi Tiesheng (史铁生) (1951 – December 31, 2010) was a Chinese novelist, known for his story which was the basis of the film Life on a String.

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Shikasta

Re: Colonised Planet 5, Shikasta (often shortened to Shikasta) is a 1979 science fiction novel by Doris Lessing, and is the first book in her five-book Canopus in Argos series.

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Shirley Varnagy

Shirley Varnagy Bronfenmajer (born February 1, 1982 in Caracas) is a Venezuelan journalist, writer and TV and radio presenter of Jewish origin.

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Shmuel Yosef Agnon

Shmuel Yosef Agnon (שמואל יוסף עגנון) (July 17, 1888 – February 17, 1970) was a Nobel Prize laureate writer and was one of the central figures of modern Hebrew fiction.

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Sholokhov Moscow State University for Humanities

Sholokhov Moscow State University for Humanities or Moscow State University for Humanities named after M.A. Sholokhov (Московский государственный гуманитарный университет имени М.А. Шолохова) was founded in 1951 as Moscow Pedagogical Institute for Correspondence Studies (Московский заочный педагогический институт).

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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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Shuntarō Tanikawa

(born December 15, 1931 in Tokyo City, Japan) is a Japanese poet and translator.

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Sicily

Sicily (Sicilia; Sicìlia) is the largest island in the Mediterranean Sea.

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Siege of Jasna Góra

The Siege of Jasna Góra (also known less accurately as the Battle of Częstochowa, Oblężenie Jasnej Góry.) took place in the winter of 1655 during the Second Northern War, or 'The Deluge' — as the Swedish invasion of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth is known.

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Sigrid Combüchen

Sigrid Combüchen (born January 16, 1942) is a Swedish novelist, essayist, literary critic and journalist.

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Sigrid Undset

Sigrid Undset (20 May 1882 – 10 June 1949) was a Norwegian novelist who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1928.

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Simin Behbahani

Simin Behbahani (سیمین بهبهانی; 20 July 1927 – 19 August 2014) was a prominent Iranian contemporary poet, lyricist and activist.

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Simon Vestdijk

Simon Vestdijk (17 October 1898 – 23 March 1971) was a Dutch writer.

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Sinclair Lewis

Harry Sinclair Lewis (February 7, 1885 – January 10, 1951) was an American novelist, short-story writer, and playwright.

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Sinclair Lewis Boyhood Home

The Sinclair Lewis Boyhood Home is a historic house museum and National Historic Landmark in Sauk Centre, Minnesota, United States.

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Sister Carrie

Sister Carrie (1900) is a novel by Theodore Dreiser about a young country girl who moves to the big city where she starts realizing her own American Dream, first as a mistress to men that she perceives as superior, and later becoming a famous actress.

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Sleeping Beauty (2011 film)

Sleeping Beauty is a 2011 Australian erotic drama film that was written and directed by Julia Leigh.

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Sligo County Museum

Sligo County Museum (Músaem Chontae Shligigh) is a museum dedicated to the history of County Sligo.

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Slow Man

Slow Man is a 2005 novel by South African-born Nobel laureate J. M. Coetzee, and concerns a man who must learn to adapt after losing a leg in a road accident.

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Snæfellsjökull

Snæfellsjökull (snow-fell glacier) is a 700,000-year-old glacier-capped stratovolcano in western Iceland.

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Snow Country

is a novel by the Japanese author Yasunari Kawabata.

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Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia

The Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (SFR Yugoslavia or SFRY) was a socialist state led by the League of Communists of Yugoslavia, that existed from its foundation in the aftermath of World War II until its dissolution in 1992 amid the Yugoslav Wars.

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Sokollu Mehmed Pasha

Sokollu Mehmed Pasha (سوکلو محمد پاشا, Sokollu Mehmet Paşa in modern Turkish; Мехмед-паша Соколовић, Arebica: مەحمەد-پاشا سۉقۉلۉوٖىݘ,; 1506 – 11 October 1579) was an Ottoman statesman.

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Solzhenitsyn Aid Fund

The Solzhenitsyn Aid Fund (officially Russian Public Fund to Aid Political Prisoners and their Families, also Fund for the Aid of Political Prisoners, Public Aid Fund) was a charity foundation and support network set up by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn and Alexander Ginzburg that distributed funds and material support to political and religious prisoners across the Soviet Union throughout the 1970s and 1980s.

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Song of Solomon (novel)

Song of Solomon is a 1977 novel by American author Toni Morrison.

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Song Offering

Song Offerings is a volume of lyrics by Bengali poet Rabindranath Thakur (রবীন্দ্রনাথ ঠাকুর), rendered into English by the poet himself, for which he was awarded the 1913 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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Sophie's Choice (novel)

Sophie's Choice is a 1979 novel by American author William Styron.

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South Africa

South Africa, officially the Republic of South Africa (RSA), is the southernmost country in Africa.

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South African Australians

South African Australians are citizens of Australia who are of South African descent.

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South Hadley, Massachusetts

South Hadley is a town in Hampshire County, Massachusetts, United States.

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Southern Renaissance

The Southern Renaissance (also known as Southern Renascence) was the reinvigoration of American Southern literature that began in the 1920s and 1930s with the appearance of writers such as William Faulkner, Thomas Wolfe, Caroline Gordon, Elizabeth Madox Roberts, Katherine Anne Porter, Allen Tate, Tennessee Williams, Robert Penn Warren, and Zora Neale Hurston, among others.

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Southern United States literature

Southern literature (sometimes called the literature of the American South) is defined as American literature about the Southern United States or by writers from this region.

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Spain

Spain (España), officially the Kingdom of Spain (Reino de España), is a sovereign state mostly located on the Iberian Peninsula in Europe.

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Spertus Institute for Jewish Learning and Leadership

Spertus Institute for Jewish Learning and Leadership is an educational center in Chicago, Illinois.

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Sri Aurobindo

Sri Aurobindo (born Aurobindo Ghose; 15 August 1872 – 5 December 1950) was an Indian philosopher, yogi, guru, poet, and nationalist.

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Sridharan Madhusudhanan

Sridharan Madhusudhanan (born 13 January 1966) is an Indian diplomat and author.

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St Columb's College

St Columb's College is a Roman Catholic boys' grammar school in Derry, Northern Ireland and, since 2008, a specialist school in Mathematics and Sports.

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St. Joseph College, Barranquilla

St.

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St. Stephen's College, Delhi

St.

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St. Xavier's Institution

St.

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Stanisław Brzozowski (writer)

Stanisław Brzozowski (28 June 1878 – 30 April 1911) was a Polish philosopher, writer, publicist, literary and theatre critic.

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Station Island (poetry collection)

Station Island is the sixth collection of original poetry written by the Northern Irish poet Seamus Heaney, who was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1995.

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Stations (poetry collection)

Stations is a poetry collection by Seamus Heaney, who received the 1995 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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Stavropol Krai

Stavropol Krai (p) is a federal subject (a krai) of Russia.

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Stefan Andres

Stefan Paul Andres (Dhrönchen (a part of Trittenheim, Rhineland-Palatinate), 26 June 1906 – Rome, 29 June 1970) was a German novelist.

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Stefan Żeromski

Stefan Żeromski (14 October 1864 – 20 November 1925) was a Polish novelist and dramatist.

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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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Stegner Fellowship

The Stegner Fellowship program is a two-year creative writing fellowship at Stanford University.

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Steinn Steinarr

Steinn Steinarr (born Aðalsteinn Kristmundsson, 13 October 1908 – 25 May 1958) was an Icelandic poet.

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Stephen Kennedy Murphy

Stephen Kennedy Murphy is a stage director of theatre and opera.

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Stephen Lowe (playwright)

Stephen Lowe (born December 1947) is an English playwright and director.

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Stephen Stenning

Stephen Stenning (aka Stephen Bailey) joined the British Council in 2011 as Director Arts Middle East North Africa.

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Stepping Stones: Interviews with Seamus Heaney

Stepping Stones: Interviews with Seamus Heaney is Dennis O'Driscoll's book-length portrait of Seamus Heaney, recipient of the 1995 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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Steven Spielberg

Steven Allan Spielberg (born December 18, 1946) is an American filmmaker.

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Stig Dagerman

Stig Halvard Dagerman (5 October 1923 – 4 November 1954) was a Swedish journalist and writer.

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Stig Dagerman Prize

The Stig Dagerman Prize (Swedish: Stig Dagermanpriset) is a Swedish award given since 1996 by the Stig Dagerman Society and Älvkarleby municipality.

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Stockholm

Stockholm is the capital of Sweden and the most populous city in the Nordic countries; 952,058 people live in the municipality, approximately 1.5 million in the urban area, and 2.3 million in the metropolitan area.

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Stockholm Stock Exchange Building

The Stock Exchange Building is a building originally erected for the Stockholm Stock Exchange between 1773 and 1778 from construction drawings by Erik Palmstedt.

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Stockholm University

Stockholm University (Stockholms universitet) is a public university in Stockholm, Sweden, founded as a college in 1878, with university status since 1960.

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Stories from Our Neighbourhood

Stories from our neighbourhood, Arabic title حكايات حارتنا, is a collection of stories by the Egyptian author Naguib Mahfouz, who was awarded the Nobel Literature Prize in 1988.

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Story of Sinuhe

The Story of Sinuhe is considered one of the finest works of ancient Egyptian literature.

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Stratis Myrivilis

Efstratios Stamatopoulos (30 June 1890 – 19 July 1969) was a Greek writer.

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Struga

Struga (Струга, Albanian: Struga/Strugë) is a town and popular tourist destination situated in the south-western region of the Republic of Macedonia, lying on the shore of Lake Ohrid.

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Struga Poetry Evenings

Struga Poetry Evenings (SPE) (Струшки вечери на поезијата, СВП; tr. Struški večeri na poezijata, SVP) is an international poetry festival held annually in Struga, Macedonia.

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Sukumar Ray (film)

Sukumar Ray is a 1987 Bengali short documentary film made by Satyajit Ray on his father, Sukumar Ray.

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Sula (novel)

Sula is a 1973 novel by Nobel Prize-winning author Toni Morrison, her second to be published after The Bluest Eye (1970).

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Sully Prudhomme

René François Armand (Sully) Prudhomme (16 March 1839 – 6 September 1907) was a French poet and essayist.

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Sunne, Sweden

Sunne is a locality and the seat of Sunne Municipality, Värmland County, Sweden with 4,931 inhabitants in 2010.

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Sunstroke (2014 film)

Sunstroke (Russian: Солнечный удар; translit. Solnechnyy udar) is a 2014 drama film by Russian director Nikita Mikhalkov.

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Sur Lautréamont

"Sur Lautréamont" is an essay written by French Nobel laureate J. M. G. Le Clézio.

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Sussex

Sussex, from the Old English Sūþsēaxe (South Saxons), is a historic county in South East England corresponding roughly in area to the ancient Kingdom of Sussex.

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Sutton Hoo Helmet (sculpture)

Sutton Hoo Helmet is a 2002 sculpture by the English artist Rick Kirby.

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Svendborg

Svendborg is a town on the island of Funen in south-central Denmark, and the seat of Svendborg Municipality.

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Svetlana

Svetlana (Russian, Bulgarian, Serbian Cyrillic: Светлана; Святла́на; Світла́на) is a common Orthodox Slavic female name, deriving from the East and South Slavic root свет svet, which translates into English as "northern star","light", "shining", "luminescent", "pure", "blessed", or "holy", depending upon context similar if not the same as the word Shwet in Sanskrit.

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Svetlana Alexievich

Svetlana Alexandrovna Alexievich (born 31 May 1948) is a Belarusian investigative journalist and non-fiction prose writer who writes in Russian.

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Sweden

Sweden (Sverige), officially the Kingdom of Sweden (Swedish), is a Scandinavian country in Northern Europe.

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Sweden–United Kingdom relations

United Kingdom–Sweden relations (also known as Anglo-Swedish relations or British-Swedish relations) (or are relations between the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and the Kingdom of Sweden.

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Swedish Academy

The Swedish Academy (Svenska Akademien), founded in 1786 by King Gustav III, is one of the Royal Academies of Sweden.

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Swedish literature

Swedish literature refers to literature written in the Swedish language or by writers from Sweden.

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Swedish nobility

The Swedish nobility (Adeln) has historically been a legally and/or socially privileged class in Sweden, and part of the so-called frälse (a derivation from Old Swedish meaning free neck).

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Swedish realism

Swedish realism is the period in Swedish literature that encompassed the last two decades of the 19th century.

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Swedish Royal Academies

The Royal Academies are independent organisations, founded on Royal command, that act to promote the arts, culture, and science in Sweden.

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Sydenham

Sydenham is a district within the south east London Boroughs of Lewisham, Bromley and Southwark.

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Szczawno-Zdrój

Szczawno-Zdrój (Bad Salzbrunn, until 1935 Ober Salzbrunn) is a spa town in Wałbrzych County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland.

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T. J. Cobden-Sanderson

Thomas James Cobden-Sanderson (2 December 1840 – 7 September 1922) was an English artist and bookbinder associated with the Arts and Crafts movement.

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T. S. Eliot

Thomas Stearns Eliot, (26 September 1888 – 4 January 1965), was an essayist, publisher, playwright, literary and social critic, and "one of the twentieth century's major poets".

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T. S. Eliot Prize (Truman State University)

The T. S. Eliot Prize for Poetry is awarded annually by Truman State University, which is a United States university located in Missouri.

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Tabataba suivi de pawana

Tabataba suivi de pawana is the title of two short stories "Tabataba" followed by Pawana(Awaité Pawana)in one book written in French by French Nobel laureate J. M. G. Le Clézio."Tabataba" was written by Bernard-Marie Koltès and Hector Poullet.

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Tadeusz Borowski

Tadeusz Borowski (12 November 1922 – 1 July 1951) was a Polish writer and journalist.

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Tadeusz Różewicz

Tadeusz Różewicz (9 October 1921 – 24 April 2014) was a Polish poet, playwright, writer, and translator.

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Taha Hussein

Taha Hussein (November 15, 1889 – October 28, 1973) was one of the most influential 20th-century Egyptian writers and intellectuals, and a figurehead for The Egyptian Renaissance and the modernist movement in the Middle East and North Africa.

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Tahar Ben Jelloun

Tahar Ben Jelloun (الطاهر بن جلون; born in Fes, French protectorate in Morocco, 1 December 1944) is a Moroccan writer.

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Taiwan Academy

Taiwan Academies are non-profit public institutes with a stated aim of promoting Mandarin language (known in Taiwan as Guóyǔ (國語)), Traditional Chinese characters, and research on Taiwan-related topics.

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Talpiot

Talpiot (תלפיות, lit. 'turrets' or 'magnificently built') is an Israeli neighborhood in southeast Jerusalem, established in 1922 by Zionist pioneers.

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Tammi (company)

Tammi is a Finnish publishing company established in 1943 by an initiative of Väinö Tanner, leader of the Social Democratic Party of Finland.

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Tanpopo (novel)

Tanpopo ("The Dandelion") is a Japanese novel by Yasunari Kawabata, written in 1964, but published complete only posthumously in 1972.

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Taormina

Taormina (Sicilian: Taurmina; Latin: Tauromenium; Ταυρομένιον, Tauromenion) is a comune (municipality) in the Metropolitan City of Messina, on the east coast of the island of Sicily, Italy.

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Tarjei Vesaas

Tarjei Vesaas (20 August 1897 – 15 March 1970) was a Norwegian poet and novelist.

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Tías, Las Palmas

Tías is a town and a municipality in the southern part of the island of Lanzarote, province of Las Palmas, autonomous community of the Canary Islands, Spain.

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Teixeira de Pascoaes

Joaquim Pereira Teixeira de Vasconcelos (2 November 1877, Amarante Municipality, Portugal - 14 December 1952, Gatão, Portugal), better known by his pen name Teixeira de Pascoaes, was a Portuguese poet.

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Telgte

Telgte is a town in the Warendorf district, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany.

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Temerl Bergson

Temerl Bergson (also spelled Tamarel; Hebrew name Tamar; surname alternately Sonnenberg or Berekson; תמריל ברגסון, died 1830) was a Polish Jewish businesswoman.

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Terespol

Terespol is a town in eastern Poland on the border with Belarus.

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Terra Amata (novel)

Terra Amata is an early fictional novel by French Nobel laureate J. M. G. Le Clézio.

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The African (essay)

"The African" (L'Africain) is a short autobiographical essay written by French Nobel laureate J. M. G. Le Clézio.

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The Appointment (novel)

The Appointment (Heute wär ich mir lieber nicht begegnet) is a novel by Nobel Prize-winning author Herta Müller, published in German in 1997.

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The Atom Station

The Atom Station (Atómstöðin) is a novel by Icelandic author Halldór Laxness, who was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1955. The initial print run sold out on the day it was published, for the first time in Icelandic history.

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The Aunt's Story

The Aunt's Story is the third published novel by the Australian novelist and 1973 Nobel Prize-winner, Patrick White.

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The Avignon Quintet

The Avignon Quintet is a five-volume series of novels by British writer Lawrence Durrell, published between 1974 and 1985.

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The Bad Girl

The Bad Girl, originally published in 2006 in Spanish as Travesuras de la niña mala, is a novel by Peruvian author Mario Vargas Llosa, who won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2010.

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The Beginning and the End (novel)

The Beginning and the End (بداية ونهاية) is a novel by Naguib Mahfouz, who was awarded the Nobel Prize in literature in 1988.

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The Bridal Canopy

The Bridal Canopy (הכנסת כלה, Hakhnasat Kallah), a novel by Shmuel Yosef Agnon, is considered to be one of the first classics of modern Hebrew literature.

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The Bridge on the Drina

The Bridge on the Drina (Na Drini ćuprija, На Дрини ћуприја) is a historical novel by the Yugoslav writer Ivo Andrić.

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The Brooklyn Rail

The Brooklyn Rail is a journal of arts, culture, and politics published monthly in Brooklyn, NY.

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The Buried Giant

The Buried Giant is a fantasy novel by Nobel Prize-winning British writer Kazuo Ishiguro, published in March 2015.

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The Captive Mind

The Captive Mind (Zniewolony umysł) is a 1953 work of nonfiction by Polish writer, poet, academic and Nobel laureate Czesław Miłosz.

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The Clown (1976 film)

The Clown is a 1976 West German film directed by Vojtěch Jasný.

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The Club Dumas

The Club Dumas (original Spanish title El Club Dumas) is a 1993 novel by Arturo Pérez-Reverte.

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The Cockatoos

The Cockatoos: Shorter Novels and Stories is a collection of six novellas by Australian writer Patrick White, first published by Jonathan Cape in 1974.

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The Days of His Grace

The Days of His Grace (Hans nådes tid) is a 1960 novel by Swedish writer Eyvind Johnson.

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The Dean's December

The Dean's December is a 1982 novel by the American author Saul Bellow.

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The Devil with Boobs

The Devil with Boobs (Italian title: Il diavolo con le zinne) is a two-act play by Dario Fo, recipient of the 1997 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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The Distinguished Citizen

The Distinguished Citizen (El ciudadano ilustre) is a 2016 Argentine-Spanish drama film directed by Gastón Duprat & Mariano Cohn.

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The Double (Saramago novel)

The Double is a 2002 novel by Portuguese author José Saramago, who won the Nobel Prize in Literature.

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The Dream of the Celt

The Dream of the Celt is a novel written by Hispano-Peruvian writer and 2010 Nobel laureate in literature Mario Vargas Llosa.

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The Dreaming Child (screenplay)

The Dreaming Child is a screenplay by Harold Pinter (1930–2008), the 2005 Nobel Laureate in Literature, which he completed in 1997 and published in volume 3 of his Collected Screenplays (2000).

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The Elephant in the Dark – Christianity, Islam and the Sufis

The Elephant in the Dark is a book by the writer Idries Shah, Article has moved and is now incorrectly dated 18 September 2011. based on lectures he delivered at the University of Geneva as Visiting Professor in 1972–1973. He was invited to speak on the topic of “Salvation as a total surrender to God: an attempt at dialogue between Christians and Muslims.” The book was published by Octagon Press in 1974 and is due to be republished in new paperback, ebook and audiobook editions by The Idries Shah Foundation from 1 March 2016. List of books and schedule for publication. Shortly before he died, Shah stated that his books form a complete course that could fulfil the function he had fulfilled while alive. As such, The Elephant in the Dark can be read as part of a whole course of study.

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The Elephant's Journey

The Elephant's Journey (A Viagem do Elefante) is a novel by Nobel Prize-winning author José Saramago.

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The Eye of the Storm (novel)

The Eye of the Storm is the ninth published novel by the Australian novelist and 1973 Nobel Prize-winner, Patrick White.

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The First Miracle of the Infant Jesus

The First Miracle of the Infant Jesus is a monologue by Dario Fo, recipient of the 1997 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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The Fish Can Sing

The Fish Can Sing is a 1957 novel by Icelandic author Halldór Laxness, who was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1955.

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The Forsyte Saga

The Forsyte Saga, first published under that title in 1922, is a series of three novels and two interludes published between 1906 and 1921 by Nobel Prize–winning English author John Galsworthy.

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The Forward

The Forward (Forverts), formerly known as The Jewish Daily Forward, is an American magazine published monthly in New York City for a Jewish-American audience.

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The Four-Gated City

The Four-Gated City, published in 1969, is the concluding novel in British Nobel Prize-winning author Doris Lessing's five-volume, semi-autobiographical series The Children of Violence, which she began, in 1952, with Martha Quest.

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The Fragrance of Guava

The Fragrance of Guava is a book based on the long conversations between Gabriel García Márquez and his close friend Plinio Apuleyo Mendoza.

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The General in His Labyrinth

The General in His Labyrinth (original Spanish title: El general en su laberinto) is a 1989 dictator novel by Colombian writer and Nobel laureate Gabriel García Márquez.

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The Gentleman from San Francisco

The Gentleman from San Francisco (Gospodin iz San-Frantsisko) is a short story by the Nobel Prize-winning Russian author Ivan Bunin, written in 1915 and published the same year in Moscow, in the 5th volume of Slovo (Word) anthology.

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The Glass Bead Game

The Glass Bead Game (Das Glasperlenspiel) is the last full-length novel of the German author Hermann Hesse.

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The Good Earth

The Good Earth is a novel by Pearl S. Buck published in 1931 and awarded the Pulitzer Prize for the Novel in 1932.

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The Good Terrorist

The Good Terrorist is a 1985 political novel written by the British novelist Doris Lessing.

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The Grandmothers: Four Short Novels

The Grandmothers: Four Short Novels is collection of four short stories published in 2003 by 2007 Nobel laureate Doris Lessing.

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The Grapes of Wrath

The Grapes of Wrath is an American realist novel written by John Steinbeck and published in 1939.

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The Grapes of Wrath (film)

The Grapes of Wrath is a 1940 drama film directed by John Ford.

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The Haw Lantern

The Haw Lantern (1987) is a collection of poems written by Irish poet Seamus Heaney, the recipient of the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1995.

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The High School, Dublin

The High School is an independent, co-educational school located in Rathgar, Dublin, Ireland.

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The Homecoming

The Homecoming is a two-act play written in 1964 by Nobel laureate Harold Pinter and it was first published in 1965.

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The Hunger Angel

The Hunger Angel (Atemschaukel; 2009) is a 304-page prose poem by Herta Müller.

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The Ice Princess (novel)

The Ice Princess is a crime novel by Swedish author Camilla Läckberg.

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The Institute for Cultural Research

The Institute for Cultural Research (ICR) was a London-based, UK-registered educational charity,The Institute for Cultural Research's UK registered charity number is 313295.

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The Keeper of Secrets

The Keeper of Secrets is a 1971 comic novel by the American writer Lester Goran.

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The Land of Green Plums

The Land of Green Plums (Herztier) is a novel by Herta Müller, published in 1994 by Rowohlt Verlag.

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The Life of Arseniev

The Life of Arseniev (Жизнь Арсеньева) is an autobiographical novel by a Nobel Prize-winning Russian author Ivan Bunin seen by many as his most important work written in emigration.

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The Light That Failed

The Light That Failed is a novel by the Nobel Prize-winning English author Rudyard Kipling that was first published in Lippincott's Monthly Magazine dated January 1891.

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The Lives of Animals

The Lives of Animals (1999) is a metafictional novella about animal rights by the South African novelist J. M. Coetzee, recipient of the 2003 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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The Living and the Dead (White novel)

The Living and the Dead is a novel by Australian Nobel Prize laureate Patrick White, his second published book (1941).

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The Magician of Lublin (novel)

The Magician of Lublin (Der kuntsnmakher fun Lublin) is a novel by Nobel Laureate Isaac Bashevis Singer.

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The Middle East Bedside Book

The Middle East Bedside Book is a collection of stories and information about the Middle East, edited by Anglo-Afghan author, Tahir Shah.

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The Moons of Jupiter (short story)

"The Moons of Jupiter" (1978 / 1982) is a short story by Alice Munro, the Canadian winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2013.

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The Museum of Innocence

The Museum of Innocence (Masumiyet Müzesi) is a novel by Orhan Pamuk, Nobel-laureate Turkish novelist published on August 29, 2008.

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The Norton Anthology of Poetry

The Norton Anthology of Poetry is one of several literary anthologies published by W.W. Norton and Company.

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The Notes

The Notes is a novel by Nobel Prize-winning author José Saramago.

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The Old Man and the Sea

The Old Man and the Sea is a short novel written by the American author Ernest Hemingway in 1951 in Cuba, and published in 1952.

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The Outpost (Prus novel)

The Outpost (Polish title: Placówka) was the first of four major novels by the Polish writer Bolesław Prus.

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The Passport

The Passport (Der Mensch ist ein großer Fasan auf der Welt) is a novel by Nobel Prize-winning author Herta Müller, published in German in 1986.

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The Peasants

The Peasants (Chłopi) is a novel written by Nobel Prize-winning Polish author Władysław Reymont in four parts between 1904 and 1909.

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The Perpetual Orgy

The Perpetual Orgy: Flaubert and Madame Bovary (1975) is a book-length essay by the Nobel Prize–winning Peruvian novelist Mario Vargas Llosa which examines Flaubert's Madame Bovary as the first modern novel.

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The Phantom Carriage

The Phantom Carriage (Körkarlen, literally "The Wagoner") is a 1921 Swedish parable generally considered to be one of the central works in the history of Swedish cinema.

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The Piano Teacher (film)

The Piano Teacher (lit) is a 2001 French-language psychological thriller film, written and directed by Michael Haneke, that is based on the 1983 novel of the same name by Elfriede Jelinek.

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The Piano Teacher (Jelinek novel)

The Piano Teacher (Die Klavierspielerin) is a novel by Austrian Nobel Prize winner Elfriede Jelinek, first published in 1983 by Rowohlt Verlag.

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The Pleasantries of the Incredible Mulla Nasrudin

The Pleasantries of the Incredible Mulla Nasrudin is a book by the writer Idries Shah, Article has moved and is now incorrectly dated 18 September 2011.

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The Pope and the Witch

The Pope and the Witch (Italian title: Il Papa e la strega) is a satirical play by Dario Fo, first performed in 1989.

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The Prize (1963 film)

The Prize is a 1963 spy film starring Paul Newman, Elke Sommer and Edward G. Robinson.

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The Promised Land (novel)

The Promised Land (Ziemia obiecana) is an 1899 novel by the Polish author and Nobel laureate, Władysław Reymont; first published in Warsaw.

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The Rats (play)

The Rats is a stage drama in five acts by Gerhart Hauptmann, which premiered in 1911, one year before the author received the Nobel Prize for Literature.

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The Remains of the Day

The Remains of the Day is a 1989 novel by Nobel Prize-winning British writer Kazuo Ishiguro.

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The Satanic Verses controversy

The Satanic Verses controversy, also known as the Rushdie Affair, was the heated and frequently violent reaction of Muslims to the publication of Salman Rushdie's novel The Satanic Verses, which was first published in the United Kingdom in 1988 and inspired in part by the life of the prophet Muhammad.

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The Second World War (book series)

The Second World War is a history of the period from the end of the First World War to July 1945, written by Winston Churchill.

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The Solid Mandala

The Solid Mandala, the seventh published novel by Australian author Patrick White, Nobel Prize winner of 1973, first published in 1966.

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The Solitude of Latin America

"The Solitude of Latin America" is the title of the speech given by Gabriel García Márquez upon receiving his Nobel Prize in Literature on 8 December 1982.

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The Sound and the Fury

The Sound and the Fury is a novel written by the American author William Faulkner.

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The Spirit Level (poetry collection)

The Spirit Level (1996) is a poetry collection written by Seamus Heaney, who received the 1995 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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The Story Bible

The Story Bible is a book by Pearl S. Buck summarizing the whole Bible in two separate volumes: Vol.

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The Story of a Shipwrecked Sailor

The Story of a Shipwrecked Sailor (original Spanish-language title: Relato de un náufrago) is a work of non-fiction by Colombian writer Gabriel García Márquez.

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The Storyteller (Vargas Llosa novel)

The Storyteller (El Hablador) is a novel by Peruvian author and Literature Nobel Prize winner Mario Vargas Llosa.

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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 Thibaults

The Thibaults (Les Thibault in French) is a multi-volume roman fleuve by Roger Martin du Gard, which follows the fortunes of two brothers, Antoine and Jacques Thibault, from their upbringing in a prosperous Catholic bourgeois family to the end of the First World War.

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The Time of the Hero

The Time of the Hero (original title: La ciudad y los perros, literally "The City and the Dogs", 1963) is a 1963 novel by Peruvian writer Mario Vargas Llosa, who won the Nobel Prize in 2010.

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The Traveller's Baggage

The Traveller's Baggage is a volume of newspaper articles by Nobel Prize-winning author José Saramago.

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The Tree of Man

The Tree of Man is the fourth published novel by the Australian novelist and 1973 Nobel Prize-winner, Patrick White.

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The Twyborn Affair

The Twyborn Affair is a novel by Australian Nobel laureate Patrick White, first published in 1979.

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The Unforgettable Character

The Unforgettable Character is a 1975 Taiwanese romantic drama film directed by Chang Mei-chun and written by Chiung Yao.

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The View from Castle Rock

The View from Castle Rock is a book of short stories by Canadian author Alice Munro, recipient of the 2013 Nobel Prize in Literature, which was published in 2006 by McClelland and Stewart.

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The Village (Bunin novel)

The Village (Derévnya) is a short novel by the Nobel Prize-winning Russian author Ivan Bunin, written in 1909 and first published in 1910 by the Saint Petersburg magazine Sovremenny Mir (issues Nos. 3, 10–11) under the title Novelet (Повесть).

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The Way to Paradise

The Way to Paradise (El paraíso en la otra esquina) is a novel published by Mario Vargas Llosa in 2003.

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The Wife (2017 film)

The Wife is a 2017 drama film directed by Björn Runge and written by Jane Anderson, based on the novel of the same name by Meg Wolitzer.

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The Winter of Our Discontent

The Winter of Our Discontent is John Steinbeck's last novel, published in 1961.

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The Wire

The Wire is an American crime drama television series set and produced in Baltimore, Maryland.

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The Words (book)

The Words (Les Mots) is Jean-Paul Sartre's 1963 autobiography.

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The Year of the Death of Ricardo Reis

The Year of the Death of Ricardo Reis (in Portuguese: O Ano da Morte de Ricardo Reis) is a 1984 novel by Portuguese novelist José Saramago, the winner of the 1998 Nobel Prize in literature.

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Theater in the United States

Theater in the United States is part of the European theatrical tradition that dates back to ancient Greek theatre and is heavily influenced by the British theatre.

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Theatre Communications Group

Theatre Communications Group (TCG) is a non-profit service organization headquartered in New York City that promotes professional non-profit theatre in the United States.

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Theodor Mommsen

Christian Matthias Theodor Mommsen (30 November 1817 – 1 November 1903) was a German classical scholar, historian, jurist, journalist, politician and archaeologist.

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Theodor Zahn

Theodor Zahn or Theodor von Zahn (10 October 1838 in Moers – 5 March 1933 in Erlangen) was a German Protestant theologian, a biblical scholar.

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Theodore Dreiser

Theodore Herman Albert Dreiser (August 27, 1871 – December 28, 1945) was an American novelist and journalist of the naturalist school.

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This World and the Other

This World and the Other is a novel by Nobel Prize-winning author José Saramago.

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Thomas Hardy

Thomas Hardy (2 June 1840 – 11 January 1928) was an English novelist and poet.

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Thomas Mann

Paul Thomas Mann (6 June 1875 – 12 August 1955) was a German novelist, short story writer, social critic, philanthropist, essayist, and the 1929 Nobel Prize in Literature laureate.

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Thomas More

Sir Thomas More (7 February 14786 July 1535), venerated in the Catholic Church as Saint Thomas More, was an English lawyer, social philosopher, author, statesman, and noted Renaissance humanist.

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Thomas P. Whitney

Thomas Porter Whitney (January 26, 1917 in Toledo, Ohio – December 2, 2007 in Manhattan, New York) was an American diplomat, author, translator, philanthropist and Thoroughbred racehorse owner/breeder.

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Thomas Pynchon

Thomas Ruggles Pynchon Jr. (born May 8, 1937) is an American novelist.

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Thomas Wolfe

Thomas Clayton Wolfe (October 3, 1900 – September 15, 1938) was an American novelist of the early twentieth century.

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Timeline of Australian history

This is a timeline of Australian history, comprising important legal and territorial changes and political events in Australia and its predecessor states.

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Timeline of Belgian history

This is a timeline of Belgian history, including important legal and territorial changes and political events in Belgium and its predecessor states.

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Timeline of Chilean history

This is a timeline of Chilean history, comprising important legal and territorial changes and political events in Chile and its predecessor states.

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Timeline of Cornish history

This timeline summarizes significant events in the History of Cornwall.

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Timeline of Indian history

This is a timeline of Indian history, comprising important legal and territorial changes and political events in India and its predecessor states.

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Timeline of Italian history

This is a timeline of Italian history, comprising important legal and territorial changes and political events in Italy and its predecessor states.

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Timeline of Portuguese history

This is a timeline of Portuguese history.

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Timeline of Quebec history (1960–81)

This section of the Timeline of Quebec history concerns the events between the Quiet Revolution and the patriation of the British North America Act.

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Timeline of the San Francisco Bay Area

This is a timeline of the San Francisco Bay Area in California, events in the nine counties that border on the San Francisco Bay, and the bay itself.

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Tin Can Cathedral

The Tin Can Cathedral (translit) was the first independent Ukrainian church in North America.

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Tomas Tranströmer

Tomas Gösta Tranströmer (15 April 1931 – 26 March 2015) was a Swedish poet, psychologist and translator.

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Toni Morrison

Toni Morrison (born Chloe Ardelia Wofford; February 18, 1931) is an American novelist, essayist, editor, teacher, and professor emeritus at Princeton University.

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Toni Preckwinkle

Toni Preckwinkle (née Reed; March 17, 1947) is an American politician and the current Cook County Board President in Cook County, Illinois, United States.

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Tony Kaye (director)

Tony Kaye (born 8 July 1952) is a British director of films, music videos, advertisements, and documentaries.

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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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Toyohiko Kagawa

At Princeton Theological Seminary Great Kantō earthquake, 1923 In America, 1935 was a Japanese Christian pacifist, Christian reformer, and labour activist.

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Traveling on One Leg

Traveling on One Leg (Reisende auf einem Bein) is a novel by Nobel Prize-winning author Herta Müller, published in German in 1989 by Rotbuch Verlag.

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Travels with Charley

Travels with Charley: In Search of America is a travelogue written by American author John Steinbeck.

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Travnik

Travnik is a town and municipality and the administrative center of Central Bosnia Canton of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, an entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

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Trevor Steele

Trevor Steele (born 1940) is an Australian Esperantist who has written numerous short stories and novels in Esperanto.

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Trinidad and Tobago

Trinidad and Tobago, officially the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago, is a twin island sovereign state that is the southernmost nation of the West Indies in the Caribbean.

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Troels Frederik Lund

Troels Frederik Troels-Lund (5 September 1840 – 12 February 1921) was a Danish historian.

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Trois Villes saintes

"Trois Villes saintes" is an essay written by French Nobel laureate J. M. G. Le Clézio.

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Tunji Oyelana

Tunji Oyelana (born October 4, 1939) is a multi-award-winning Nigerian musician, actor, folk singer, composer and once a lecturer at the University of Ibadan, Nigeria.

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Turin International Book Fair

The Turin International Book Fair (Italian: Salone Internazionale del Libro) is Italy's largest trade fair for books, held annually in mid-May in Turin, Italy.

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Turkey

Turkey (Türkiye), officially the Republic of Turkey (Türkiye Cumhuriyeti), is a transcontinental country in Eurasia, mainly in Anatolia in Western Asia, with a smaller portion on the Balkan peninsula in Southeast Europe.

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Turkish Cypriots

Turkish Cypriots or Cypriot Turks (Kıbrıs Türkleri or Kıbrıslı Türkler; Τουρκοκύπριοι) are mostly ethnic Turks originating from Cyprus.

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Turkish literature

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

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Turkish people

Turkish people or the Turks (Türkler), also known as Anatolian Turks (Anadolu Türkleri), are a Turkic ethnic group and nation living mainly in Turkey and speaking Turkish, the most widely spoken Turkic language.

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Turkish presidential election, 2014

Presidential elections were held on 10 August 2014 in order to elect the 12th President of Turkey.

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Twentieth-century English literature

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

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Twentieth-century theatre

Twentieth-century theatre describes a period of great change within the theatrical culture of the 20th century, mainly in Europe and North America.

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Twilight of the Eastern Gods

Twilight of the Eastern Gods (Albanian: Muzgu i perëndive të stepës, French: Le Crépulscule des dieux de la steppe) is a novel by the Albanian author Ismail Kadare.

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Twin Sisters of Kyoto

is a 1963 Japanese drama film directed by Noboru Nakamura and based on the novel The Old Capital (1962) by the Nobel-winning Japanese writer Yasunari Kawabata.

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Uchiko, Ehime

is a town located in Kita District, Ehime Prefecture, Japan.

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UCL Faculty of Laws

The UCL Faculty of Laws is the law school of University College London (UCL).

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UEA Creative Writing Course

The University of East Anglia's Creative Writing Course was founded by Sir Malcolm Bradbury and Sir Angus Wilson in 1970.

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Umberto Piersanti

Umberto Piersanti (born February 26, 1941) is an Italian poet, prose writer, professor of sociology of the literature at the University of Urbino, in Italy, and editor of the literary revue Pelagos.

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Une lettre de J. M. G. Le Clézio

"Une lettre de J. M. G. Le Clezio"is an essay written by French Nobel laureate J. M. G. Le Clézio.

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United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom (UK) or Britain,Usage is mixed with some organisations, including the and preferring to use Britain as shorthand for Great Britain is a sovereign country in western Europe.

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United States

The United States of America (USA), commonly known as the United States (U.S.) or America, is a federal republic composed of 50 states, a federal district, five major self-governing territories, and various possessions.

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Universidad Camilo José Cela

The University Camilo José Cela (UCJC) is a private university established in 2000 and based in Madrid, Spain.

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Universidad Francisco Marroquín

Francisco Marroquín University (Spanish: Universidad Francisco Marroquín), also known by the abbreviation UFM, is a private, secular university in Guatemala City, Guatemala.

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University of Adelaide Theatre Guild

The University of Adelaide Theatre Guild is a South Australian not-for-profit amateur theatre companyHibberd, M, 2012, About the Theatre Guild, http://www.adelaide.edu.au/theatreguild/about/ based on the North Terrace campus of the University of Adelaide.

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University of Cape Town

The University of Cape Town (UCT) is a public research university located in Cape Town in the Western Cape province of South Africa.

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University of Cartagena

The University of Cartagena (Universidad de Cartagena), also called Unicartagena, is a public, departmental, coeducational, research university based primarily in the city of Cartagena, Bolívar, Colombia.

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University of Chicago

The University of Chicago (UChicago, U of C, or Chicago) is a private, non-profit research university in Chicago, Illinois.

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University of East Anglia

The University of East Anglia (abbreviated as UEA) is a public research university in Norwich, England.

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University of Helsinki

The University of Helsinki (Helsingin yliopisto, Helsingfors universitet, Universitas Helsingiensis, abbreviated UH) is a university located in Helsinki, Finland since 1829, but was founded in the city of Turku (in Swedish Åbo) in 1640 as the Royal Academy of Åbo, at that time part of the Swedish Empire.

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University of Ibadan

The University of Ibadan (UI) is the oldest Nigerian university, and is located five miles (8 kilometres) from the centre of the major city of Ibadan in Western Nigeria.

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University of Leeds

The University of Leeds is a Russell Group university in Leeds, West Yorkshire, England.

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University of London International Programmes

The University of London (formerly International Programmes) is a central academic body within the University of London, which manages external study programmes.

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University of Minnesota

The University of Minnesota, Twin Cities (often referred to as the University of Minnesota, Minnesota, the U of M, UMN, or simply the U) is a public research university in Minneapolis and Saint Paul, Minnesota.

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University of Nice Sophia Antipolis

The Nice Sophia Antipolis University (Université Nice Sophia Antipolis) is a university located in Nice, France and neighboring areas.

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University of St Andrews

The University of St Andrews (informally known as St Andrews University or simply St Andrews; abbreviated as St And, from the Latin Sancti Andreae, in post-nominals) is a British public research university in St Andrews, Fife, Scotland.

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University of Texas at Austin

The University of Texas at Austin (UT, UT Austin, or Texas) is a public research university and the flagship institution of the University of Texas System.

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University of the Witwatersrand

The University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, is a multi-campus South African public research university situated in the northern areas of central Johannesburg.

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University of Warsaw

The University of Warsaw (Uniwersytet Warszawski, Universitas Varsoviensis), established in 1816, is the largest university in Poland.

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University of Washington Press

The University of Washington Press is an American academic publishing house.

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University of Zurich

The University of Zurich (UZH, Universität Zürich), located in the city of Zürich, is the largest university in Switzerland, with over 25,000 students.

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Unsere Besten

("Our Best") was a television series shown in German public television (ZDF) in November 2003, similar to the BBC series 100 Greatest Britons and that program's spin-offs.

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Uppsala University

Uppsala University (Uppsala universitet) is a research university in Uppsala, Sweden, and is the oldest university in Sweden and all of the Nordic countries still in operation, founded in 1477.

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Userkaf

Userkaf (known in Greek as Usercherês, Ούσερχέρης) was the founder of the Fifth dynasty of Egypt and the first pharaoh to start the tradition of building sun temples at Abusir.

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V. S. Naipaul

Sir Vidiadhar Surajprasad "Vidia" Naipaul, TC (born 17 August 1932), is an Indo-Caribbean writer and Nobel Laureate who was born in Trinidad with British citizenship.

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Vaaren

Vaaren is a novel written by Norwegian Nobel laureate Sigrid Undset, published in 1914.

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Valdemar Rørdam

Valdemar Rørdam (23 September 1872 – 13 July 1946) was a Danish national conservative poet and author.

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Vasco Pratolini

Vasco Pratolini (19 October 1913 – 12 January 1991) was an Italian writer of the 20th century.

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Vasyl Holoborodko

Vasyl Holoborodko (*April 7, 1945, Adrianopil) is a Ukrainian poet, representative of the "Kyiv school of poetry".

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Vasyl Stus

Vasyl Semenovych Stus (Васи́ль Семе́нович Стус; 6 January 1938, Rakhnivka, Ukrainian SSR – 4 September 1985, Perm-36, Kuchino, Russian SFSR) was a Ukrainian poet, translator, literary critic, journalist, and an active member of the Ukrainian dissident movement.

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Vater telefoniert mit den Fliegen

Vater telefoniert mit den Fliegen is a book by Nobel Prize-winning author Herta Müller.

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Växjö

Växjö is a city and the seat of Växjö Municipality, Kronoberg County, Sweden.

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Víctor Jara

Víctor Lidio Jara Martínez (28 September 1932 – 16 September 1973) was a Chilean teacher, theater director, poet, singer-songwriter and political activist tortured and killed during the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet.

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Víctor Manuel Rendón

Víctor Manuel Rendón Pérez (Guayaquil, December 5, 1859 – Guayaquil, October 9, 1940) was an Ecuadorian writer, poet, novelist, playwright, biographer, translator, doctor, diplomat, pianist and composer.

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Verner von Heidenstam

Carl Gustaf Verner von Heidenstam (6 July 1859 – 20 May 1940) was a Swedish poet, novelist and laureate of the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1916.

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Vevey

Vevey is a town in Switzerland in the canton of Vaud, on the north shore of Lake Geneva, near Lausanne.

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Vicente Aleixandre

Vicente Pío Marcelino Cirilo Aleixandre y Merlo (26 April 1898 – 14 December 1984) was a Spanish poet who was born in Seville in 1898.

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Vicente Fox

Vicente Fox Quesada, (born 2 July 1942) is a Mexican businessman and politician who served as the 55th President of Mexico from December 1, 2000 to November 30, 2006.

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Viking Press

Viking Press is an American publishing company now owned by Penguin Random House.

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Vilhelm

Vilhelm is a masculine given name, the Scandinavian form of William and Wilhelm.

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Vilhelm Grønbech

Vilhelm Peter Grønbech (14 June 1873 – 21 April 1948) was a Danish cultural historian.

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Vilhelm Moberg

Karl Artur Vilhelm Moberg (20 August 1898 – 8 August 1973) was a Swedish journalist, author, playwright, historian, and debater.

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Villa Aurore

Villa Aurore is a novel written in French by French Nobel laureate J. M. G. Le Clézio.

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Violet Clifton

Violet Mary Clifton (née Beauclerk) (2 November 1883 (Rome) – 20 November 1961) was an English writer.

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Violeta Cela

Violeta Bravo Cela (born December 7, 1960) is a Spanish actress, model, columnist and voice actress.

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Vivienne Haigh-Wood Eliot

Vivienne Haigh-Wood Eliot (28 May 1888 – 22 January 1947) was an English governess and writer, who became known for her marriage in 1915 to the American poet T. S. Eliot.

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Vizma Belševica

Vizma Belševica (May 30, 1931, Riga – August 6, 2005) was a Latvian poet, writer and translator.

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Volker Schlöndorff

Volker Schlöndorff (born 31 March 1939) is a German filmmaker who has worked in Germany, France and the United States.

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Vopnafjörður

Vopnafjörður is a village and municipality in Northeast Iceland, standing on a peninsula in the middle of a mountainous bay by the same name.

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Voyage au pays des arbres

Voyage au pays des arbres is a novel written in French by French Nobel laureate J. M. G. Le Clézio.

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Voyages de l'autre côté

Voyages de l'autre côté is a novel written in French by French Nobel laureate writer J. M. G. Le Clézio.

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Voz viva de México

Voz viva de México ("Living Voice of Mexico") is a collection of readings by authors from their own works.

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W. B. Yeats

William Butler Yeats (13 June 186528 January 1939) was an Irish poet and one of the foremost figures of 20th-century literature.

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W. B. Yeats bibliography

This is a list of all works by Irish poet and dramatist W. B. (William Butler) Yeats (1865–1939), winner of the 1923 Nobel Prize in Literature and a foremost figure in 20th-century literature.

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W. G. Sebald

Winfried Georg Sebald (18 May 1944 – 14 December 2001), known as W. G. Sebald or Max Sebald, was a German writer and academic.

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W. H. Auden

Wystan Hugh Auden (21 February 1907 – 29 September 1973) was an English-American poet.

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Waiting for the Barbarians

Waiting for the Barbarians is a novel by the South African-born Nobel laureate J. M. Coetzee.

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Walter Arthur Berendsohn

Walter Arthur Berendsohn (10 September 1884, Hamburg – 30 January 1984, Stockholm) was a German literary scholar.

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Walter Eucken

Walter Eucken (17 January 1891 – 20 March 1950) was a German economist of the Freiburg school and father of ordoliberalism.

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Walter Starkie

Walter Fitzwilliam Starkie CMG, CBE, Litt.D (9 August 1894 – 2 November 1976) was an Irish scholar, Hispanist, author and musician.

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Wandering Star (novel)

Wandering Star (original title: Étoile errante) is a novel by French Nobel laureate writer J. M. G. Le Clézio.

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War novel

A war novel (military fiction) is a novel in which the primary action takes place on a battlefield, or in a civilian setting (or home front), where the characters are either preoccupied with the preparations for, suffering the effects of, or recovering from war.

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Wartime Lies

Wartime Lies is a semi-autobiographical novel by Louis Begley first published in 1991.

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Władysław Reymont

Władysław Stanisław Reymont (born Rejment; 7 May 1867 – 5 December 1925) was a Polish novelist and the 1924 laureate of the Nobel Prize in Literature.

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Werner Bergengruen

Werner Bergengruen (September 16, 1892 – September 4, 1964) was a Baltic German novelist and poet.

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West University of Timișoara

The West University of Timișoara (Universitatea de Vest din Timișoara; abbreviated UVT) is a university located in Timișoara, Romania.

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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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Western culture

Western culture, sometimes equated with Western civilization, Occidental culture, the Western world, Western society, European civilization,is a term used very broadly to refer to a heritage of social norms, ethical values, traditional customs, belief systems, political systems and specific artifacts and technologies that have some origin or association with Europe.

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Western Norway

Western Norway (Vestlandet, Vest-Norge, Vest-Noreg) is the region along the Atlantic coast of southern Norway.

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Westin St. Francis

The Westin St.

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What Must Be Said

"What Must Be Said" ("Was gesagt werden muss") is a 2012 prose poem by the German writer Günter Grass, recipient of the 1999 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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When We Were Orphans

When We Were Orphans is the fifth novel by Nobel Prize-winning British author Kazuo Ishiguro, published in 2000.

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White Rose

The White Rose (die Weiße Rose) was a non-violent, intellectual resistance group in Nazi Germany led by a group of students and a professor at the University of Munich.

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Who Do You Think You Are? (book)

Who Do You Think You Are? is a book of short stories by Alice Munro, recipient of the 2013 Nobel Prize in Literature, published by Macmillan of Canada in 1978.

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Wie Wahrnehmung sich erfindet

Wie Wahrnehmung sich erfindet is a book by Nobel Prize-winning author Herta Müller.

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Wife selling

Wife selling is the practice of a husband selling his wife and may include the sale of a female by a party outside a marriage.

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Willem Kloos

Willem Johannes Theodorus Kloos (6 May 1859 in Amsterdam – 31 March 1938 in The Hague) was a nineteenth-century Dutch poet and literary critic.

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William Auld

William Auld (6 November 1924 – 11 September 2006) was a Scottish poet, author, translator and magazine editor who wrote chiefly in Esperanto.

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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 Faulkner Foundation

The William Faulkner Foundation (1960-1970) was a charitable organization founded by the novelist William Faulkner in 1960 to support various charitable causes, all educational or literary in nature.

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William Golding

Sir William Gerald Golding CBE (19 September 1911 – 19 June 1993) was a British novelist, playwright, and poet.

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William Greaves

William Greaves (October 8, 1926 – August 25, 2014) was a documentary filmmaker and a pioneer of African-American filmmaking.

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William Heinesen

Andreas William Heinesen (15 January 1900 – 12 March 1991) was a poet, novel writer, short story writer, children's book writer, composer and painter from the Faroe Islands.

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William Inge (priest)

William Ralph Inge (6 June 1860 – 26 February 1954) was an English author, Anglican priest, professor of divinity at Cambridge, and Dean of St Paul's Cathedral, which provided the appellation by which he was widely known, Dean Inge.

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William Trevor

William Trevor KBE (24 May 1928 – 20 November 2016) was an Irish novelist, playwright and short story writer.

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Willibrordus S. Rendra

Willibrordus Surendra Broto Rendra (7 November 1935 - 6 August 2009), widely known as Rendra or W. S. Rendra, was an Indonesian dramatist, poet, activist, performer, actor and director.

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Willy Conley

Willy Conley (born August 5, 1958, in Baltimore, Maryland, USA) is an American deaf photographer, playwright, actor and writer.

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Winston Churchill

Sir Winston Leonard Spencer-Churchill (30 November 187424 January 1965) was a British politician, army officer, and writer, who was Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1940 to 1945 and again from 1951 to 1955.

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Winston Churchill as historian

The British statesman Winston Churchill was a prolific writer throughout his life, and many of his works were historical.

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Winston Churchill as writer

Winston Churchill, in addition to his careers of soldier and politician, was a prolific writer under the pen name "Winston S. Churchill".

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Wintering Out

Wintering Out (1972) is a poetry collection by Seamus Heaney, who received the 1995 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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Wisława Szymborska

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

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With Beauty and Sorrow

is a 1965 Japanese drama film directed by Masahiro Shinoda and based on the novel Beauty and Sadness (1964) by the Nobel-winning Japanese writer Yasunari Kawabata.

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Without Dogma

Without dogma is a novel of manners by Henryk Sienkiewicz, a Polish Nobel Prize in Literature winner, published in 1891.

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Wole Soyinka

Akinwande Oluwole Babatunde Soyinka (Yoruba: Akinwándé Oluwo̩lé Babátúndé S̩óyinká,; born 13 July 1934), known as Wole Soyinka, is a Nigerian playwright, poet and essayist.

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Wole Soyinka Prize for Literature in Africa

Wole Soyinka Prize for Literature in Africa is a pan-African writing prize awarded biennially, official website.

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Women as Lovers (novel)

Women as Lovers (Die Liebhaberinnen, published 1975) is a novel by Austrian Nobel laureate Elfriede Jelinek that details the lives of the characters Brigitte and Paula, as the two women transition from dreams of the future, to life with a husband and children.

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Women in Chile

The lives, roles, and rights of women in Chile have gone through many changes over time.

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Women in Italy

Women in Italy refers to females who are from (or reside) in Italy.

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Women in speculative fiction

In 1948, 10–15% of science fiction writers were female.

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World Editions

World Editions (WE) is an independent publishing house that focuses on bringing Dutch and international literature to an English readership.

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World Literature Today

World Literature Today is an American magazine of international literature and culture, published bimonthly at the University of Oklahoma, Norman.

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World March for Peace and Nonviolence

The World March for Peace and Nonviolence is an initiative of World without Wars, an international organization which has worked for peace and nonviolence since 1995 and was created by the Humanist Movement.

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World War III in popular culture

World War III is a common theme in popular culture.

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Writer

A writer is a person who uses written words in various styles and techniques to communicate their ideas.

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Wu Chinese-speaking people

The Wu Chinese people, also known as Wuyue people, (Shanghainese) Jiang-Zhe people (江浙民系) or San Kiang (三江) are a major subgroup of the Han Chinese.

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Xu Xin (Judaic scholar)

Xu Xin (born June 16, 1949) is a professor at Nanjing University and China's leading Judaic scholar, as well as the founder and director of the Diane and Guilford Glazer Institute for Jewish and Israel Studies at Nanjing University in Nanjing, China.

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Yaşar Kemal

Yaşar Kemal (born Kemal Sadık Gökçeli; 6 October 1923 – 28 February 2015) was a Turkish writer and human rights activist of Kurdish origin.

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Yaddo

Yaddo is an artists' community located on a estate in Saratoga Springs, New York.

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Yang Lian (poet)

Yang Lian (楊煉 Yáng Liàn) is a Swiss-Chinese poet associated with the Misty Poets and also with the Searching for Roots school.

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Yannis Markopoulos

Yannis Markopoulos (Γιάννης Μαρκόπουλος; born 18 March 1939) is a Greek composer.

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Yasunari Kawabata

was a Japanese novelist and short story writer whose spare, lyrical, subtly-shaded prose works won him the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1968, the first Japanese author to receive the award.

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Yedikule Fortress

Yedikule Fortress (Yedikule Hisarı or Yedikule Zindanları; meaning "Fortress of the Seven Towers", or "Dungeons of the Seven Towers", respectively) is a fortified historic structure located in the Yedikule neighbourhood of Fatih, in Istanbul, Turkey.

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Yehia Chahine

Yehia Chahine (يحيى شاهين) (28 July 1917 – 18 March 1994) was an Egyptian film producer and an actor of film and theatre.

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Yevgeny Yevtushenko

Yevgeny Aleksandrovich Yevtushenko (Евгений Александрович Евтушенко; 18 July 1933 – 1 April 2017) was a Soviet and Russian poet.

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Yiannis Ritsos

Yiannis Ritsos (Γιάννης Ρίτσος; 1 May 1909 – 11 November 1990) was a Greek poet and left-wing activist and an active member of the Greek Resistance during World War II.

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Yiddish

Yiddish (ייִדיש, יידיש or אידיש, yidish/idish, "Jewish",; in older sources ייִדיש-טײַטש Yidish-Taitsh, Judaeo-German) is the historical language of the Ashkenazi Jews.

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Yiddish literature

Yiddish literature encompasses all those belles-lettres written in Yiddish, the language of Ashkenazic Jewry which is related to Middle High German.

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Yordan Radichkov

Yordan Radichkov (Йордан Радичков; 24 October 1929 – 21 January 2004) was a Bulgarian writer and playwright.

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Yoruba language

Yoruba (Yor. èdè Yorùbá) is a language spoken in West Africa.

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Yoruba literature

Yoruba literature is the spoken and written literature of the Yoruba people, one of the largest ethno-linguistic groups in Nigeria and in the rest of Africa.

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Yukio Mishima

is the pen name of, a Japanese author, poet, playwright, actor, model, film director, founder of the Tatenokai, and nationalist.

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Yumiko Kurahashi

was a Japanese writer.

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Yury Trifonov

Yury Valentinovich Trifonov (Юрий Валентинович Трифонов; 28 August 1925 – 28 March 1981) was a leading representative of the so-called Soviet "Urban Prose".

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Zahl (Norwegian family)

Zahl or Sahl is a Nordland family belonging to and mainly living in the County of Nordland, Norway.

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Zalman Shneur

Zalman Shneur (1887 – 20 February 1959) was a prolific bilingual Yiddish and Hebrew poet and writer.

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Zama (novel)

Zama is a 1956 novel by Argentine writer Antonio di Benedetto.

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Zbigniew Herbert

Zbigniew Herbert (29 October 1924 – 28 July 1998) was a Polish poet, essayist, drama writer and moralist.

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Zenica prison

Zenica prison (Kaznenopopravni zavod zatvorenog tipa Zenica, KPZ Zenica, K.P. DOM) is a closed-type prison located in Zenica, Bosnia and Herzegovina.

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Zenobia Camprubí

Zenobia Camprubí Aymar (31 August 1887 – 25 October 1956) was a Spanish-born writer and poet; she was also a noted translator of the works of Rabindranath Tagore.

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Ziemia obiecana

Ziemia obiecana is a Polish language name for the Promised Land or the Land of Israel.

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Zygmunt Ajdukiewicz

Zygmunt Ajdukiewicz (1861 – 1917) was a Polish realist painter of the late 19th century specializing in portraits, genre and historical painting.

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100 Greatest Britons

The 100 Greatest Britons was a television series broadcast by the BBC in 2002.

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1269 Rollandia

1269 Rollandia, provisional designation, is a dark Hildian asteroid from the outermost region of the asteroid belt, approximately 105 kilometers in diameter.

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12696 Camus

12696 Camus, provisional designation, is a carbonaceous asteroid from the central region of the asteroid belt, approximately 9 kilometers in diameter.

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1446 Sillanpää

1446 Sillanpää, provisional designation, is a stony Florian asteroid from the inner regions of the asteroid belt, approximately 8.2 kilometers in diameter.

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1817

No description.

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1830

It is known in European history as a rather tumultuous year with the Revolutions of 1830 in France, Belgium, Poland, Switzerland and Italy.

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1830 in France

Events from the year 1830 in France.

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1830 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1830.

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1830 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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1832

No description.

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1832 in Norway

Events in the year 1832 in Norway.

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1839 in France

Events from the year 1839 in France.

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1839 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1839.

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1839 in science

The year 1839 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.

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1844

No description.

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1844 in France

Events from the year 1844 in France.

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1845

No description.

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1856

No description.

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1856 in Ireland

Events from the year 1856 in Ireland.

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1857

No description.

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1858

No description.

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1859

No description.

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1859 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1859.

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1859 in Norway

Events in the year 1859 in Norway.

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1861 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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1862

This year was named by Mitchell Stephens as the greatest year to read newspapers.

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1862 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1862.

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1864

No description.

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1865

No description.

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1866

No description.

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1866 in France

Events from the year 1866 in France.

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1867

No description.

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1867 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1867.

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1867 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 1867 in the United Kingdom.

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1869

No description.

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1870

No description.

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1870 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1870.

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1871

No description.

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1872

No description.

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1872 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 1872 in the United Kingdom.

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1873

No description.

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1873 in Denmark

Events from the year 1873 in Denmark.

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1874

No description.

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1874 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 1874 in the United Kingdom.

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1875

No description.

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1881

No description.

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1881 in France

Events from the year 1881 in France.

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1882

No description.

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1882 in Norway

Events in the year 1882 in Norway.

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1885

No description.

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1885 in France

Events from the year 1885 in France.

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1887

No description.

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1887 in France

Events from the year 1887 in France.

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1887 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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1888

In Germany, 1888 is known as the Year of the Three Emperors.

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1888 in the United States

Events from the year 1888 in the United States.

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1889

No description.

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1890

No description.

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1891

No description.

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1891 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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1892

No description.

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1896

No description.

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1896 in Italy

See also: 1895 in Italy, other events of 1896, 1897 in Italy.

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1897

No description.

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1897 in the United States

Events from the year 1897 in the United States.

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1898

No description.

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1899

No description.

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1899 in Japan

Events in the year 1899 in Japan.

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1900

As of March 1 (O.S. February 17), when the Julian calendar acknowledged a leap day and the Gregorian calendar did not, the Julian calendar fell one day further behind, bringing the difference to 13 days until February 28 (O.S. February 15), 2100.

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1900 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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1901

No description.

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1901 in literature

This article presents lists of literary events and publications in 1901.

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1901 in philosophy

1901 in philosophy.

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1901 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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1902

No description.

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1902 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1902.

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1902 in philosophy

1902 in philosophy.

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1903

No description.

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1903 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1903.

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1904

No description.

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1904 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1904.

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1904 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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1905

As the second year of the massive Russo-Japanese War began, more than 100,000 died in the largest world battles of that era, and the war chaos lead to a revolution against the Tsar (Shostakovich's 11th Symphony is subtitled The Year 1905 to commemorate this).

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1905 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1905.

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1906

No description.

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1906 in Ireland

Events from the year 1906 in Ireland.

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1906 in Italy

See also: 1905 in Italy, other events of 1906, 1907 in Italy.

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1906 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1906.

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1906 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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1907

No description.

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1907 in France

Events from the year 1907 in France.

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1907 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1907.

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1907 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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1907 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 1907 in the United Kingdom.

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1908

According to NASA reports, 1908 was the coldest recorded year since 1880.

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1908 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1908.

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1909

No description.

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1909 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1909.

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1909 in Sweden

Events from the year 1909 in Sweden.

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1910

No description.

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1910 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1910.

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1910 in Norway

In 1910 Haakon VII serves his sixth year as King of '''Norway'''.

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1911

A highlight was the race for the South Pole.

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1911 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1911.

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1911 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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1911 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 1911 in the United Kingdom.

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1912

No description.

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1912 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1912.

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1913

No description.

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1913 in France

Events from the year 1913 in France.

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1913 in India

Events in the year 1913 in India.

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1913 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1913.

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1913 in philosophy

1913 in philosophy.

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1913 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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1914

This year saw the beginning of what became known as World War I, after an heir to the Austrian throne was assassinated by a Serbian nationalist.

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1914 in France

Events from the year 1914 in France.

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1914 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1914.

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1914 in Mexico

Events in the year 1914 in Mexico.

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1914 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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1915

Below, the events of World War I have the "WWI" prefix.

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1915 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1915.

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1915 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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1915 in the United States

Events from the year 1915 in the United States.

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1916

Below, the events of the First World War have the "WWI" prefix.

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1916 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1916.

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1916 in poetry

—Closing lines of "Easter, 1916" by W. B. Yeats Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).

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1917

This year was famous for the October Revolution in Russia, by Vladimir Lenin.

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1917 in literature

This article presents lists of literary events and publications in 1917.

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1917 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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1918

This year is famous for the end of the First World War, on the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month, as well as for the flu pandemic, that killed 50-100 million people worldwide.

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1918 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1918.

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1919

No description.

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1919 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1919.

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1919 in poetry

—From A Prayer for My Daughter by W. B. Yeats, first published this year Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).

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1919 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 1919 in the United Kingdom.

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1920

No description.

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1920 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1920.

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1920 in Norway

Events in the year 1920 in Norway.

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1921

No description.

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1921 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1921.

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1922

No description.

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1922 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1922.

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1923

No description.

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1923 in Ireland

Events from the year 1923 in Ireland.

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1923 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1923.

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1923 in poetry

—From Robert Frost's "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening", first published this year in his collection New Hampshire Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).

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1924

No description.

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1924 in France

Events from the year 1924 in France.

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1924 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1924.

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1925

No description.

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1925 in Ireland

Events from the year 1925 in Ireland.

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1925 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1925.

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1926

No description.

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1926 in Ireland

Events from the year 1926 in Ireland.

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1926 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1926.

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1927

No description.

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1927 in Germany

Events in the year 1927 in Germany.

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1927 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1927.

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1927 in philosophy

1927 in philosophy.

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1927 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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1928

No description.

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1928 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1928.

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1928 in Norway

Events in the year 1928 in Norway.

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1929

This year marked the end of a period known in American history as the Roaring Twenties after the Wall Street Crash of 1929 ushered in a worldwide Great Depression.

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1929 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1929.

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1930

No description.

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1930 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1930.

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1930 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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1930 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 1930 in the United Kingdom.

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1931

No description.

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1931 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1931.

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1931 in the United States

Events from the year 1931 in the United States.

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1932

No description.

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1932 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1932.

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1932 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 1932 in the United Kingdom.

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1933

No description.

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1933 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1933.

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1933 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 1933 in the United Kingdom.

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1934

No description.

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1934 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1934.

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1934 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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1935

No description.

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1935 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1935.

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1936

No description.

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1936 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1936.

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1936 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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1936 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 1936 in the United Kingdom.

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1937

No description.

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1937 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1937.

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1938

No description.

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1938 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1938.

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1939

This year also marks the start of the Second World War, the largest and deadliest conflict in human history.

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1939 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1939.

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1939 in Northern Ireland

Events during the year 1939 in Northern Ireland.

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1939 in poetry

— W. H. Auden, from "September 1, 1939" Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).

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1939 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 1939 in the United Kingdom.

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1940

Below, the events of World War II have the "WWII" prefix.

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1940 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1940.

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1940 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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1940 in South Africa

The following lists events that happened during 1940 in South Africa.

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1941

Below, the events of World War II have the "WWII" acronym.

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1941 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1941.

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1941 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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1941 in the United States

Events from the year 1941 in the United States.

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1942 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1942.

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1943

Below, events of World War II have the "WWII" prefix.

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1943 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1943.

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1944

Below, events of World War II have the "WWII" prefix.

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1944 in France

Events from the year 1944 in France.

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1944 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1944.

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1944 in philosophy

1944 in philosophy.

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1945

This year also marks the end of the Second World War, the deadliest conflict in human history.

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1945 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1945.

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1946

No description.

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1946 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1946.

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1947

No description.

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1947 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1947.

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1948

No description.

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1948 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1948.

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1948 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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1948 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 1948 in the United Kingdom.

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1949

No description.

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1949 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1949.

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1949 in Norway

Events in the year 1949 in Norway.

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1950

No description.

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1950 in Denmark

Events from the year 1950 in Denmark.

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1950 in Ireland

Events from the year 1950 in Ireland.

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1950 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1950.

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1950 in philosophy

1950 in philosophy.

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1950 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 1950 in the United Kingdom.

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1951

No description.

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1951 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1951.

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1951 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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1952

No description.

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1952 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1952.

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1952 in Norway

Events in the year 1952 in Norway.

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1953

No description.

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1953 in literature

This article presents lists of literary events and publications in 1953.

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1953 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 1953 in the United Kingdom.

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1954

No description.

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1954 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1954.

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1954 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 1954 in the United Kingdom.

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1955

No description.

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1955 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1955.

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1956

No description.

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1956 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1956.

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1957

No description.

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1957 in literature

This article presents lists of literary events and publications in 1957.

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1957 in philosophy

1957 in philosophy.

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1957 in poetry

Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).

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1958

No description.

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1958 in France

Events from the year 1958 in France.

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1958 in literature

This article is a summary of the literary events and publications of 1958.

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1959

No description.

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1959 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1959.

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1960

It is also known as the "Year of Africa" because of major events—particularly the independence of seventeen African nations—that focused global attention on the continent and intensified feelings of Pan-Africanism.

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1960 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1960.

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1960 in poetry

Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).

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1961

As MAD Magazine pointed out on its cover for the March 1961 issue, this was the first "upside-up" year — i.e., one in which the numerals that form the year look the same as when the numerals are rotated upside down, a strobogrammatic number — since 1881.

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1961 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1961.

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1962

No description.

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1962 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1962.

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1963

No description.

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1963 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1963.

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1963 in poetry

Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).

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1964

No description.

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1964 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1964.

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1964 in philosophy

1964 in philosophy.

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1965

No description.

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1965 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1965.

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1965 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 1965 in the United Kingdom.

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1966

No description.

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1966 in Israel

Events in the year 1966 in Israel.

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1966 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1966.

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1966 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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1967

No description.

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1967 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1967.

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1968

This was the year of the Protests of 1968.

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1968 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1968.

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1969

The year is associated with the first manned landing on the Moon (Apollo 11).

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1969 in Ireland

Events from the year 1969 in Ireland.

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1969 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1969.

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1970

No description.

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1970 Cannes Film Festival

The 23rd Cannes Film Festival run from 3 to 18 May 1970.

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1970 in France

Events from the year 1970 in France.

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1970 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1970.

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1970 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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1970 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 1970 in the United Kingdom.

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1971

The world population increased by 2.1% this year, the highest increase in history.

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1971 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1971.

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1971 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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1972

Within the context of Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) it was the longest year ever, as two leap seconds were added during this 366-day year, an event which has not since been repeated.

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1972 in Japan

Events in the year 1972 in Japan.

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1972 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1972.

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1972 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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1973

No description.

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1973 in Australian literature

This article presents a list of the historical events and publications of Australian literature during 1973.

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1973 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1973.

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1974

No description.

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1974 in literature

This article presents a list of the literary events and publications in 1974.

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1974 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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1974 in Sweden

Events from the year 1974 in Sweden.

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1975

It was also declared the International Women's Year by the United Nations and the European Architectural Heritage Year by the Council of Europe.

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1975 in France

Events from the year 1975 in France.

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1975 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1975.

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1975 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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1976

No description.

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1976 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1976.

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1977

No description.

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1977 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1977.

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1977 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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1978

No description.

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1978 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1978.

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1979

No description.

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1979 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1979.

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1979 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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1980

No description.

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1980 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1980.

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1980 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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1980 in Poland

On March 27, 1976, the government of Prime Minister Piotr Jaroszewicz was created.

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1981

No description.

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1981 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1981.

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1981 in poetry

Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).

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1982

No description.

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1982 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1982.

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1983

The year 1983 saw both the official beginning of the Internet and the first mobile cellular telephone call.

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1983 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1983.

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1983 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 1983 in the United Kingdom.

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1984

No description.

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1984 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1984.

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1984 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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1985

The year 1985 was designated as the International Youth Year by the United Nations.

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1985 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1985.

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1986

The year 1986 was designated as the International Year of Peace by the United Nations.

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1986 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1986.

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1987

No description.

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1987 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications of 1987.

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1988

In the 20th century, the year 1988 has the most Roman numeral digits (11).

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1988 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1988.

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1989

1989 was a turning point in political history because a wave of revolutions swept the Eastern Bloc in Europe, starting in Poland and Hungary, with experiments in power sharing, coming to a head with the opening of the Berlin Wall in November, and the Velvet Revolution in Czechoslovakia, embracing the overthrow of the communist dictatorship in Romania in December, and ending in December 1991 with the dissolution of the Soviet Union.

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1989 in Ireland

Events from the year 1989 in Ireland.

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1989 in literature

This article presents a list of publications of literature, awards given, and births and deaths of major literary figures during 1989.

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1990

Important events of 1990 include the Reunification of Germany and the unification of Yemen, the formal beginning of the Human Genome Project (finished in 2003), the launch of the Hubble Space Telescope, the separation of Namibia from South Africa, and the Baltic states declaring independence from the Soviet Union amidst Perestroika.

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1990 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1990.

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1991

It was the year that is usually considered the final year of the Cold War that had begun in the late 1940s.

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1991 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1991.

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1991 in South Africa

The following lists events that happened during 1991 in South Africa.

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1992

1992 was designated as.

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1992 in literature

This article presents lists of literary events and publications in 1992.

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1993

No description.

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1993 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1993.

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1993 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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1993 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 1993 in the United Kingdom.

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1994

The year 1994 was designated as the "International Year of the Family" and the "International Year of Sport and the Olympic Ideal" by the United Nations.

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1994 in Japan

Events in the year 1994 in Japan.

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1994 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1994.

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1995

This was the first year that the Internet was entirely privatized, with the United States government no longer providing public funding.

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1995 in Ireland

Events from the year 1995 in Ireland.

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1995 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1995.

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1995 in Northern Ireland

Events during the year 1995 in Northern Ireland.

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1996

1996 was designated as.

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1996 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1996.

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1996 in poetry

Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).

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1997

No description.

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1997 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1997.

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1998

1998 was designated as the International Year of the Ocean.

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1998 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1998.

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1998 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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1999

1999 was designated as the International Year of Older Persons.

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1999 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1999.

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2000

2000 was designated as.

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2000 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 2000.

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2001

2001 was designated as.

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2001 in England

Events from 2001 in England.

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2001 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 2001.

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2001 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 2001 in the United Kingdom.

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2002

2002 was designated as.

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2002 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 2002.

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2003

2003 was designated the.

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2003 in literature

This article presents lists of literary events and publications in 2003.

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2004

2004 was designated as.

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2004 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 2004.

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2005

2005 was designated as.

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2005 in England

Events from 2005 in England.

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2005 in France

Events from the year 2005 in France.

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2005 in Iraq

Events in the year 2005 in Iraq.

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2005 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 2005.

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2005 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 2005 in the United Kingdom.

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2006

2006 was designated as.

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2006 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 2006.

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2006 in poetry

Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).

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2007

2007 was designated as.

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2007 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 2007.

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2007 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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2008

2008 was designated as.

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2008 in France

Events from the year 2008 in France.

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2008 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 2008.

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2008 in poetry

Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).

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2009

2009 was designated as.

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2009 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 2009.

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2010

2010 was designated as.

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2010 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 2010.

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2010 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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2010 Nobel Peace Prize

The 2010 Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to imprisoned Chinese human rights activist "for his long and non-violent struggle for fundamental human rights in China".

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2011

2011 was designated as.

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2011 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 2011.

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2011 in poetry

Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).

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2012

2012 was designated as.

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2012 in Europe

This is a list of 2012 events that occurred in Europe.

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2012 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 2012.

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2012 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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2013

2013 was designated as.

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2013 in Europe

This is a list of 2013 events that occurred in Europe.

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2013 in Ireland

Events during the year 2013 in Ireland.

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2013 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 2013.

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2013 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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2013 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 2013 in the United Kingdom.

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2014

2014 was designated as.

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2014 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 2014.

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2014 in South Africa

Events in the year 2014 in South Africa.

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2015

2015 was designated as.

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2015 Ankara bombings

On 10 October 2015 at 10:04 local time (EEST) in Ankara, the capital city of Turkey, two bombs were detonated outside Ankara Central railway station.

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2015 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 2015.

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2015 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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2015 in public domain

This is a list of authors whose works enter the public domain in part of the world in 2015.

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2016

2016 was designated as.

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2016 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 2016.

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2017

2017 was designated as International Year of Sustainable Tourism for Development by the United Nations General Assembly.

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2017 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 2017.

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2017 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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2018 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 2018.

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20th century in literature

Literature of the 20th century refers to world literature produced during the 20th century (1901 to 2000).

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21st century in poetry

No description.

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68 Publishers

68 Publishers, also called Sixty-Eight Publishers, Sixtyeight Publishers, or even Nakladatelství 68 ('nakladatelství' is Czech for 'publisher'), was a publishing house formed in Toronto, Ontario, Canada in 1971 by Czech expatriate Josef Škvorecký and his wife Zdena Salivarová.

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Literature Nobel Prize, Nobel Laureate in Literature, Nobel Literature Prize, Nobel Prize In Literature, Nobel Prize for Literature, Nobel Prize for literature, Nobel Prize for litterature, Nobel Prize in literature, Nobel Prize laureates in Literature, Nobel Prize winner for literature, Nobel Prize/Literature, Nobel prize (literature), Nobel prize for literature, Nobel prize in Literature, Nobel prize in literature, Nobel prize list for literature, Nobel prize literature, NobelPrize/LiteraturE, Nobelpriset i litteratur, The Nomination Database for the Nobel Prize in Literature.

References

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

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