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  • ...literature]]”). It is often divided into historical periods ("[[Victorian literature]]") as well as into formal categories ([[prose]], [[poetry]], or [[drama]]) ...edia Britannica Online, 01 November 2012.</ref> In that sense, the art of “literature” differs from [[linguistics]], the science of “language” as studied b
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  • == An undefined category of literature == ...; but, particularly with the broadsides, some authors are known. As "folk literature" they had no fixed form, and there is no "correct" version.
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  • ...that can have a variety of meanings. As normally used, it refers to the [[literature]] written by inhabitants of the [[British Isles]] in English or Scots, but ...e literature written in [[Old English]]. It will almost certainly include literature written in [[Middle English]], in order that [[Geoffrey Chaucer|Chaucer]] c
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  • This article covers literature written in English in the British Isles during the reign of [[Queen Victori Many authors not mentioned in this overview are given in the [[Victorian Literature/Timelines|Timeline]].
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  • ....citizendium.org/wiki?title=Literature&direction=next&oldid=100095501|cat1=Literature|date=May 10, 2007}}-->
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  • * ''The Cambridge History of English and American Literature'' (1907-1921). http://www.bartleby.com/cambridge/ * ''CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture'' http://clcwebjournal.lib.purdue.edu
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  • ...produced in the [[United States of America]]. Moreover, a small amount of literature from the US is written in other languages than English, especially in [[Spa ...American literary tradition began initially as part of a broader English literature in ''the colonies'' along the East Coast of what is now the U.S.A. Since th
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  • '''Postcolonial literature''' is a category of writing produced by authors born in countries which wer The study of postcolonial [[literature]] was spurred almost entirely by the publication of Edward Said's critical
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  • #REDIRECT [[Romance literature]]
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  • ...Depending on usage, the term "French literature" may or may not include [[literature]] composed in [[Francoprovençal language|Provençal]] or [[Occitan languag
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  • ...icle provides a summarized overview of the major developments of '''German literature''', that is to say, the novels, poetry, and plays written in the [[German l ...netti]]. Twelve authors writing in German have received the Nobel Prize in Literature, including [[Thomas Mann]], Hermann Hesse, Elias Canetti, and [[Günter Gra
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  • '''Elizabethan literature''' refers to English [[literature]] produced during the reign of [[Elizabeth I]], 1558–1603, but the term i ...ing that there was an appetite for verse that extended beyond the [[ballad literature]]. This appetite clearly continued, with Shakespeare's ''Venus and Adonis'
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  • '''Comparative Literature''' is the study of written texts from more than one language, culture, or r * ''CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture'' http://clcwebjournal.lib.purdue.edu
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  • #REDIRECT [[Scientific literature]]
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  • ...>Munro S. Edmonson, ''Lore: an Introduction to the Science of Folklore and Literature'', New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1971, pages 322f, 330f</ref> says This means that significant literature continues to be written. Arranged by number of native speakers.
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  • #REDIRECT [[French literature]]
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  • Literature of the British isles written in English.
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  • 12 bytes (1 word) - 11:07, 13 November 2007
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  • Category of [[literature|writing]] produced by authors born in countries which were formerly coloniz
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>The British literature of Victoria's reign
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  • ...n American Poetry" by Jerry W. Ward, Jr., from ''Teaching African American Literature'' by M. Graham, Routledge, 1998, page 146.</ref> ...American literature has become accepted as an integral part of [[American literature]], with books such as ''[[Roots: The Saga of an American Family]]'' by [[Al
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  • Literature of Ireland written in Gaelic. [e]
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  • Literature of the British isles written in Celtic. [e]
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  • {{rpl|Literature}} {{rpl|English literature}}
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  • ...n any human [[language]], even works in other media. Practically speaking, literature’s present-day definition is shaped by the perspective from which one rega == The study of literature ==
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>English literature written by authors active in the reign of Elizabeth I.
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  • #REDIRECT [[CZ Talk:American Literature Subgroup]]
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  • {{r|literature}}
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  • #REDIRECT [[Nobel Prize for Literature]]
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Postcolonial literature]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Literature}}
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  • ...r, F., and Harris, T. (Editors).''The Oxford Companion to African American Literature''. Oxford, 1997. ..._n4331_v126/ai_19997743 Review of the Norton Anthology of African-American Literature]" ''New Statesman'', April 25, 1997.
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Comparative literature]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Literature}}
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  • ''This is the Discussion Page for the '''[[CZ:Literature Workgroup]]''''' ...though I do have some background in, and occasionally teach, postcolonial literature.
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  • {{rpl|Literature}}
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/German literature]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Literature}}
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  • {{r|Literature}} {{r|English literature}}
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  • The body of literature produced in the USA by writers of African descent.
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  • {{Subgroup|American Literature}} There's already a Literature Workgroup. Why a subgroup as well? [[User:Peter Jackson|Peter Jackson]] ([[
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  • {{Subgroup|English Literature}}
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  • The most highly regarded award in the field of [[literature]]; named after [[Alfred Nobel]] who instituted it.
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  • #REDIRECT [[Nobel Prize for Literature/Definition]]
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  • ...edu/sac/english/bailey/aframlit.htm A Brief Chronology of African American Literature] * [http://aalbc.com/ African American Literature Book Club]
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  • '''Children's literature''' is a term used for fiction and poetry written specifically for children,
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Page text matches

  • {{rpl|Literature}} {{rpl|English literature}}
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  • (1709-1784) One of the leading figures of English literature's Augustan Age.
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  • [[Literature]] [[Romantic literature]]
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  • '''Comparative Literature''' is the study of written texts from more than one language, culture, or r * ''CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture'' http://clcwebjournal.lib.purdue.edu
    567 bytes (67 words) - 06:48, 26 September 2007
  • ...ho won the 1988 Nobel Prize for Literature who managed to modernize Arabic literature.
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  • Author of [[science fiction]], [[horror (literature)|horror]] and [[fantasy (literature)|fantasy]]
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  • {{rpl|literature}} {{rpl|American literature}}
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  • ...that can have a variety of meanings. As normally used, it refers to the [[literature]] written by inhabitants of the [[British Isles]] in English or Scots, but ...e literature written in [[Old English]]. It will almost certainly include literature written in [[Middle English]], in order that [[Geoffrey Chaucer|Chaucer]] c
    944 bytes (141 words) - 17:28, 12 September 2020
  • ...en if they are of [[fiction]]al scenes. Realism also depicts [[character (literature)|characters]] in terms of what they say or do and refrains from overtly imp
    296 bytes (44 words) - 11:02, 10 September 2020
  • * ''The Cambridge History of English and American Literature'' (1907-1921). http://www.bartleby.com/cambridge/ * ''CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture'' http://clcwebjournal.lib.purdue.edu
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  • == Literature ==
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  • {{r|literature}} {{r|Romance literature}}
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  • == Literature ==
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  • ...edu/sac/english/bailey/aframlit.htm A Brief Chronology of African American Literature] * [http://aalbc.com/ African American Literature Book Club]
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  • ...a leader of the Yiddish literary movement and winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1978.
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  • ==In literature==
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  • {{Subgroup|American Literature}} There's already a Literature Workgroup. Why a subgroup as well? [[User:Peter Jackson|Peter Jackson]] ([[
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  • ==The Three Kings in Literature and Music==
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  • ==Other science fiction and fantasy literature awards==
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  • ==Other science fiction and fantasy literature awards==
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  • #REDIRECT [[Scientific literature]]
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  • *[[Literature]]
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  • {{Subgroup|English Literature}}
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  • #REDIRECT [[French literature]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[Scientific literature]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[Romance literature]]
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  • {{r|Literature}} {{r|English literature}}
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  • == Literature ==
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  • #REDIRECT [[Nobel Prize for Literature]]
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  • {{r|literature}} {{r|French literature}}
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  • ===Literature===
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  • Literature of natural world subjects.
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  • #REDIRECT [[Nobel Prize for Literature/Definition]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[CZ Talk:American Literature Subgroup]]
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  • {{r|Literature}} {{r|American literature}}
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  • {{r|literature}} {{r|English literature}}
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  • Art, literature and situations that humans find amusing.
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  • Literature of Ireland written in Gaelic. [e]
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  • == Wisdom literature == "Wisdom literature", in a [[Bible|Biblical]] context, refers to those books of the [[Old Testa
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  • Homeric epic poem, the first great work of European [[literature]].
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  • Literature of the British isles written in English.
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  • {{r|Literature}} {{r|English literature}}
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  • Literature of the British isles written in Celtic. [e]
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  • * Dumbleton, William A.; Ireland, Life and Land in Literature
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  • ...e categories [[Nobel Prize for Peace|Peace]], [[Nobel Prize for Literature|Literature]], [[Nobel Prize in Chemistry|Chemistry]], [[Nobel Prize in Physiology or M
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  • Mythological reptilian creature widely featured in human literature and lore.
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  • == Media and literature ==
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  • (1861-1941) Bengali poet and composer; Nobel Prize for Literature 1913.
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>English literature written by authors active in the reign of Elizabeth I.
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  • * [[Nobel Prize in literature|Literature]] - [[Jaroslav Seifert]]
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  • :*[[Battle of Waterloo/Waterloo in literature|Waterloo in literature]]
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  • ==Roses in literature and song==
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  • {{r|Literature}} {{r|English literature}}
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  • ...r founded in 1935 by Allen Lane, known for inexpensive editions of serious literature.
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  • ...Depending on usage, the term "French literature" may or may not include [[literature]] composed in [[Francoprovençal language|Provençal]] or [[Occitan languag
    655 bytes (89 words) - 10:36, 29 October 2014
  • ...ture of the ancient [[Mediterranean]] world, including its [[language]], [[literature]], [[history]], and [[art]]. Classics focuses particularly on [[Ancient Gr ...eriod, or more broadly and in common parlance, to the best of any genre of literature.
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  • A type of literature, especially plays, meant to be delivered in spoken performance on stage.
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Comparative literature]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Literature}}
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  • *[[German literature]]<br /> *[[Dutch literature]]
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  • ...arly organization founded in 1842 devoted to the study of Asian languages, literature and culture.
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  • {{r|literature}} {{r|Italian literature}}
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>The British literature of Victoria's reign
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Postcolonial literature]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Literature}}
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  • {{r|Literature}} {{r|English literature}}
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  • {{r|African American literature}} {{r|Literature}}
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  • {{r|Literature}} {{r|Spanish literature}}
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  • ...itself in most forms of [[art]], especially [[painting]], [[music]] and [[literature]]. The period was also marked by an increase in [[nationalism|nationalistic == Literature ==
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  • ...with magical or supernatural elements, in either oral tradition or written literature.
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  • ...disciplinary approaches from economics, sociology and demography, and even literature.
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  • ...>Munro S. Edmonson, ''Lore: an Introduction to the Science of Folklore and Literature'', New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1971, pages 322f, 330f</ref> says This means that significant literature continues to be written. Arranged by number of native speakers.
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  • A comparison used in literature which employs the use of "like" or "as" to reference one construct to anoth
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  • The most highly regarded award in the field of [[literature]]; named after [[Alfred Nobel]] who instituted it.
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  • ==Literature==
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  • (1885-1951) An American author and playwright, winner of the [[Nobel Prize in Literature]] in 1930.
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/German literature]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Literature}}
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  • | title = The Fairies in Tradition and Literature
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  • A massive, fully free online library of books and literature, primarily the full texts of [[public domain]] works.
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  • ...wrote ''[[Long Day's Journey into Night]]'' and won [[Nobel Prize]] for [[literature]].
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  • == Literature ==
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  • ...]] writer, author of ''[[Moby Dick]]'', one of the masterpieces of world [[literature]].
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  • ..."[[Socialist Realism]]", the official school of [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] [[literature]] and [[art]].
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  • ...{Subpages}}</noinclude>Any of 21 awards for distinguished U.S. journalism, literature, drama or music; established by media proprietor Joseph Pulitzer (1847-1911
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  • ==Literature and Art==
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  • {{r|literature}} {{r|English literature}}
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  • The body of literature produced in the USA by writers of African descent.
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  • ...dian writer (1913-1995), considered one of the founders of modern Canadian literature.
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  • ==Primary literature== ==Secondary literature==
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  • ==Primary literature== ==Secondary literature==
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  • Oldest layer of [[Sanskrit literature]] and the oldest [[Hindu scripture|sacred texts]] of [[Hinduism]].
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  • A leading character in a work of literature whose qualities are the opposite of heroic.
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  • ...ter, poet, and philosopher; still considered the greatest writer of German literature
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  • (1855 – 1940) Austrian-German philologist specialized in Anglo Saxon literature and in particular Shakespeare; signatory of ''Aufruf an die Kulturwelt!''
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  • A body of early Irish literature which includes origin stories and tales of the supposed gods of pre-Christi
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  • ...Roman]] poet; wrote the ''[[Aeneid]]'', one of the masterpieces of world [[literature]].
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  • Jewish professor of Biblical literature of such reputation that he was invited to be the only Jew participating in
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  • A branch of the Humanities dealing with language, literature, history, art, and other aspects of the ancient Mediterranean world.
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  • ...propagandist, and art, music and drama critic who won the Nobel Prize for literature in 1925.
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  • Individuals who have authored or co-authored literature that has appeared in the various scriptural canons of Judaism and of Christ
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  • ...r, F., and Harris, T. (Editors).''The Oxford Companion to African American Literature''. Oxford, 1997. ..._n4331_v126/ai_19997743 Review of the Norton Anthology of African-American Literature]" ''New Statesman'', April 25, 1997.
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  • An American writer, who was the first woman to win the [[Pulitzer Prize for Literature]] in 1921 with her novel ''[[The Age of Innocence]]''.
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  • Japanese [[novel]]ist (1899–1972) who won the [[Nobel Prize for Literature]]. His works include ''[[Snow Country]]'' and ''[[The Sound of the Mountain
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  • ...malan writer and the first Latin American to be awarded the Nobel Prize in literature in 1967.
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  • ...aywright, novelist, and composer who has been a pioneer for modern Bengali literature and music in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. ...e |format= |work= |accessdate=}}</ref> when he won the 1913 Nobel Prize in Literature. Most of the money from that prize went to creating a school/university at
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  • A classification of works of art, whether in literature,music,visual arts, media or any of the other arts.
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  • Literature review focused on a single question that tries to identify, appraise, selec
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  • Category of [[literature|writing]] produced by authors born in countries which were formerly coloniz
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  • ...dbc649e4bdbd9d9d74208c344;rgn=full%20text;tpl=home.tpl The Core Historical Literature of Agriculture] 4500 online books from Cornell Library
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  • ...ww-etcsl.orient.ox.ac.uk/index1.htm The Electronic Text Corpus of Sumerian Literature]
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  • A foundational text of Yoga, which forms part of the corpus of Sutra literature dating to India's Mauryan period.
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  • ...hought of as situated off the [[Straits of Gibraltar]], first mentioned in literature in [[Plato]]'s dialogues ''Timaeus'' and ''Critias''.
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  • {{r|English literature}} {{r|romance literature}}
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  • ...recently published in an academic journal have been cited in the academic literature.
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  • ...ure of the Modern Era: Poetry, Drama, Criticism Vol 4 (History of Japanese Literature/Donald Keene, Vol 4)'' New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston [1984] ISBN 02 *Keene, Donald. ''Seeds in the Heart: Japanese Literature from Earliest Times to the Late Sixteenth Century.'' New York: Henry Holt a
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  • ===Literature in English=== ===Literature in German===
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  • *[http://www.cytoskeletons.com Cytoskeleton database, clinical trials, recent literature, lab registry ...]
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  • ...a''' (1899–1972) was a Japanese [[novel]]ist who won the [[Nobel Prize for Literature]] in 1968. His works include ''[[Snow Country]]'' and ''[[The Sound of the
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  • ==Collections of authoritative literature== ..., major divisions of Japanese Buddhism have produced collected editions of literature important to them, overlapping the above.
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  • {{r|Romance literature}}
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  • ...known for writing in the [[science fiction]], [[fantasy]] and [[Christian literature]] genres and particularly noted for her work for young adults.
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  • The process of production and dissemination of literature or information - the activity of making information available for public vi
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  • ...L_ID=43330&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html | Melbourne UNESCO City of Literature (accessed 25 Oct 2008)</ref>
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  • An artistic approach emphasizing factual accuracy of details in art or literature, by (for example) characterizing people by what they say or do instead of o
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  • ...t prominent figures in the American [[Romanticism|Romantic Movement]] in [[literature]].
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  • ...from 1940 to 1945; second term from 1951 to 1955. Won the Nobel Prize for Literature as a historian.
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  • == Classical literature == It is in literature that classicism most contrasts with romanticism, though the typology can be
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  • (1806-1876) Writer of iconic [[French literature]], including ''[[The Three Musketeers]]''; usually [[name suffixes|suffixed
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  • *''[[A Family and a Fortune]]'' ([[1939 in literature|1939]]) *''[[Darkness and Day]]'' ([[1951 in literature|1951]])
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  • ...ey Girls’ High School in [[Cape Coast]], then studied English language and literature at the University of Legon. She participated in a theatre group and in a wr ==Literature==
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  • ...ympios/Aphrodite.html Theoi Project, Aphrodite] information from classical literature, Greek and Roman art
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  • ...rlin, and in 1928 became deputy president of the ''Sektion für Dichtung'' (literature section) of the ''Preußischen Akademie der Künste'' (Prussian Academy of
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  • ...ex as the leading Anglo-Saxon kingdom, and encouraged [[Anglo-Saxon people#Literature|learning]].
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  • ...ition and what it is to be human. These typically include [[languages]], [[literature]], [[classics]], [[law]], [[art]], the [[performing arts]], [[philosophy]],
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  • Early apologetic literature in the Christian tradition was aimed at convincing [[Judaism|Jews]] as to t ...sts to respond: the rise of [[Protestantism]] brought with it apologetical literature on both the Protestant and Catholic side, modern science including the disc
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  • ...of German advanced weapons; biographer and Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>An 11th century [[Japan]]ese [[literature|literary]] masterpiece, one of the world's earliest [[novel]]s; written by
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  • (15 September 1822 - 1894) English physician and writer on English literature, best known for a ten volume work entitled ''English Writers'' (published 1
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  • ...oximately the 9th century BC and the 9th century AD and widely employed in literature and theological works.
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  • ...arly thirteenth century, considered one of the masters of the high courtly literature of the era, famous as the author of the epic poem ''Tristan and Isolde''.
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  • * [http://chla.library.cornell.edu/c/chla/ The Core Historical Literature of Agriculture] Contains over 2000 online books and two dozen journals from
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  • ...emely popular [[United States of America|American]] writer of [[children's literature|children's book]]s, including books designed to teach reading.
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  • ...ontemporary literature. There is also a large and rapidly growing critical literature dealing with this category. A number of books and important critical studie
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  • ...ife]], or [[serious]] [[repercussion]]s, often expressed as [[drama]] or [[literature]] but the term can describe real-life events
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  • ...specific discipline or [[subject]] usually in a branch of [[science]] or [[literature]].
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  • ...of the classics and forming a key moment in the canon formation of English literature as a whole.
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  • '''Postcolonial literature''' is a category of writing produced by authors born in countries which wer The study of postcolonial [[literature]] was spurred almost entirely by the publication of Edward Said's critical
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  • ...or of epic poetry, one of the three most important poets of German courtly literature of the Middle Ages (with [[Wolfram von Eschenbach]] and [[Gottfried von Str
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  • {{r|Literature}} {{r|Nobel Prize in Literature}}
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  • ...y involving the supernatural. It is a [[genre]] of fictional [[Literature|literature]] closely associated with [[Science fiction|science fiction]] merely becaus
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  • ...Inana (Inana B): translation] from The Electronic Text Corpus of Sumerian Literature</ref> ...Inana (Inana C): translation] from The Electronic Text Corpus of Sumerian Literature</ref>
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  • Lecturer in Comparative Literature at [[Tel-Aviv University]]; literary critic for the Israeli daily Yedioth
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  • ...the city of [[Rome]]; a monumental work of major significance in Western [[literature]].
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  • ===Jewish religious literature and texts===
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  • ==Literature== Đurđević was strongly influenced by classical literature, most of all Ovid. To him, he dedicated the first poem of his love poems �
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  • Beckwith, J and Silhavy, T. J. (1992). ''The Power of Bacterial Genetics: A Literature Based Course'', Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press NY ISBN 0-87969-379-7
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  • [[category:Literature Workgroup]]
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  • *[http://www.online-literature.com/stevenson/ biography and works] on The Literature Network ...uis Stevenson] online at [http://www.classic-literature.co.uk/ The Classic Literature Library]
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  • == Literature surveys == * [http://nal-ir.nal.res.in/4496/ A Report on Block Ciphers (Literature Survey)], concentrating on Feistel ciphers, from the Indian National Aerona
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  • ...a society or a social group..." that "encompasses, in addition to art and literature, lifestyles, ways of living together, value systems, traditions and beliefs
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  • | title = BioLit: integrating biological literature with databases
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  • ...e/info/info_chronology.html A Cultural Chronology of Early Beat Generation Literature 1944-1960]
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  • ....edu/dejavu/ Déjà vu: a Database of Duplicate Citations in the Scientific] Literature (See Déjà vu--a study of duplicate citations in Medline PMID 18056062)
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  • ...] [[philosophy|philosopher]]. She has the post of Professor of Comparative Literature and Rhetoric at the [[University of California, Berkeley]]. Butler has work ...used as part of a critical stance to perform analysis on works of art and literature that deal with the topic of sexuality and gender. For instance, such an ana
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  • ...-Nebraska Act, by George Washington Bungay; available from the Antislavery Literature Project
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  • ...iving humans. It is generally replacing the term hominid in the scientific literature.
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  • ...bioethics.georgetown.edu/ American National Reference Center for Bioethics Literature] *[http://www.eureth.net/literature/index_literature.htm/ EURETHICS (European database on ethics in medicine) a
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  • While anti-heroes have appeared frequently in modern [[literature]], they can also be found in literary works over many centuries. The ancien Examples of the anti-hero in more recent literature include Jim Dixon, the lead character of the novel ''[[Lucky Jim]]'' by [[K
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  • ...ler is either an adventurous, chivalrous, romantic hero, or a [[genre]] in literature, film and theatre, based on that archetype.
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  • ...and drama critic, vegetarian and total abstainer, won the Nobel Prize for literature in 1925. ...in [[Dublin]]. By his own account he was largely self-educated in English literature, art and political and economic theory. Following his mother and sisters t
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  • A [[metaphor]], often used in [[literature]] and [[poetry]] and [[creative writing]], in which a non-human [[object]]
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  • *800 Literature
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  • *{{:CZ:Ref:Björk 2010 Open access to the scientific journal literature: situation 2009}}
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  • ...on|fictional]] and often [[ugly]] and [[menacing]], who often appears in [[literature]] and [[mythology]] and is associated with [[evil]] and wrongdoing, and is
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  • ...E.; and Person, Diane G. (2005) ''The Continuum Encyclopedia of Children's Literature''. New York: Continuum. ISBN 0-8264-1778-7
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  • ...rkulturelle Literatur in Deutschland (Transl.: "Amma Darko – Intercultural Literature in Germany?")
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  • ...contains millions of document records from the chemical journal and patent literature.
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  • ...ath/lit_links2.html Table of Contents of the ''Heath Anthology of American Literature, Volume II'' -- No Sandburg here!</ref>
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  • A '''simile''' is a comparison used in literature which employs the use of "like" or "as" to reference one construct to anoth
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  • ...to C, Schoelles K| title=Stereotactic body radiation therapy: scope of the literature. | journal=Ann Intern Med | year= 2011 | volume= 154 | issue= 11 | pages= 7
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  • ...smicomiche'', or ''Se una notte d'inverno un viaggiatore''), and essays on literature (e.g., ''Lezioni americane''). ...s own view, the generation that came out of that experience "believed that literature could be epic, full of an energy which was vital and rational at one time,
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  • While Yiddish literature had existed for centuries, Yiddish theater is a development of the nineteen
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  • *Baer, Florence E. (1986) ''Folklore and Literature of the British Isles: an Annotated Bibliography''. New York: Garland Publis
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  • ...Junipero Serra'' (1987) and ''A Select Bibliography To California Catholic Literature, 1856-1974'' (1974), which enumerates some 500 writings.
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  • ..., brash, working class hairdresser who wants to "find herself" by studying literature. Rita is under pressure from her husband Denny to settle down and have chil
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  • ...inate the subject. Works of criticism are often considered to be works of literature in their own right. ...ism is so poorly written that it cannot be fitted into most definitions of literature).
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