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After reading 1329 websites, we found 16 different results for "Who wrote La peste"
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Camus – (7 November 1913 4 January 1960)
Camus (7 November 1913 – 4 January 1960) wrote La Peste (The Plague), 1947, but we will focus on Giovanni Boccacio’s Decameron.
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a Spanish historical drama television series created by Alberto Rodríguez and Rafael Cobos for Movistar+
La peste (The Plague) is a Spanish historical drama television series created by Alberto Rodríguez and Rafael Cobos for Movistar+.
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The Plague ()
In editing and working on the writing of others, Pardoe translated Guido Sorelli's La Peste (The Plague) in 1834 and edited Anita George's Memoirs of the Queens of Spain, published in 1850.
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as “The Plague” from the book by Albert Camus
A punk rock powerhouse trio with dark, shadowy subject material and high-velocity wail, La Peste took La Peste's name (translated as “The Plague”) from the book by Albert Camus.
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Those familiar with Camus as a philosopher and novelist
Those familiar with Camus as a philosopher and novelist will know that Camus wrote The Just two years after Camus wrote Camus's great novel La Peste (The Plague).
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the backdrop for Camus's novel La Peste, an allegory for the spread of Nazism
Oran was the backdrop for Camus's novel La Peste, an allegory for the spread of Nazism.
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the first book , and our “revolt” against a description in which Camus sought to address the implications – rather than a description – of the absurd
If Caligula, L’Étranger and Sisyphus can be regarded as the absurd trilogy, La Peste is the first book in which Camus sought to address the implications – rather than a description – of the absurd, and our “revolt” against a description .
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David J Baker, whose translations of the Camus excerpts appear here,
The author is identified thus: David J Baker, whose translations of the Camus excerpts appear here, taught La Peste and other novels to undergraduates while preparing Camus's PhD in French.
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a trio made up of Peter Dayton, Mark Karl (Mark Andreasson)
La Peste was a trio made up of Peter Dayton, Mark Karl (Mark Andreasson), and Roger Tripp.
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La Peste
A punk rock powerhouse trio with dark, shadowy subject material and high-velocity wail, La Peste took La Peste's name (translated as “The Plague”) from the book by Albert Camus.
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Oratio de reducenda ad medicinam chirurgia,
De peste, 1646; republished in 1665 by Joan Blaeu (Tractatus de peste in quatuor libros distinctus, truculentissimi morbi historiam ratione et experientia confirmatam exhibens on Google Books), republished in 1687 and 1721; translated into Dutch in 1671, into English in 1722 Oratio de reducenda ad medicinam chirurgia, 1649
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Tarrou
By the time Tarrou began to write La Peste, Tarrou had tried to work as a journalist in Paris, towards which Tarrou initially felt little in the way of belonging, and was isolated near Saint-Étienne, with Tarrou's wife and Tarrou's heart back in Algiers.
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Johann Jacob Mangetus
Johann Jacob Mangetus published Traité de la Peste (Geneva: Philippe Planche, 1721), a major treatise on the bubonic plague, and was well known as a plague doctor.
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Marie-Agnès
Marie-Agnès takes part in school performances and writes Marie-Agnès's first plays and poems, among which is La Peste.
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Wu Youxing
After extensive research into epidemic disease, Wu Youxing published a book Wenyilun (On Pestilence) in 1642.
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