Frases de francoise sagan biography
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Introduction
1If journalism is the first draft of history, as the Washington Post’s Phil Graham once quipped, then literary journalism is history’s second, third or even fourth draft. Some would even say that literary journalism, given its scrupulous attention to detail and fact, is history recorded in situ. And while literary journalism’s past dates back to Europe’s 19th–century chronique and early 20th–century reportage, its present is undoubtedly centralized in the Americas, from the cronistas south of the 28th parallel to the New Journalists north of the line. One literary journalist who combined these two American traditions, and who still managed to keep one foot in Europe, is the Parisian born Mexican cronista of royal Polish blood, Elena Poniatowska Amor. Her nonfiction over the past half-century or more has focused on Mexico’s struggle with democracy, poverty and corruption; but it has also championed a universal plea for social justice and gender equality th
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Plantilla:/doc
Esto prometo: ejercer mi medicina y no apartarme de ella mientras Dios me consienta ejercerla, y refutar todas las falsas medicinas y doctrinas. Después, amar a los enfermos, a cada uno de ellos más que si de mi propio cuerpo se tratara. No cerrar los ojos, y orientarme por ellos, ni dar medicamentos sin comprenderlo ni aceptar dinero sin ganarlo
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French Women Writers
French Women Writers describes the lives and careers of fifty-two literary figures from the twelfth century to the late twentieth. All the contributors are recognized authorities. Some of their subjects, like Colette and George Sand, are celebrated, and others are just now gaining critical notice. From Christine de