Author | Epoch | Work | Type | Quote | Term |
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Naira Gelashvili | 1947 | The first two circles and all the others (Naira Gelashvili, Works, Vol. 4, Tbilisi, 2010) | Prose | “Whatever concerns the informer, under the code name “Plutarch” […] the informer under the code name “Plut-arch” is either crazy, or tries to look like... |
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Naira Gelashvili | 1947 | The first two circles and all the others (Naira Gelashvili, Works, Vol. 4, Tbilisi, 2010) | Prose | “Blossoming from the seeds once brought by the Greeks”. (pg. 517) |
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Naira Gelashvili | 1947 | The first two circles and all the others (Naira Gelashvili, Works, Vol. 4, Tbilisi, 2010) | Prose | “As the Muse of translation is tormented and especially - the Muse of reviewing”. (pg. 420) |
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Naira Gelashvili | 1947 | The first two circles and all the others (Naira Gelashvili, Works, Vol. 4, Tbilisi, 2010) | Prose | “From the stage boxes, which were occupied by expansive daughters of once strict and reserved Matrons” (pg. 278) |
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Naira Gelashvili | 1947 | The first two circles and all the others (Naira Gelashvili, Works, Vol. 4, Tbilisi, 2010) | Prose | “Placard “Narrative – a weeping Nymph”. (pg. 213) |
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1947 | The first two circles and all the others (Naira Gelashvili, Works, Vol. 4, Tbilisi, 2010) | “From the Ancient Greek (prior to Socrates) philosophy […] to the important examples of post-modernistic thinking” (pg. 209) | |||
1947 | The first two circles and all the others (Naira Gelashvili, Works, Vol. 4, Tbilisi, 2010) | “From the Ancient Greek (prior to Socrates) philosophy […] to the important examples of post-modernistic thinking” (pg. 209) | |||
Naira Gelashvili | 1947 | The first two circles and all the others (Naira Gelashvili, Works, Vol. 4, Tbilisi, 2010) | Prose | “You Medea, your life has become very disorderly, your luck has deserted you (but you also betrayed many people, and who cares about people: you betrayed your motherland, your father, your... |
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Naira Gelashvili | 1947 | The first two circles and all the others (Naira Gelashvili, Works, Vol. 4, Tbilisi, 2010) | Prose | “… addressed basically the four […]: Medea, former Khoja, David Bagrationi and Zaza Panaskerteli-Tsitsishvili”. (pg. 170) |
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Naira Gelashvili | 1947 | The first two circles and all the others (Naira Gelashvili, Works, Vol. 4, Tbilisi, 2010) | Prose | “Hippocrates, Avicenna, Claudius Galen […] in Latin, German or Russian”. (pg. 169) |
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