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Annette Becker | |
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Born | |
Relatives | Jean-Jacques Becker (father) |
Academic work | |
Discipline | History |
Sub-discipline | First World War |
Annette Becker (born 21 August 1953) [1] [2] [3] is a French historian specializing in study of World War I. She is daughter of historian Jean-Jacques Becker.
Fred Vargas is the pseudonym of Frédérique Audoin-Rouzeau, a French historian, archaeologist and novelist.
Marie Darrieussecq is a French writer. She is also a translator, and has practised as a psychoanalyst.
Louis Pauwels was a French journalist and writer.
Albert Malet was a French historian and writer of scholarly textbooks, killed during the First World War.
Alain Rey was a French linguist, lexicographer and radio personality. He was the editor-in-chief at French dictionary publisher Dictionnaires Le Robert. His wife, Josette Rey-Debove, was also his colleague.
"Daddy, What Did You Do in the Great War?" was a British First World War recruitment poster by Savile Lumley, and first published in March 1915 by the Parliamentary Recruiting Committee. It was commissioned and submitted to the committee by Arthur Gunn, the director of the publishers Johnson Riddle and Company. The poster shows a daughter posing a question to her father: "Daddy, what did you do in the Great War?", depicting a future from the perspective of viewers in 1915. The message of the poster was inspired by Gunn's own feelings of guilt around not fighting in the war.
Annie Kriegel, née Annie Becker was a French historian, a leading expert on communist studies and the history of Communism, a cofounder (1982) of the academic journal Communisme, and a columnist for Le Figaro.
The prix Guillaume Apollinaire is a French poetry prize first awarded in 1941. It was named in honour of French writer Guillaume Apollinaire. It annually recognizes a collection of poems for its originality and modernity.
Laurence Ruel, known by her pen name Camille Laurens, is a French writer and winner of the 2000 Prix Femina for Dans ces bras-là. Laurens is a member of the Académie Goncourt.
Nicolas Bréhal was a French novelist and literary critic.
Jean Freustié, also known as Jean Pierre Teurlay was a French writer and literary critic. He won the 1969 Prix du roman de la société des gens de lettres, and 1970 Prix Renaudot, for Isabelle ou l'arrière-saison.
Nicolas Werth is a French historian.
Jean-Jacques Becker was a French historian. A specialist of contemporary history, he was the brother of historian Annie Kriegel and father to World War I specialist Annette Becker.
Stéphane Heuet (Brest) is a French comics artist. He is notable in the Franco-Belgian comics genre for having tackled one of the most literary of modern novels, À la recherche du temps perdu by Marcel Proust (1988).
The Grand prix des lectrices de Elle is a French literary prize awarded by readers of Elle magazine.
The Roger Nimier Prize is a French literature award. It is supposed to go to "a young author whose spirit is in line with the literary works of Roger Nimier". Nimier (1925–1962) was a novelist and a leading member of the Hussards movement. The prize was established in 1963 at the initiative of André Parinaud and Denis Huisman and is handed out annually during the second half of May. It comes with a sum of 5000 euro.
Lucien Jerphagnon was a French scholar, historian and philosopher specialized in Greek and Roman philosophy.
The Cassini Map or Academy's Map is the first topographic and geometric map made of the Kingdom of France as a whole. It was compiled by the Cassini family, mainly César-François Cassini and his son Jean-Dominique Cassini in the 1700s.
Marcel Bénabou is a French writer and historian.
Leonard V. Smith is an American military historian.