Stefan Zweig (Galician Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Stefan Zweig" in Galician language version.

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dw.de

elpais.com

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nytimes.com

select.nytimes.com

  • "Stefan Zweig, Wife End Lives in Brazil", artigo de The United Press en The New York Times, 23 de febreiro de 1942.
    Stefan Zweig, Wife End Lives In Brazil; Austrian-Born Author Left a Note Saying He Lacked the Strength to Go on – Author and Wife Die in Compact: Zweig and Wife Commit Suicide
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otroscines.com

praza.gal

time.com

  • "Died" Arquivado 25 de agosto de 2013 en Wayback Machine., artigo en Time, 2 de marzo de 1942.
    Died. Stefan Zweig, 60, Austrian-born novelist, biographer, essayist (Amok, Adepts in Self-Portraiture, Marie Antoinette), and his wife, Elizabeth; by poison; in Petropolis, Brazil. Born into a wealthy Jewish family in Vienna, Zweig turned from casual globe-trotting to literature after World War I, wrote prolifically, smoothly, successfully in many forms. His books banned by the Nazis, he fled to Britain in 1938 with the arrival of German troops, became a British subject in 1940, moved to the U.S. the same year, to Brazil the next. He was never outspoken against Naziism, believed artists and writers should be independent of politics. Friends in Brazil said he left a suicide note explaining that he was old, a man without a country, too weary to begin a new life. His last book: Brazil: Land of the Future.
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tumblr.com

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web.archive.org

  • "Died" Arquivado 25 de agosto de 2013 en Wayback Machine., artigo en Time, 2 de marzo de 1942.
    Died. Stefan Zweig, 60, Austrian-born novelist, biographer, essayist (Amok, Adepts in Self-Portraiture, Marie Antoinette), and his wife, Elizabeth; by poison; in Petropolis, Brazil. Born into a wealthy Jewish family in Vienna, Zweig turned from casual globe-trotting to literature after World War I, wrote prolifically, smoothly, successfully in many forms. His books banned by the Nazis, he fled to Britain in 1938 with the arrival of German troops, became a British subject in 1940, moved to the U.S. the same year, to Brazil the next. He was never outspoken against Naziism, believed artists and writers should be independent of politics. Friends in Brazil said he left a suicide note explaining that he was old, a man without a country, too weary to begin a new life. His last book: Brazil: Land of the Future.
    .
  • Zweig, Stefan. "Momentos estelares da humanidade". Arquivado dende o orixinal o 03 de agosto de 2018. Consultado o 3 de agosto de 2018.