Talk:Requiem for a Nun

Fair use rationale for Image:Requiudfsahfl.jpg
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BetacommandBot (talk) 04:23, 24 January 2008 (UTC)

"Almost universally misunderstood"
I have a problem with the line "Almost universally misunderstood". This is opinion, not verifiable, and should be removed. Tabrown97 (talk) 12:16, 21 March 2008 (UTC)


 * I agree, and have removed the line. —Josiah Rowe (talk • contribs) 19:37, 29 March 2008 (UTC)

Camus
Camus' dramatization from 1956? - Can the date be correct? On Oct. 20, 1955 (cf. http://www.chroniknet.de/daly_de.0.html?year=1955&month=10 )  (according to other sources  even  a little earlier on Oct. 9) the Zurich Schaupielhaus staged "the play's world première" in a German translation. But was this a translation of Camus' dramatization? Who might have info? --Marschner (talk) 18:51, 22 May 2010 (UTC)

Earlier source for "The past is never dead. It's not even past.."
In Moncrieff's translation of Proust's The Guermantes Way, 1921, one finds: "The past not merely is not fugitive, it remains present." Same sentiment, different words, thirty years earlier in the original French. Larry Koenigsberg (talk) 15:38, 15 May 2012 (UTC)


 * Ideas and quotes, two different things. 70.192.137.68 (talk) 11:14, 21 December 2014 (UTC)

Confusion!
Faulkner did not publish any novels until 1926 as per his bibliobraphy. In his article it states that "He did not write his first novel until 1925. Sanctuary was not published until 1931. So I do not know where the image of the 1919 Chatto and Windus novel appears from, I have reverted for now as all sources (for example https://www.britannica.com/topic/Requiem-for-a-Nun-play-by-Faulkner) say that the novel was published in 1951...GrahamHardy (talk) 09:21, 18 January 2022 (UTC)