Newsgroups: alt.politics.ec,sci.lang,soc.culture.europe,soc.culture.french,soc.culture.german
From: franck@altsoft.demon.co.uk (Franck Arnaud)
Path: cantaloupe.srv.cs.cmu.edu!das-news2.harvard.edu!news2.near.net!news.mathworks.com!news.alpha.net!uwm.edu!math.ohio-state.edu!howland.reston.ans.net!news.sprintlink.net!peernews.demon.co.uk!altsoft.demon.co.uk!franck
Subject: Re: Great Esperanto literature (was: Re: Esperanto? The EU?)
Distribution: inet
References: <3i0p01$8i8@masala.cc.uh.edu> <donhD46q0y.GKt@netcom.com> <3i629t$m7f@fido.asd.sgi.com> <donhD49B7v.14L@netcom.com> <3ibs82$fac@fido.asd.sgi.com>
Organization: AlterSoft
Reply-To: franck@altsoft.demon.co.uk
X-Newsreader: Demon Internet Simple News v1.27
Lines: 10
X-Posting-Host: altsoft.demon.co.uk
Date: Wed, 22 Feb 1995 00:32:02 +0000
Message-ID: <793413122snz@altsoft.demon.co.uk>
Sender: usenet@demon.co.uk

livesey@solntze.engr.sgi.com "Jon Livesey" writes:

> "Mostly from previous centuries"?   Mann, Singer, Boll, Gorki, 
> Sartre, Genet, Malraux, Celine, Maiakovski, Solzhenytsin,
> Remarque.

all these people though are from only 4 mainstream languages (german, french, 
russian & english). does the fact that they are no authors from most minority 
languages known to anglophones mean that all those languages are irrelevant and 
cannot be used for litterature?
