Joseph Conrad - meaning and definition. What is Joseph Conrad
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What (who) is Joseph Conrad - definition


Joseph Conrad (ship)         
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DANISH-BUILT SAILING SHIP
Joseph Conrad is an iron-hulled sailing ship, originally launched as Georg Stage in 1882 and used to train sailors in Denmark. After sailing around the world as a private yacht in 1934 she served as a training ship in the United States, and is now a museum ship at Mystic Seaport in Connecticut.
Joseph Conrad (general)         
AMERICAN UNION ARMY GENERAL
Joseph Conrad (May 17, 1827 – July 16, 1897) was a Union American Civil War colonel who was nominated and confirmed in 1866 for appointment as a brevet brigadier general of volunteers for his service during the Atlanta Campaign.
Conrad Malte-Brun         
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DANO-FRENCH GEOGRAPHER (1775-1826)
Conrad Maltebrun; Malthe Conrad Bruun; Malte-Conrad Bruun; Malthe Conrad Brunn
Conrad Malte-Brun (12 August 177514 December 1826), born Malthe Conrad Bruun, and sometimes referred to simply as Malte-Brun, was a Dano-French geographer and journalist. His second son, Victor Adolphe Malte-Brun, was also a geographer.
Examples of use of Joseph Conrad
1. In Africa, Asia, too much of the world –– it is Joseph Conrad much of the time: "The horror!
2. Writers such as Chinua Achebe, Ngugi Wa Thiong‘o and Wole Soyinka suddenly joined Thomas Hardy, Joseph Conrad and EM Forster.
3. Joseph Conrad in The Secret Agent (1'07) drew on a real–life episode, an anarchist who detonated himself while plotting an attack on the Greenwich Observatory.
4. Joseph Conrad, no radical, described it as "a flabby, pretending, weak–eyed devil of a rapacious and pitiless folly". Good governance?
5. The list of authors who never won a Nobel is dazzling: Graham Greene, James Joyce, Marcel Proust, Joseph Conrad, Raymond Chandler, Henry James.