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'''Thomas Gustav Winner''' (3 May 1917, [[Prague]] – 20 April 2004, [[Cambridge, Massachusetts]]) was an eminent American [[slavist]] and [[semiotician]].<ref>Zezima, Katie 2004. Thomas Winner, 86, Scholar Who Escaped From Nazi Europe. ''New York Times'', April 29.</ref>
'''Thomas Gustav Winner''' (3 May 1917, [[Prague]] – 20 April 2004, [[Cambridge, Massachusetts]]) was an eminent American [[slavist]] and [[semiologist]].<ref>Zezima, Katie 2004. Thomas Winner, 86, Scholar Who Escaped From Nazi Europe. ''New York Times'', April 29.</ref>


At [[Brown University]], he established the first American semiotics center.
At [[Brown University]], he established the first American semiotics center.
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[[Category:1917 births]]
[[Category:1917 births]]
[[Category:2004 deaths]]
[[Category:2004 deaths]]
[[Category:Semioticians]]
[[Category:Semiologists]]
[[Category:Slavists]]
[[Category:Slavists]]
[[Category:People from Prague]]
[[Category:People from Prague]]

Revision as of 21:40, 2 February 2013

Thomas Gustav Winner (3 May 1917, Prague – 20 April 2004, Cambridge, Massachusetts) was an eminent American slavist and semiologist.[1]

At Brown University, he established the first American semiotics center.

He was a well-known Chekhov specialist, and a proponent of Tartu-Moscow semiotics school.

Notes

  1. ^ Zezima, Katie 2004. Thomas Winner, 86, Scholar Who Escaped From Nazi Europe. New York Times, April 29.

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