Entrada Nombre personal
Número de registros utilizados en: 2
001 - CONTROL NUMBER
- control field: 17485
003 - CONTROL NUMBER IDENTIFIER
- control field: MX-MeUAM
005 - DATE AND TIME OF LATEST TRANSACTION
- control field: 20191016171556.0
008 - FIXED-LENGTH DATA ELEMENTS
- fixed length control field: 180827n| azannaabn |a aaa c
010 ## - LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CONTROL NUMBER
- LC control number: no2018115257
024 ## - OTHER STANDARD IDENTIFIER
- Source of number or code: viaf
- Standard number or code: 66602082
035 ## - SYSTEM CONTROL NUMBER
- System control number: (OCoLC)oca11521398
040 ## - CATALOGING SOURCE
- Original cataloging agency: ICrlF
- Language of cataloging: eng
- Description conventions: rda
- Transcribing agency: ICrlF
046 ## - SPECIAL CODED DATES
- Beginning or single date created: 2018
- Source of date scheme: edtf
053 ## - LC CLASSIFICATION NUMBER
- Classification number element--single number or beginning number of span: PS3601.C525
100 1# - HEADING--PERSONAL NAME
- Personal name: Aciman, André
368 ## - OTHER ATTRIBUTES OF PERSON OR CORPORATE BODY
- Source: lcdgt
- Type of corporate body: Americans
368 ## - OTHER ATTRIBUTES OF PERSON OR CORPORATE BODY
- Source: lcdgt
- Type of corporate body: Sephardim
370 ## - ASSOCIATED PLACE
- Source of term: naf
- Place of birth: Alexandria (Egypt)
- Associated country: United States
370 ## - ASSOCIATED PLACE
- Source of term: naf
- Place of birth: New York (N.Y.)
372 ## - FIELD OF ACTIVITY
- Source of term: lcgft
- Field of activity: Fiction
- Field of activity: Essays
372 ## - FIELD OF ACTIVITY
- Source of term: lcsh
- Field of activity: Literature--Philosophy
372 ## - FIELD OF ACTIVITY
- Source of term: lcsh
- Field of activity: French literature--History and criticism
373 ## - ASSOCIATED GROUP
- Associated group: City University of New York
373 ## - ASSOCIATED GROUP
- Source of term: naf
- Associated group: Graduate School and University Center
373 ## - ASSOCIATED GROUP
- Source of term: naf
- Associated group: New York University
373 ## - ASSOCIATED GROUP
- Source of term: naf
- Associated group: Princeton University
373 ## - ASSOCIATED GROUP
- Source of term: naf
- Associated group: Bard College
374 ## - OCCUPATION
- Source of term: lcsh
- Occupation: Authors
374 ## - OCCUPATION
- Source of term: lcsh
- Occupation: College teachers
374 ## - OCCUPATION
- Source of term: lcsh
- Occupation: Literature teachers
374 ## - OCCUPATION
- Source of term: lcdgt
- Occupation: Writers
374 ## - OCCUPATION
- Source of term: lcdgt
- Occupation: University and college faculty members
374 ## - OCCUPATION
- Source of term: lcdgt
- Occupation: Literature teachers
375 ## - GENDER
- Gender: masculino
377 ## - ASSOCIATED LANGUAGE
- Language code: eng
381 ## - OTHER DISTINGUISHING CHARACTERISTICS OF WORK OR EXPRESSION
- Other distinguishing characteristic: Díaz Ceballos
400 1# - SEE FROM TRACING--PERSONAL NAME
- Personal name: Aciman, André.
- Title of a work: Llámame por tu nombre
670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND
- Source citation: Aciman, André. Llámame por tu nombre, 2018:
- Information found: t.p. verso (original title: Call me by your name) t.p. (translated from the English by Guillermo Díaz Ceballos)
670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND
- Source citation: Out of Egypt, c1994:
- Information found: t.p. (André Aciman) jkt. (b. in Alexandria and raised in Egypt, Italy and France; educated at Harvard; teaches French lit. at Princeton)
670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND
- Source citation: Wikipedia, February 27, 2019 :
- Information found: (André Aciman (born 2 January 1951) is an American writer. Born and raised in Alexandria, Egypt, he is currently distinguished professor at the Graduate Center of City University of New York, where he teaches the history of literary theory and the works of Marcel Proust. Aciman previously taught creative writing at New York University and French literature at Princeton and Bard College; author of several novels, including Call Me by Your Name (winner, in the Gay Fiction category, of the 2007 Lambda Literary Award) and a 1995 memoir, Out of Egypt, which won a Whiting Award; parents were Sephardic Jews; as members of one of the Mutamassirun ("foreign") communities, his family members were unable to become Egyptian citizens; his family left Egypt in 1965; after his father purchased Italian citizenship for the family, Aciman moved with his mother and brother as refugees to Rome while his father moved to Paris. They moved to New York City in 1968)