FacEs oF ModErnity in roManian
litEraturE: a concEptual analysis
Faces da modernidade na literatura romena:
uma análise conceitual
Andrei Terian
Universidade Lucian Blaga
Sibiu, Romênia
Abstract
his study analyses the manner in which Romanian criticism chose to
deine and outline literary modernity. From this point of view, I have highlighted a series of deiciencies in the aforementioned endeavors, among
which the reductive vision on modernism, which is limited either to a
strictly formal meaning (as literary technique) or to a substantial one (as
ideological attitude), the emergence of a non-diferentiated concept of
modernism, which tends to embrace any secondary efects or, on the contrary, of a generic anti-modernism, irrespective of the level or the direction
in which it opposes modernism. herefore, the present study sets forth a
new classiication of Romanian literary modernity, which includes, besides
modernism, an anti-modernist direction and an ultra-modernist one also.
Keywords: modernity, Romanian literature, modernism, anti-modernism, ultramodernism
Resumo
O presente estudo analisa o modo
com o qual a crítica romena decidiu definir e delinear o perfil da
modernidade literária. Desse ponto
de vista, sublinhei uma série de deiciências em tais esforços, dentre as
quais a visão redutora do modernismo, que é limitada, seja a um
sentido estritamente formal (como
técnica literária), seja a um sentido
substancial (como atitude ideológica), bem como o surgimento
de um conceito não-diferenciado
de modernismo, que tende a abraçar qualquer efeito secundário, ou
pelo contrário, de um anti-modernismo genérico, independente do
nível ou direção na qual se opõe
ao modernismo. Consequente-
Palavras-chave: modernidade; literatura romena; modernismo; anti-modernismo;
ultra-modernismo.
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Résumé
Cette étude analyse la manière
dont la critique roumaine a choisi
de définir et mettre en relief la
modernité littéraire. De ce point
de vue, j’ai mis en évidence une
série de lacunes impliquées par ce
choix, dont la vision réductrice sur
le modernisme, qui est limité soit
à un sens strictement formel (en
tant que technique littéraire) soit
à un sens substantiel (entant qu’attitude idéologique), aussi bien que
l’émergence d’un concept non-différenciée de modernité, qui tend
à embrasser tous les efets secondaires ou, au contraire, d’un antimodernisme générique, quel que
soit le niveau ou la direction dans
laquelle il s’oppose à la modernité.
Mots-clés: modernité, littérature roumaine, modernisme, anti-modernisme,
ultra-modernisme
ANDREI TERIAN | Faces of Modernity in Romanian Literature
15
mente, o artigo propõe uma nova
classiicação da modernidade literária romena, que inclui, além do
modernismo, uma direção antimodernista bem como uma outra
ultra-modernista.
Par conséquent, cette étude présente une nouvelle classiication de
la modernité littéraire roumaine,
qui comprend, outre le modernisme, un biais antimoderniste et
un biais ultra-moderne aussi.
his study analyzes at the way in which the most important
Romanian literary critics, historians and theorists of the last century have deined and applied the concept of modernism and its
derivatives1 in Romanian literature; at the same time, it sets forth
an alternative outline of Romanian modernism. I ind that the issue
of my concern has a capital importance, because, from a certain
point of view, the entire history of Romanian literature fuses with
the history of its modernization. his literature took shape as an
institutionalized cultural practice only at the beginning of the 19th
century; its prehistory, however, gathers approximately three centuries, starting from the conirmation of the irst Romanian written text, i.e. the famous letter of Neacsu of Campulung (1521).
Nevertheless, with several exceptions,2 by the 1830s, when the irst
de facto literary magazines, programmes and directions appear in
Romania, this “literature” had meant mainly a heterogeneous group
of mostly historical and religious texts. It is only in the irst half of
the 19th century, when Romania’s westernization begins, given the
great European powers’ increased interest in the Balkans’ geopolitical area and owing to the circulation in the region of the various
(post)Enlightenment ideologies – human rights, social emancipation, nationalism, autonomy of art, etc. – that Romanian literature
becomes a deined discursive practice, as we understand it today.
In fact, this process can be tracked by two tendencies: the nationalization of literature (which enables the formation of a Romanian
1
he “derivatives” of modernism mean, for my approach, mainly anti-modernism and ultra-modernism, but they exclude postmodernism. Contrary to Matei
Calinescu’s classical thesis (CALINESCU, Matei. Five Faces of Modernity: Modernism, Avant-garde, Decadence, Kitsch, Postmodernism. Durham: Duke University Press, 1987), I believe that postmodernism is a novel socio-cultural stage in
relation to modernity rather than a mere “face” of it.
2
Referring mainly to the allegorical novel Istoria ierogliică/ he Hieroglyphic
History by the humanist Dimitrie Cantemir (the novel was written in 1705, but
published only in 1883) and Ion Budai-Deleanu’s comic epopee Ţiganiada/ he
Gypsiad (written in 1812 and published only in 1875).
16
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literature as distinct cultural system in relation to other literatures
and to the works translated into Romanian) and its aestheticization (which allowed the formation of a Romanian literature as speciic discourse).3 Not at all by chance, these processes overlapped
the formation of two cultural and ideological poles which were not
typical to Romania only, but also to the whole of Eastern Europe
and, even more, to all of the (semi)peripheral cultures: the (generally “modernist”) Westernizers, who defended the linking of the
national culture to the low of European intellectual life, and the
(generally traditionalist) “autochtonizers” who strove for the preservation of the stable values of the “national character”. Irrespective
of the side taken, both tendencies (to a certain extent, still existing
in present-day Romania, given fast-tracked globalization and the
aggravation of identity-related dilemmas) shared a common ground
that envisaged literature as a privileged battleield for the preservation of identity, of culture and even of the Romanian national state.
For this reason, in Romania, the issue of literary modernization – and, thus, the position of modernism – has represented more
than an aesthetic dilemma; it has also meant a deining indicator
of its stage of sociocultural growth, of its identity cohesion and,
last but not least, of its situation in the international context. It
has been at the heart of all the Romanian public debates of the last
two centuries, starting from the conlict between the Bonjouristes
(young men educated in Paris or other Western centers) and the
Tombateres (defenders of Oriental mentalities) in the 1830s and
ending with the recent confrontations between the adepts of European integration and the various Euro-skeptical ideologies. Given
these circumstances, the shortcomings and ambiguities that, as the
present study shall demonstrate, are currently governing the deinition of Romanian literary modernism are no less than a startling
phenomenon. Indeed, modernism (as literary movement) cannot
be mistaken for modernity (as socio-historical condition) and, least
of all, for modernization (as pattern of development). It is equally
true, however, that, in a culture that, at least until the collapse
of communism (1989), had had a more or less literature-centric
3
According to Pascale Casanova (CASANOVA, Pascale. he World Republic of
Letters, tr. by M.B. DeBevoise, Cambridge/London: Harvard University Press,
2004, 34-40), nationalization and aestheticization (“depoliticization”) govern any
process of “invention” of a national literature. he time and the pace of these processes are the only divergent aspects among the various cultures.
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17
character, no approach of any of the three concepts can exclude
the other two. More precisely, no thorough analysis of Romanian
modernism can occur in the absence of a constant reference to the
sociopolitical ideologies underlying this concept, to the historical
framework that generated these ideologies and, last but not least,
to Romania’s rhythm of modernization in relation to other societies and cultures situated both in the neighboring and in other
geographic areas. Nevertheless, until now, it seems this aspect had
been observed only partially and fragmentarily, hence the necessity
to critically and systematically revisit Romanian modernism. Since
the complexity of this topic exceeds considerably the limits of an
article, henceforth I shall approach only indirectly the extension
of the concept (representatives, individual traits, scope, etc.) and I
have chosen to focus on its intension, i.e. how Romanian literary
criticism has pieced together this concept.
Contextualizing Romanian modernism
* (ORNEA, Z. Tradiţionalism
şi modernitate în deceniul
al treilea. Bucharest: Minerva, 1980.)
* (GUILLEN, Mauro F. “Modernism without Modernity:
The Rise of Modernist Architecture in Mexico, Brazil, and Argentina, 18901940”. In: Latin American
Research Review, v. 39, n.
2, 2004: 6-34.)
18
Let me begin with a series of preliminary clariications on
the creation of the concept of modernism in Romanian literature.
Firstly, in a manner similar to most literary movements in Romania, modernism is a loanword, adopted along (mainly) French
and (less) German lines at around 1900. he establishment and
the application of the term in Romania gave rise to a number of
problems undoubtedly derived from the many social, economic,
political and cultural diferences between Romania and Western
countries, which, in fact, would become the object of numerous
controversies in Romanian cultural media at the beginning of the
20th century.* hus, while in the West modernism emerged with
the appearance of a vie moderne (Baudelaire’s words), which meant
industrialization, urbanization and secularization, the same material and social conditions were scarce in a peripheral, agrarian, rural
country governed by archaic mentalities, as Romania was in the
19th century and the beginning of the 20th century. Hence, there
were heated debates on the validity of the concept of modernism
in Romanian culture, a concept that, at least until the beginning
of the 20th century, can be projected, as in Latin America’s literary
cultures, as a “modernism without modernity”.* In this context,
I also note that, until recently decades, Romanian critics chose to
apply various Western deinitions rather than to attempt their own
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approach of this “traveling concept”, which would be adjusted to
the local circumstances.
Secondly, the speciic nature of Romanian culture does not
exclude a series of interesting peculiarities regarding the emergence
of its own modernism in relation to other (semi)peripheral literary
cultures’ modernisms. To this end, a comparison to Brazilian modernism may prove useful.4 Like in Brazil, in Romania, too, modernism emerged in the inter-war period, after a period of seeming
literary decadence – the so-called “era of transition” from the end
of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th (approx. 18891918), which would roughly correspond to Brazilian “pre-modernism” (1895-1922); similar to Brazil, the assertion of modernism was
experienced in Romania as an era of signiicant growth, if not even
a “golden age” of national literature; like in Brazil, Romanian modernism emerged as an outcome of the innovating incentives from
West- European artistic movements. Unlike Brazil, however, where
modernism was welcomed by most of the intellectuals as a precious
stimulus on the path of building a national identity, in Romania
many inter-war writers read it as a cosmopolitan movement threatening the integrity of “national character”. On the other hand,
ever since before the First World War, Romania would already see
the beginning of a series of original avant-garde endeavors,5 which
became radical in the 1920s. his is why, whereas in Brazil modernism was a synthetic movement that assimilated traditionalist,
regionalist, nationalist and avant-garde elements alike, in Romania
modernism was given a hostile welcome both by traditionalism (as
“too new”), and by the avant-garde (as “not new enough”). Furthermore, whereas Brazilian modernism was undertaken and theorized by critics and writers alike, Romanian modernism is irst of
all a creation of the critics, since most of the important writers of
the inter-war age rejected vehemently such a classiication of their
For an overview of Brazilian modernism, see PONTIERO, Giovanni. “Brazilian
Poetry from Modernism to the 1990s”. In: ECHEVARRÍA, Robero González,
PUPO-WALKER, Enrique (eds.). he Cambridge History of Latin American Literature, vol. 3.: Brazilian Literature; Bibliographies. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996: 247-268; FARIA COUTINHO, Eduardo De. “Brazilian
Modernism”. In: EYSTEINSSON, Astradur, LISKA, Vivian: Modernism, vol. 2.
Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins, 2007: 759-768.
5
he most representative case here is Tristan Tzara’s, who only several years later would become one of the creators of Dada (cf. CERNAT, Paul. Avangarda
românească şi complexul periferiei. Bucharest: Cartea Românească, 2007: 25-60).
4
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ANDREI TERIAN | Faces of Modernity in Romanian Literature
19
work. Finally, while regarding Brazilian modernism literary historians agreed there was a particular organic evolution (obvious in
three phases: 1922-1930, 1930-1945 and 1945-c.1970), in Romania, like in the other Eastern European countries, the “natural”
development of modernism was brutally halted after the Second
World War, with communism ascension to power and, thus, of the
Soviet socialist realism.
hirdly, Romanian modernism is deined by a series of speciic traits, determined by its own cultural tradition, two of which
seem to be more pertinent. On the one hand, there are two historical “complexes” of Romanian literature, voiced in the verdicts by
Vasile Alecsandri (“Every Romanian is born a poet”, 1852), and by
Nicolae Iorga (“Why we don’t have our own novel?”, 1890), which
endorsed the cliché of the Romanian poetry’s precedence over iction and which led to a lyric genre clustering of the deinitions of
Romanian modernism. On the other hand, there is the requirement
of the “autonomy of the aesthetic” which, in Romania, turned into
an actual dogma, since the existence of literature as a speciic discursive practice would be constantly at threat from various nationalist or social “tendencies” that attempted to control it. his led to
a deinition of Romanian modernism more from the viewpoint of
its form, as rhetorical “technique” and less from the viewpoint of
its literary content, as forma mentis or as Weltanschauung.
Modernism in poetry: form without ideology (I)
Considering the reasons mentioned above, I start by analyzing modernism in poetry. Generally, Romanian literary historians
agree that modern Romanian poetry begins after the death of Mihai
Eminescu (1850-1889), Romania’s “national poet”, through the
emergence of the symbolist movement promoted by the former’s
main rival, Alexandru Macedonski (1854-1920) and asserted in
the pages of the magazine Literatorul (1880-1919). Nevertheless,
until the First World War, Romanian literature would continue to
be dominated by Eminescu’s epigones (before 1900), and later by
two agrarian movements opposing modernity: sămănătorism and
poporanism/ populism.6 Consequently, the term modern would begin
6
Sămănătorism was promoted in the magazine Sămănătorul/ he Sower (19011910), led by Nicolae Iorga, while poporanism was backed up by the magazine
Viața românească/ Romanian Life (1906-1916; 1920-1940), led until 1930 by G.
20
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to be used in Romanian literary press only around 1887, while its
semantic specialization (as modernism) would materialize only after
1900.* Nonetheless, in the irst two decades of the last century, this
terminological pair refers to a mainly hostile environment, which
means that they were used with rather pejorative implications. In
Romania, modernism becomes a respectable literary movement
only in the 1920s, and its accreditation and deinition were linked
to the critic E. Lovinescu, who promoted the new movement in the
magazine Sburătorul/ Winged Spirit (1919-1922; 1926-1927) and
in the debates held by its namesake literary circle. In Lovinescu’s
view, modernism is more than a “new” literary movement; it is the
spearhead of an extended philosophical and sociological platform
the critic developed thoroughly in his History of Modern Romanian
Civilization.* Starting from Gabriel Tarde’s concept of “imitation”,
Lovinescu stated here that societies and cultures develop only to
a small extent through organic evolution; instead, they progress
through mutations (“leaps”) triggered by the adoption of material
and spiritual structures of the more developed nations. According
to Lovinescu, in the contemporary era, owing to the fast development of the means of communication, imitation would occur
almost instantaneously and, thus, would impose the law of “synchronism” as a principle of development of modern cultures and
societies. Based on this principle, Lovinescu claims the necessity
of modernizing Romanian society through industrialization and
urbanization, as well as the adoption of modernism as form of art
keeping with the “spirit of the age”.7
his perspective was deined, only several years later, in the
third volume of his History of Contemporary Romanian Literature
(1926-1929), where the most signiicant part of inter-war Romanian poetry – particularly the canonical poets Tudor Arghezi (1880-
* (OMĂT, Gabriela. “Modernismul românesc în date”.
In: OMĂT, Gabriela (ed.),
Modernismul literar românesc în date (1880 2000)
şi texte (1880 1949), vol. 1.
Bucureşti: Romanian Cultural Institute, 2009: 51-78.)
* (LOVINESCU, E. Istoria
civilizaţiei române moderne,
3 vol. Bucureşti: Ancora –
S. Benvenisti & Co., 19241925.)
Ibrăileanu. Although the two directions had speciic ideological diferences, both
of them promoted nationalism, rural themes and moral lessons of literature and
displayed an anti-modernist attitude. For an overview of the Romanian literary
ideologies at the end of the 19th-beginning of the 20th century, see TERIAN,
Andrei. “National Literature, World Literatures, and Universality in Romanian
Cultural Criticism 1867-1947”. In: CLCWeb – Comparative Literature and Culture,
vol. 15, n. 5, 2013 <http://docs.lib.purdue.edu/clcweb/vol15/iss5/12>.
7
For the relations between Lovinescu’s sociology and literary criticism, see
TERIAN, Andrei. Teorii, metode și strategii de lectură în critica și istoriograia literară
românească de la T. Maiorescu la E. Lovinescu. O abordare comparativă, București:
Muzeul Național al Literaturii Române, 2013: 146-156.
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ANDREI TERIAN | Faces of Modernity in Romanian Literature
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* (LOVINESCU, E. Istoria
literaturii române contemporane, vol. 3: Evoluţia poeziei
lirice. Bucureşti: “Ancora” –
S. Benvenisti & Co., 1927:
324-430.)
* (BARBU, Ion. Evoluţ ia
poeziei lirice după E. Lovinescu (1927). In: OMĂT,
Gabriela (ed.), Modernismul literar românesc, vol.
2, ed. cit.: 89.)
* ( D U M I T R U , Te o d o ra. “Modernismul – document ş i fantasmă . Sursele
modernismului românesc.
Modernismul în concepţia
lui E. Lovinescu”. In: Cultura, n. 27 (431), 1 August
2013: 14-15.)
* (LOVINESCU, E. Istoria
literaturii române contemporane, Vol. 3, ed. cit., 91.)
* (Idem, 91.)
* (Idem, 438.)
* (LEFTER, Ion Bogdan. Recapitularea modernită ţ i i.
Pentru o nouă istorie a literaturii române. Piteşti: Paralela 45, 2000: 133-163.)
22
1967), Ion Barbu (1895-1961) and Lucian Blaga (1895-1961), as
well as other authors, such as Adrian Maniu, Aron Cotruș or Al.
Philippide – were placed in the category of “modernist poetry”.*
Nevertheless, while the ranks established by Lovinescu were quickly
adopted at that time, the same did not apply to the meanings he
had ascribed to the concept of “modernism” as such, which would
remain a disputed term. he explanation of such a semi-failure
relates irstly to the era’s most important poets’ reluctance to accept
this notion; one of them even labeled modernism as an “insult”.*
On the other hand, Lovinescu himself had ascribed to modernism
a series of opposing meanings. Without approaching the concept
systematically, the critic deined modernism, in a span of only several years, both as (post)symbolism and anti-symbolism, as “pure”
lyricism and anti-lyricism, as musicality and plasticity, as subjectivism and objectivism, as intellectualism and “imagism”.* Finally,
by proclaiming the “inutility of a disagreement on the poetic material”,* Lovinescu limited modernism to a merely formal meaning
and he created the premises of an artiicial uniication of the entire
Romanian poetic ield. hus, the critic stated that contemporary
lyric traditionalism – particularly the Orthodoxist one, promoted
by the magazine Gândirea/ hought (1921-1944), led by Nichifor
Crainic, one of the main opponents of Lovinescu’s ideology – would
be, in fact, “a sămănătorism synchronized with the time’s aesthetic
requirements by a contact, at some poets as alert as the modernists’, with Western stylistic devices, if not even with the Western
sensitivity as such”;* similarly, Lovinescu kept the “extremist” – his
label for the avant-garde – Romanian movements within the ranks
of “latest modernist attempts”.* In both cases, the critic applied a
formal (rhetoric) criterion, i.e., the use of speciic “stylistic devices”
(suggestion, ambiguity, syntax fragmentation, etc.), which led him
to the forced invalidation of borders between the most important
formulae of the Romanian inter-war poetry. herefore, although
they did contribute to the conirmation of the concept of modernism and inferred some of the traits of poetic modernity (lyricism,
ambiguity, anti-mimesis etc.), neither Lovinescu, nor his disciples
could provide a functional deinition of this paradigm.*
For these reasons, to which it also added the boycott of modernism in the irst phase of Romanian communism (1948-1965),
characterized by the dictatorship of socialist realism, a more adequate circumscription of the concept is seen in Romania only
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toward the end of the 1960s, with the translation in Romanian of
Hugo Friedrich’s Structure of Modern Poetry, soon to become an
authentic Bible of Romanian poetry criticism.* By deining modern poetry according to so-called “negative categories” (depersonalization, empty transcendence, fragmentariness, dislocation,
etc.), Friedrich’s book provided Romanian critics with the advantage of a clear and solidly articulated concept. However, his theory
involved, at the same time, two signiicant disadvantages. Firstly,
by proclaiming a “structural unity” of modern poetry, the German
scholar would discourage rather than encourage Romanian critics’ attempts to dissociate modernism from the competing poetic
formulae. Secondly, in keeping with his method (a strictly stylistic one), Friedrich would also limit modernism to a purely formal element – or, at any rate, to one in which the artistic reality
was deemed a mere efect of language. he outcome of these two
premises (particularly of the latter) inluenced both the faithful
applications of Friedrich’s theory in the 1970s and the 1980s and
the attempts to outgrow his design. hus, in the largest study, to
this day, on Romanian poetic modernism, although systematically
arguing (on almost 50 pages) against Friedrich’s concept, Dumitru
Micu does more than fail to propose an alternative concept of modernism; he also trivializes the term, mistaking it for novelty in general (any poetic formula would be “modern” in relation to another
one) and thus deeming “modernist” the entire extent of valuable
Romanian poetry in the 1880-1980 timespan, irrespective of formula and topic.* Nicolae Manolescu suggested one way to overcome this obstruction; he identiied “two kinds of being modern”
and he dissociated the “modernist” poetry as such from the poetic
“avant-garde”.* Nevertheless, aside from the fact that Manolescu
outlines the avant-garde at least eccentrically (his concept covers
the “historical” avant-gardes as well as Rimbaud, Lautréamont and
Whitman), he perpetuates a purely formal concept of modernism and, thus, Lovinescu’s preconception of traditionalism as an
integral part of modernism from which the former would diferentiate only by its themes, not by its “style”.* Perhaps the boldest
attempt of Romanian criticism to revise Friedrich’s concept came
from Gheorghe Crăciun, who stated that, although most of the
works on modern poetry still operate on the concept proposed by
the German scholar (where lyric modernity is reduced to a “relexive” poetry based on symbol, obscurity, subjectivity, connotation
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* (FRIEDRICH, Hugo. Die
Struktur der modernen
Lyrik: Von Baudelaire bis
zur Gegenwart. Hamburg:
Rowohlt, 1956; Romanian
translation: Structura liricii
moderne de la jumă t atea
secolului al XIX-lea până la
mijlocul secolului al XX-lea.
Trans. by Dieter Fuhrmann.
Bucureşti: ELU, 1969.)
*(MICU, Dumitru. Modernismul românesc, 2 vol.
Bucureşti: Minerva, 19841985.)
* (MANOLESCU, Nicolae.
Despre poezie. Braşov: Aula, 2002 (1987): 134-140.)
* (Idem: 177-182.)
ANDREI TERIAN | Faces of Modernity in Romanian Literature
23
* (CRĂ CIUN, Gheorghe.
Aisbergul poeziei moderne,
with an Argument by the
author, afterword by Mircea Martin. Piteşti: Paralela
45, 2002.)
and destruction/overcoming of immediate reality), modern poetry
would include two additional dimensions: a “ludic-experimental”
one, discernible in avant-garde poems, and a “transitive” one, relying on clarity, denotation, objectivity and description of immediate reality, which, starting from Whitman, Pound and Pessoa, and
ending with Montale, Williams and Ponge, had already formed its
own tradition.* Crăciun’s typology may be correct (I am not going
to analyze it here); however, I cannot overlook the fact that it continues to circulate at the beginning of the 2000s, even if on a different level of the spiral, the clichés E. Lovinescu had established
nearly a century before: on the one hand, irrespective of their differences, both “relexive” poems and “transitive” and “ludic-experimental” ones are seen as subdivisions of modernism broadly speaking; on the other hand, this “modernism” is again deined formally,
i.e. rhetorically, by neglecting the diversity of values and attitudes
that may stay obscured underneath its formula.
Modernism in iction: form without ideology (II)
* (LOVINESCU, E. Istoria
literaturii române contemporane, vol. 4, ed. cit.: 216.)
24
While Romanian critics focused often on poetic modernism,
despite its inaccuracies and limitations, the same cannot be said
about prose writing and mainly novel writing. his omission can
be explained by the fact that E. Lovinescu himself, the patriarch
of Romanian modernism, limited the direction of this concept to
poetry. hus, in the fourth volume of his History of Contemporary
Romanian Literature (1928), the critic invokes Ferdinand Brunetière’s evolutionist principle, according to which the “natural”
development of each literary genre occurs in the sense of its own
“essence” (lyric and subjective essence for poetry; epic and objective for iction). Hence, given these circumstances, the evolution
toward lyricism and subjective of the modernist iction would be a
“mixed” and “reactionary” tendency, “opposed to the direction of
the genre’s evolution as such”.* his position indicates more than
a speciic type of aesthetic conservatism; it is also suggestive of an
exercise through which the critic tried to discredit the narrative
production of the rival traditionalist groups, particularly that of
sămănătorism and poporanism, which relied on lyricism in the evocation of a patriarchal atmosphere and on compassion in the description of the peasant’s condition. In any case, Lovinescu’s approach
is not only reductive; it is downright lawed, as noted by one of his
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commentators at that time, the novelist Mihail Sebastian (19071945), who drew attention to the immense distance that separates
the lyricism of traditionalist rural novel, idealizing the pure and
uncorrupted peasants, from the modern, analytical lyricism in the
line of Proust.* In fact, Sebastian was one of the few Romanian
writers of the inter-war period who tried to apply modernism to
iction, even if his observations had carried almost no echo among
his contemporaries.8 However, in the best known epic manifesto
of the time – Noua structură și opera lui Marcel Proust (1935) –,
Camil Petrescu (1895-1957), a writer considered the main representative of modernization in the Romanian novel, avoided ostentatiously any discussion of modernism (a concept that, in fact, he
had repudiated in several articles published at the end of the 1920s).
As for the literary critics and historians of the age, they chose either
to operate on the thematic distinction rural vs. urban iction,* or
to classify each novelist according to their narrative “manner” or
“technique” (e.g., “Proustians”, “Gidians” etc.).*
hese uncertainties will continue, to a certain extent, in the
post-war era, although starting in the 1960s the analysis of prose
also begins to use the term of “modernism”. Similarly to what happened in poetry, a signiicant incentive was provided here by translations, particularly that of R.-M. Albérès’s History of Modern Novel,*
which, in Romanian criticism, had a role somewhat analogous to
Hugo Friedrich’s monograph (including the artiicial dilation and
uniication of modernism, since for the French critic all the important novelists, from Balzac to Robbe-Grillet, were “modern”). In
this context, an important step in the coniguration of the concept
of narrative modernism in Romania was the publication of Nicolae
Manolescu’s extensive essay on the Romanian novel (1980-1983).
According to the critic, the evolution of this genre is divided among
three forms and ages he labels Doric, Ionic and Corinthian, thus
borrowing Albert hibaudet’s concepts, but redeining them in the
terms of structural narratology and supplementing them with a new
category.* From among these, the Doric largely corresponds to Balzac’s model, with an omniscient narrator, typology and socioeconomic conlict; the Ionic is the outcome of Proust’s revolution: the
narrator becomes a character himself, heroes ditch their ixed out-
* (SEBASTIAN, Mihail. “E.
Lovinescu, Istoria literaturii
române contemporane, vol.
IV: Evoluţia prozei literare”
(1928), In: OMĂ T, Gabriela (ed.), Modernismul literar românesc, vol. 2, ed. cit.:
147-151.)
* (LOVINESCU, E. Istoria literaturii române contemporane, vol. 4, ed. cit.)
* (CĂ LINESCU, G. History of
Romanian Literature. Trans.
by Leon Leviţchi. Milan: Nagard, 1988 (1941).)
* (ALBÉRÈS, R.-M. Histoire
du roman moderne. Paris:
Albin Michel, 1962; Romanian translation: Istoria romanului modern. Trans. by
Leonid Dimov, Foreword by
Nicolae Balotă. Bucureşti:
ELU, 1968.)
* (MANOLESCU, Nicolae.
Arca lui Noe. Eseu despre romanul românesc. Bucureşti:
100+1 Gramar, 2004 (19801983): 732-733.)
For Sebastian’s ideas on the “modern novel”, see IOVĂNEL, Mihai. Evreul improbabil: Mihail Sebastian – o monograie ideologică. București: Cartea Românească, 2012: 81-87.
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ANDREI TERIAN | Faces of Modernity in Romanian Literature
25
* (Idem, 729.)
* (MANOLESCU, Nicolae. Istoria critică a literaturii române. Cinci secole de
literatură. Piteşti: Paralela 45,
2008: 455-882.)
* (Idem: 555-557.)
* (CĂ RTĂ RESCU, Mircea.
Postmodernismul românesc.
Afterword by Paul Cornea.
Bucureşti: Humanitas, 1999:
272, 293.)
26
lines and the conlict has an inner nature; inally, while these two
categories continue to share a more or less “realist” perspective, the
Corinthian is governed by diferent laws: it is not the narrative perspective, but the subversion of the mimesis (through myth, symbol,
irony and parable) that matters. Nevertheless, apart from the fact
that, as with poetry, Manolescu’s classiication is built on a strictly
formal criterion (i.e., the relationship between narrator and characters or between author and represented world), it is far from solving
the problem of modernism in the Romanian novel. One irst hindrance seems to be that, while in Western literatures the three types
indicate three successive “ages” of the novel, in Romania, because
of the development delays, they occur almost simultaneously.* In
Romanian literature, the most important novels of the 1920s and
of the 1930s cover equally the Doric (Liviu Rebreanu, Ion, 1920;
Mihail Sadoveanu, Baltagul, 1930; G. Călinescu, Enigma Otiliei,
1938), the Ionic (Hortensia Papadat-Bengescu, Concert din muzică
de Bach, 1927; Camil Petrescu, Patul lui Procust, 1933; Mircea
Eliade, Maitreyi, 1933) and the Corinthian (Mateiu I. Caragiale,
Craii de Curtea-Veche, 1929; M. Blecher, Întâmplări din irealitatea
imediată, 1936; Tudor Arghezi, Cimitirul Buna-Vestire, 1936). On
the other hand, the relationship of the three categories with modernism is kept ambiguous, given that the said term is not mentioned anywhere in Manolescu’s essay, while the word “modern” is
indicative, for him, of a mere undetermined innovation. Furthermore, when nearly three decades later the critic reconsiders his categories’ relationship with modernity, he can ofer only an ambiguous reaction. For, in his Critical History of Romanian Literature
(2008), Manolescu places, on the one hand, the entire Romanian
novel of 1889-1948 in the category of modernism;* and, on the
other hand, he evicts it insidiously therefrom, since he labels the
Doric and Ionic novels as “realist”, while he prudently calls “postrealist” the Corinthian one.*
Nevertheless, Manolescu’s taxonomy has stimulated the emergence of other attempts to classify the Romanian novels of the irst
half of the 20th century. From among these, a signiicant approach
is Mircea Cărtărescu’s overview on Romanian post-modernism,
which assimilates the Doric novel to the traditional (“realist”) one,
the Ionic novel with the modernist, and the Corinthian with the
postmodern one.* Cărtărescu’s solution seems simple and elegant;
this is why it has been largely adopted by Romanian curricula in
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secondary education. However, the issue here is that – because of
the use of a purely formal principle – it involves the existence in
Romania, since the 1920s-1930s, of a literary paradigm which is
set to occur, in fact, only half a century later, namely, postmodernism. A fact suggestive of the inaccuracy attached to Cărtărescu’s
equations rather than of the precociousness of Romanian literature. On the other hand, Manolescu’s classiication has also been
the starting point of a polemic study by Sorin Alexandrescu,* who
notes that the three “forms” of the inter-war Romanian novel have
a common denominator: they outline a so-called “aesthetic modernism”, based on the convergence between the principle of the
autonomy of the aesthetic and the values of liberal democracy.
Contrary to this paradigm, he points out the existence of an “ethic
modernism”, promoted by the magazine Cuvântul/ Word and by the
Criterion Group (Mircea Eliade, Emil Cioran, Mihail Sebastian,
Eugen Ionescu, etc.), by the Romanian avant-garde movements,
as well as by other cultural groups (e.g., the new leading team of
the magazine Viața românească, which had abandoned the pre-war
aggressive poporanism); all these challenge both the supremacy of
the aesthetic principle in literature and the supremacy of liberal
values in politics. Alexandrescu’s hypothesis is challenging, but it
tends toward an overemphasis opposed to Cărtărescu’s: while the
latter overstated, in line with Manolescu, the formal criterion, the
former, who joins the same category the Doric, the Ionic and the
Corinthian, cancels it and reduces modernism to a mere ideological attitude. On the other hand, the heterogeneous character of the
concept of “ethic modernism” indicates a vital aspect to the understanding of literary modernity, which Alexandrescu, however, leaves
open: namely that not all oppositions against modernity occur in
the same way and in the name of the same values.
* (ALEXANDRESCU, Sorin.
“Romanul românesc interbelic: Problema canonului”.
In: Privind înapoi, modernitatea. Bucureş t i: Univers,
1999: 125-148).
Anti-modernism: ideology without form
During the last decade, there have been several attempts to
solve the issues attached to circumscribing Romanian modernism
by introducing new concepts. hus, Caius Dobrescu has proposed
a segmentation of modernism in two successive ages: “‘conservative modernism’ generally means the in-de-siècle literary experiments (although the term may seem slightly paradoxical, because
it denotes, in fact, the entire period of 1880-1918). By ‘radical
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27
* (DOBRESCU, Caius.
Revoluţia radială. O critică
a conceptului de postmodernism dinspre înţelegerea
plurală şi deschisă a culturii
burgheze. Braş ov: Editura
Universită t i̧ i „Transilvania”,
2008: 319.)
* (CERNAT, Paul. Modernismul retro în romanul românesc interbelic. Bucureşti:
Art, 2009: 12.)
* (COMPAGNON, Antoine.
Les Antimodernes: De Joseph de Maistre à Roland
Barthes. Paris: Gallimard,
2005; Romanian translation: Antimodernii: De la
Joseph de Maistre la Roland
Barthes. Trans. by Irina Mavrodin and Adina Diniţoiu.
Foreword by Mircea Martin.
Bucureşti: Art, 2008.)
modernism’ I mean [...] the historical avant-garde and ‘literature
of commitment’”.* Nevertheless, the distinction between the two
modernisms is controversial both at the level of Romanian literature
and in literature in general. It does not have a chronological support (“conservative modernism” does not end with the First World
War, and it includes many nostalgic projects emerging before this
historic threshold), nor does it have a typological one (a large part
of Romanian and European literature rejects social militancy and
the avant-garde, which does not mean that it becomes conservative). From this point of view, a more striking approach is the concept of “retro-modernism”, launched by Paul Cernat and described
as the “blend of nostalgic solidarity and critical distance from the
conventions of a recent enough age ..., the aestheticizing livresque
assumption of the ‘desuetude’ and of the ‘anachronic’ relating to
the literary form also, the retrieval of an atmosphere that transigures – through the poetic, the imaginary and the myth – the realist-social mimesis, the preeminence of illusion before reality”.* Cernat’s “eclectic typology”, however (which includes novelists such
as G. Ibrăileanu, Mateiu Caragiale, G. Călinescu, Mihail Sadoveanu, Ionel Teodoreanu and Mircea Eliade), is not founded on
solid ground; from among the so-called “retro-modernists”, some
are only “retro”, but not “modernists” (Mihail Sadoveanu or Ionel
Teodoreanu, who disseminate obsolete narrative techniques), while
others are “modernists”, but not “retro” – e.g., Mircea Eliade, in
whose “old world” of the novel Domnișoara Christina (1936) the
retrospective gesture is not automatically followed by its nostalgia.
he term that gained widespread popularity in recent Romanian criticism is “anti-modernism”, which became established
especially owing to the translation in Romanian of Antoine Compagnon’s Les Antimodernes.* Nonetheless, before I consider the
Romanian applications of this concept, I think it is important to
make a few brief comments on the volume as such. Firstly, Compagnon’s book concerns exclusively French culture, ignoring both
the forms of manifestation and the previous analyses of “anti-modernism” in other cultures, although some of the latter anticipate
certain of his ideas and would have provided his analysis additional
weight through the opening of a broader comparative context.9
See, for example, JACKSON LEARS, T.J. No Place of Grace: Antimodernism
and the Transformation of American Culture (1880-1920). New York: Pantheon
Books, 1981.
9
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Secondly, Compagnon’s deinition elicits several questions relating
to its consistency: if, as stated by the French critic, “the real antimoderns are, at the same time, moderns, even perpetually modern,
or moderns against their will” and, moreover, if “the anti-moderns
[…] are only moderns, the true moderns”,* then the very analytical
utility of the “anti-modern” as concept is to be doubted.10 On the
other hand, even though it is acceptable that the “modern” antimoderns represent a typological category distinct from the “modern” moderns, Compagnon does not provide any clear criterion to
help dissociate the former (“anti-moderns in the interesting [? – my
emphasis], modern sense of the word”) from the “mere” traditionalists, although he seems to believe irmly in such a distinction.*
Finally, through the limitation to a substantivization of the adjective (les antimodernes/ the anti-moderns), Compagnon indulges in
a comfortable ambiguity, without mentioning whether, in his text,
the preix anti- concerns (cultural) modernism, (historic) modernity or both: indeed, he discusses mostly writers and critics, but
discusses them exclusively from the viewpoint of their ideological
attitudes, without reference to the form of their discourse.
hese laws in Compagnon’s theory can also be identiied,
to various extents, at his Romanian disciples. From among them,
Oana Soare applied most faithfully the theory of anti-modernism;
she borrows not only the French theorist’s perspective, but also its
limits and ambiguities. hus, Soare relates only briely to the particular conditions of Romanian culture in relation to the French one.
At the same time, she approaches only the ideological positions of
Romanian writers, without any notes on the extent to which they
* (COMPAGNON, Antoine.
Les Antimodernes, ed. cit.:
7-8.)
* (COMPAGNON, Antoine.
Les Antimodernes, ed. cit.: 9.)
he deinition of modernism/modernity as a critical and self-relexive age – or,
to be more exact, of (cultural) modernism as criticism of (historic) modernity – is
one of the common places of the theory of modernity in the last half of century:
“what deines cultural modernity is its outright rejection of bourgeois modernity,
its consuming negative passion” (CALINESCU, Matei. Five Faces of Modernity,
ed. cit.: 42). In fact, Calinescu has expresed early his doubt on the originality of
Compagnon’s theory, stating that “Compagnon’s ‘ive paradoxes’ [in COMPAGNON, Antoine. Cinq paradoxes de la modernité. Paris: Seuil, 1990, which could
be seen as a draft of Les Antimodernes] are not far from my earlier ‘ive faces’ of
modernity, although his formulations difer on occasion and he adds a substantial
discussion of artistic currents and trends over the last century” (CĂLINESCU,
Matei. “Modern, Modernism, Modernization: Variations on Modern hemes”.
In: BERG, Christian, DURIEUX, Frank, LERNOUT, Geert (eds.). he Turn
of the Century: Modernism and Modernity in Literature and the Arts. Berlin/
New York: Walter de Gruyter, 1995: 39).
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* (SOARE, Oana. Modernitate ş i reacţii antimoderne în
cultural română. Bucureşti:
Editura Muzeului Naţional
al Literaturii Române, 2013:
33.)
* (Idem: 46.)
* (ALEXANDRESCU, Sorin. “Romanian Modernism
and Anti-Modernism”. In:
VAJDOVÁ, Libuša; BŽOCH,
Adam (eds.). Controversial Modernity. Bratislava:
Slovak Academic Press,
2011: 17-35.)
actually reverberate in the form of their discourse and particularly
in their literary work. his is why the greatest part of her approach
does not even consider poets or novelists, but rather the three critics and ideologists who deined the structure of Romanian literary
canon from the 1870s to the 1930s: T. Maiorescu, G. Ibrăileanu
and E. Lovinescu. Last but not least, the concept of anti-modernism is stretched to such a degree that it seems to incorporate modernism itself. his aspect is most obvious in the analysis of Camil
Petrescu’s ideology (who had been labeled a “champion of modernism” by the previous literary historiography, but who, in Soare’s
opinion, is “a dual, Janus Bifrons proile of the anti-modern modern”*), as well as of E. Lovinescu’s, at whom modernism is seen as
a simple “bovaristic projection of a spirit who had initially rejected
modernity”.* From this viewpoint, Sorin Alexandrescu’s more
recent analyses are more challenging, for they further to the contact with Compagnon’s theory, updating his opposition between
the “esthetic” and “ethic modernism”. hus, Alexandrescu continues to identify the “aesthetic modernism” with a “liberal (ideological) block”, but distinguishes within the “ethic modernism”
no less than six additional cultural “blocks”: agrarian, traditionalist, “anti-modern”, right-wing extremist, left-wing extremist and
avant-gardist.* Notwithstanding fact that the last three of these
trends are merely listed and not analyzed (which raises questions
about the accuracy of the classiication, because a large part of the
Romanian avant-garde was, in fact, left-wing extremist, just as a
part of the so-called “anti-moderns” – which the author links to
the Criterion Group – were actually right-wing extremists), Alexandrescu’s approach ends this time too at the political and ideological aspects of the concerned directions, without almost any mention of their literary consequences and of the discourse structures
that express the said attitudes.
Toward a systematic reconstruction of Romanian
literary modernity
herefore, previous approaches of modernism in Romanian
literature display three signiicant shortcomings: (a) in general,
Romanian critics disseminate a reductive vision of modernism,
which limits it to either a formal approach (as literary “technique”)
or to a substantial one (as ideological attitude); (b) a result of this
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perspective is the emergence of a non-diferentiated concept of
modernism, a sponge-concept that tends to absorb any adverse reactions; (c) even when they do identify the presence of an “other-thanmodernism”, Romanian critics tend to place it under a generic antimodernism, irrespective of the degree or the direction in which it
challenges modernism. Despite this situation, I believe such obstacles can be overcome, provided that, on the one hand, we consider
both the form and the vision of literary discourse and, on the other
hand, we distinguish more diligently the cultural positions from
where the critique of modernism is advanced. For example, I ind
it essential to distinguish between the critique of modernity as type
of society that encourages appearances and supericiality (in Camil
Petrescu’s novels) and the negation of modernity through the projection of an atemporal and archetypal Moldavia (in Mihail Sadoveanu’s novels). Likewise, I think it is important to distinguish this
regressive negation of modernity from what could be called the progressive negation of modernity (by envisaging a “new man” and a
society based on vitality rather than on the corrupt bourgeois values, in Mircea Eliade’s novels). For while the irst one engenders a
critical and self-relexive modernism, the second one disseminates an
obvious anti-modernism, while the last one projects an ultra-modernism that counteracts a potential “suspension” of the project of
modernization.11 hese positions are encountered not only in the
novel, but also in Romanian inter-war poetry, in which the attachment to pre-modern collective values (shared by the rural and religious “traditionalist” poets – e.g., Vasile Voiculescu and Ion Pillat)
should be dissociated from the assumption of individualism as an
outcome of secularization and of the modernity crises (e.g. Tudor
Arghezi and George Bacovia), as well as from the attempt to transcend the limits of modernity with the help of the latest technological achievements or by inventing a new mystique (in the avantgarde poetry). herefore, I believe Romanian literary modernity
of the irst half of the 20th century could be successfully described
via three complementary “faces”:
An important suggestion to this end comes from Jacques Maritain, the irst
theorist of the “anti-modern”, who had warned that “what I call here anti-modern may equally be called ultra-modern” (MARITAIN, Jacques. Antimoderne, revised and augmented edition. Paris: Revue des Jeunes, 1922: 14), subsequently
describing his own idea: “Anti-modern in relation to the errors of the present, it is
ultra-modern in relation to the truths concealed in the ages to come” (Idem: 16).
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1. Anti-modernism, promoted mainly by the group around
the magazine Gândirea and represented by writers such as Liviu
Rebreanu, Mihail Sadoveanu, G. Călinescu, Lucian Blaga (as a
poet, but also as a philosopher of culture), Vasile Voiculescu and
Ion Pillat. Ideologically, this direction means a conservative critique of liberal bourgeois democracy in the name of the nostalgia
for a traditional, agrarian, orthodox society loyal to the collective
and archetypal values of a supposed “Romanian spirit”. In their
novels, the anti-moderns prefer Balzac’s formula of a Doric realism and a rural background, while their poetry is characterized by
the ostentatious growing of (apparently) obsolete species, such as
the elegy, the hymn or the psalm. Although, in general, it rejects
modernism, this direction is fully aware of its existence as a reaction to modernity.
2. Modernism, promoted mainly by the magazine Sburătorul
and represented by writers such as Hortensia Papadat-Bengescu,
Camil Petrescu, Anton Holban, E. Lovinescu and (partially) Tudor
Arghezi. Ideologically, this direction is characterized by a liberalism
subordinated, generally, to bourgeois individualism and to the beneits of “modern life”. In their novels, the modernists describe an
urban background by adopting the interiorized, Ionic perspective
of French psychologism (especially Proust’s and Gide’s), while their
poems draw both upon Baudelaire’s and Rimbaud’s moral tearing
and upon Mallarme’s and Valéry’s aesthetic purism. Although, in
general, it adheres to modernity as the historical age of individual
emancipation, modernism does not exclude a self-critical and selfrelexive awareness.
3. Ultra-modernism, promoted especially by the Criterion
Group (Mircea Eliade, Emil Cioran, Mihail Sebastian, Eugen
Ionescu, etc.) and by the many avant-garde magazines (which
enjoyed contributions from Ion Vinea, Ilarie Voronca, Geo Bogza,
Gherasim Luca, Gellu Naum, etc.). Ideologically speaking, this
direction proclaims the failure of liberal democracy, either from the
viewpoint of a fascist-tinged new spirituality (Criterion Group),
or from that of a revolutionary ideal with an anarchic-communist
touch (the avant-garde). In their novels (represented mainly by the
Criterion Group), the ultra-modernists adopt frequently the essay,
symbolic and parabolic formula to describe the utopia of a spiritual
rebirth; in their poetry (represented mostly by the avant-garde),
they choose to de-structure any literary form, in order to suggest
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the “permanent revolution”. In both alternatives, the ultra-modernists look at modernity as a necessary, but transitory historical
stage which they need to overcome.
I would add two observations on this classiication. Firstly,
beyond the fact that it attempts to solve the three taxonomic hindrances mentioned, it also strives to relect the consistency and
the coherence of the most important inter-war Romanian literary groups (Gândirea, Sburătorul, Criterion, the avant-garde,
etc.). Indeed, as stated by Reinhart Koselleck, “there is always a
gap between the historical reality and its linguistic representation,
which leads invariably to the rewriting of a written history at a
certain point in time”.* I believe, however, that a literary historian
must not give in to revisionism too easily; although at times it may
seem to lead to spectacular results, there are many cases when revisionism tends to make the past even more opaque. For this reason
I have attempted, through the above-mentioned concepts, to ply
speciic typological traits on the main centers of power in Romanian inter-war literature; otherwise, the positions and ideas so stubbornly defended by the intellectuals of the age could seem incomprehensible now. Secondly, it may be redundant to add that the
concepts I proposed are scale downs and one should not expect
them to match perfectly the options of Romanian writers at the
beginning of the 20th century. On the contrary, from this point of
view there are signiicant contradictions; such is the case of Ion
Barbu, who, although he began his literary activity in the magazine
Sburătorul and was considered by Lovinescu one of the pillars of
Romanian poetic modernism, made haste to move away from this
paradigm by proclaiming the artistic supremacy of an “anti-modern” form (the Pindaric ode), as well as by expressing his admiration toward an “ultra-modern” political regime (Hitlerism). I am
afraid, however, that in such cases the writers are to blame rather
than my concepts.
* (KOSELLECK, Reinhart. Begriffsgeschichten: Studien
zur Semantik und Pragmatik der politischen und sozialen Sprache. Mit zwei Beiträgen von Ulrike Spree und
Willibald Steinmetz sowie einem Nachwort zu Einleitungsfragmenten Reinhart Kosellecks von Carsten
Dutt. Frankfurt am Main:
Suhrkamp, 2006: 70).
Andrei Terian é Professor Associado da Universidade Lucian Blaga de
Sibiu e Pesquisador Sênior III no Instituto G. Călinescu de História Literária e Teoria da Academia Romena de Bucareste. É autor dos volumes G.
Călinescu: A cincea esență (2009), Critica de export: Teorii, contexte, ideologii (2013), e coautor de Dicţionarul general al literaturii române (7 vol.,
2004-2009) e de Cronologia vieţii literare românești. Perioada postbelică
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(10 vol., 2010-2012). Publicou ainda cerca de 50 artigos em revistas internacionais “CLCWeb – Comparative Literature and Culture”, “World
Literature Studies”, “Slovo”, “Primerjalna književnost”, “Interlitteraria”
etc., bem como em revistas acadêmicas romenas. A pesquisa deste artigo
foi inanciada pela Autoridade Romena Nacional para Pesquisa Cientíica (CNCS-UEFISCDI), código PN-II-RU-TE-2012-3-0411. E-mail:
<
[email protected]>.
Recebido em
15/11/2013
Aprovado em
15/12/2013
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