Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2597053931> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 81 of
81
with 100 items per page.
- W2597053931 endingPage "110" @default.
- W2597053931 startingPage "94" @default.
- W2597053931 abstract "One of the most important Romanian writers of the interwar period, Lucian Blaga (1895 - 1961) has been well known as a poet and a philosopher, an exquisite translator, a subtle essayist and a beloved playwright. Had he been awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1956, as it seemed likely at the time, his work would have been studied all over the world, as it deserves. Nevertheless, the situation was complicated by politics and the prize went instead to Juan Ramon Jimenez. Blaga remained relatively unknown to the Western reader and has since often been considered a marginal or peripheral author, his great accomplishments being ignored outside Romania. Believing mystery to be an integral part of human life, he used his poetry to illuminate its significance to individuals and society and his philosophic system proved to be, at least partially, a type of pantheism dominated by the search for an elusive metaphysical principle called the Great Anonymous.Discussing Lucian Blaga's place in the field of Romanian culture but also keeping in mind the general context of world literature, Marcel Cornis-Pop considers that this author holds a singular position in modern Romanian literature, comparable to that of Eliot and Pound in the English-speaking countries.2 In fact, Blaga was the first Romanian poet whose work synchronized with some essential European artistic forms, his most important achievement being, perhaps, that of adapting Expressionism to Romanian poetry3 but also reappraising the models and relieving the will to modernity in terms specific to Romanian culture.The period between the two World Wars was Romania's golden age of modernism4: Tudor Arghezi, Ion Barbu, Tristan Tzara, Eugen Ionescu, Mircea Eliade and E.M. Cioran are only some names representing a generation determined to change something in the Romanian culture. Some of them became more or less familiar to the Western world, especially after leaving their native country and established mainly in France. But mention should be made that, as Andrei Codrescu pointed out, twentieth-century ideas descended on our small Balkan country all at once and were quickly absorbed and transformed.5 Together with some of his contemporaries, Blaga represents a constructivist phase in Romanian modernism, mainly because, picking up the scattered pieces of Dadaism, futurism and Expressionism and avoiding the excess of the new French art (surrealism), their work participated, however indirectly, in a reconstruction of European art in a post-Dada age.6In addition to the aspects mentioned before, Blaga belongs to the family of modern creators destined to have a many-sided commanding influence over the culture they belong to, considers Edgar Papu, stressing that these types of scholars, heralded already by Nietzsche and who cannot be absent from a privileged place neither in the history of poetry nor in the history of thinking, have appeared in orderly succession from Miguel de Unamuno to Jean-Paul Sartre. Their fecund polyvalence cannot be separated from the unity of their own personality which, from all sides, radiates the same vivid originality and the same message.7 Blaga is somehow paradoxical within Romanian culture: very keen on penetrating deep into the of his native land and, at the same time, being eager to resonate with the modern ideas of his own time, the poet carried the resources of the Romanian spirit to a culminating convergence; he made up his own inner horizon and connected with the spiritual profile of his people in order to find all specific reflexes of the great horizons of this particular circuit. Unamuno surprised an essence of Spain and established its place in the world and Blaga did exactly the same for Romania. Besides, Blaga is the first to include the search for final traits in the philosophic register, by applying concepts and categories of the philosophy of culture especially to the Romanian subhistory, to the unrecorded strata of the visible known history. …" @default.
- W2597053931 created "2017-03-23" @default.
- W2597053931 creator A5079117163 @default.
- W2597053931 date "2015-10-31" @default.
- W2597053931 modified "2023-09-25" @default.
- W2597053931 title "Lucian Blaga Between Words and Silence" @default.
- W2597053931 doi "https://doi.org/10.3798/tia.1937-0237.15025" @default.
- W2597053931 hasPublicationYear "2015" @default.
- W2597053931 type Work @default.
- W2597053931 sameAs 2597053931 @default.
- W2597053931 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W2597053931 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2597053931 hasAuthorship W2597053931A5079117163 @default.
- W2597053931 hasBestOaLocation W25970539311 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConcept C107038049 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConcept C111472728 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConcept C124952713 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConcept C129400051 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConcept C138885662 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConcept C142362112 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConcept C164913051 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConcept C166957645 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConcept C17744445 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConcept C182744844 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConcept C199539241 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConcept C2778682666 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConcept C2779343474 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConcept C2781115785 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConcept C2781291010 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConcept C41895202 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConcept C94625758 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConcept C95457728 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConceptScore W2597053931C107038049 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConceptScore W2597053931C111472728 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConceptScore W2597053931C124952713 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConceptScore W2597053931C129400051 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConceptScore W2597053931C138885662 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConceptScore W2597053931C142362112 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConceptScore W2597053931C164913051 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConceptScore W2597053931C166957645 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConceptScore W2597053931C17744445 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConceptScore W2597053931C182744844 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConceptScore W2597053931C199539241 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConceptScore W2597053931C2778682666 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConceptScore W2597053931C2779343474 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConceptScore W2597053931C2781115785 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConceptScore W2597053931C2781291010 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConceptScore W2597053931C41895202 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConceptScore W2597053931C94625758 @default.
- W2597053931 hasConceptScore W2597053931C95457728 @default.
- W2597053931 hasIssue "4" @default.
- W2597053931 hasLocation W25970539311 @default.
- W2597053931 hasOpenAccess W2597053931 @default.
- W2597053931 hasPrimaryLocation W25970539311 @default.
- W2597053931 hasRelatedWork W1002477419 @default.
- W2597053931 hasRelatedWork W1997296645 @default.
- W2597053931 hasRelatedWork W2042947173 @default.
- W2597053931 hasRelatedWork W2073465924 @default.
- W2597053931 hasRelatedWork W2079316801 @default.
- W2597053931 hasRelatedWork W2125186793 @default.
- W2597053931 hasRelatedWork W223168559 @default.
- W2597053931 hasRelatedWork W2315721973 @default.
- W2597053931 hasRelatedWork W2316681049 @default.
- W2597053931 hasRelatedWork W2318436663 @default.
- W2597053931 hasRelatedWork W2490616836 @default.
- W2597053931 hasRelatedWork W2507906481 @default.
- W2597053931 hasRelatedWork W2525921778 @default.
- W2597053931 hasRelatedWork W2598490780 @default.
- W2597053931 hasRelatedWork W2761928484 @default.
- W2597053931 hasRelatedWork W2803571797 @default.
- W2597053931 hasRelatedWork W282138476 @default.
- W2597053931 hasRelatedWork W312786906 @default.
- W2597053931 hasRelatedWork W3196032394 @default.
- W2597053931 hasRelatedWork W33395275 @default.
- W2597053931 hasVolume "8" @default.
- W2597053931 isParatext "false" @default.
- W2597053931 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W2597053931 magId "2597053931" @default.
- W2597053931 workType "article" @default.