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Urmuz

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Urmuz
Demetru Dem. Demetrescu-Buzău
Urmuz, c. 1920
Urmuz,c. 1920
Born(1883-03-17)March 17, 1883
Curtea de Argeș
DiedNovember 23, 1923(1923-11-23)(aged 40)
Bucharest
Pen nameCiriviș, Hurmuz
Occupationwriter, humorist, judge, clerk
NationalityRomanian
Periodc. 1908–1923
GenreAbsurdist fiction,antinovel,aphorism,experimental literature,fable,fantasy literature,mythopoeia,nonsense verse,parody,sketch story
Literary movementAvant-garde
Futurism

Urmuz(Romanian pronunciation:[urˈmuz],pen name ofDemetru Dem. Demetrescu-Buzău,also known asHurmuzorCiriviș,bornDimitrie Dim. Ionescu-Buzeu;March 17, 1883 – November 23, 1923) was a Romanian writer, lawyer and civil servant, who became a cult hero in Romania'savant-gardescene. His scattered work, consisting ofabsurdistshort prose and poetry, opened a new genre inRomanian lettersandhumor,and captured the imagination ofmodernistsfor several generations. Urmuz'sBizarre(orWeird)Pageswere largely independent of European modernism, even though some may have been triggered byFuturism;their valorization ofnonsense verse,black comedy,nihilistictendencies and exploration into theunconscious mindhave repeatedly been cited as influential for the development ofDadaismand theTheatre of the Absurd.Individual pieces such as "The Funnel and Stamate", "Ismaïl and Turnavitu", "Algazy & Grummer" or "The Fuchsiad" areparodyfragments, dealing with monstrous andshapeshiftingcreatures in mundane settings, and announcing techniques later taken up bySurrealism.

Urmuz's biography between his high school eccentricity and his public suicide remains largely mysterious, and some of the sympathetic accounts have been described as purposefully deceptive. The abstruse imagery of his work has produced a large corpus of diverging interpretations. He has notably been read as a satirist of public life in the 1910s, an unlikely conservative and nostalgic, or an emotionally distantesotericist.

In Urmuz's lifetime, his stories were only acted out by histhespianfriendGeorge Ciprianand published as samples byCuget Românescnewspaper, with support from modernist writerTudor Arghezi.Ciprian and Arghezi were together responsible for creating the link between Urmuz and the emerging avant-garde, their activity as Urmuz promoters being later enhanced by such figures asIon Vinea,Geo Bogza,Lucian Boz,Sașa PanăandEugène Ionesco.Beginning in the late 1930s, Urmuz also became the focus interest for the elite critics, who either welcomed him into20th-century literatureor dismissed him as a buffoonish impostor. By then, his activity also inspired an eponymous avant-garde magazine edited by Bogza, as well as Ciprian's dramaThe Drake's Head.

Name

[edit]

Urmuz's birth name was, in full,Dimitrie Dim. Ionescu-Buzeu(orBuzău), changed toDimitrie Dim. Dumitrescu-Buzeuwhen he was still a child, and later settled asDemetru Dem. Demetrescu-Buzău.[1][2]TheDemetrescusurname was in effect a Romanianpatronymic,using the-escusuffix: his father was known as Dimitrie (Demetru, Dumitru) Ionescu-Buzău.[1][3][4]The attached particleBuzău,originallyBuzeu,confirms that the family traced its roots tothe eponymous town.[2][5]According to George Ciprian, the namesCiriviș(variation ofcerviș,Romanianfor "melted grease" ) andMitică(pet form ofDumitru) were coined while the writer was still in school, whereasUrmuzcame "later".[6]

The name under which the writer is universally known did not actually originate from his own wishes, but was selected and imposed on the public by Arghezi, only one year before Urmuz committed suicide.[7][8][9][10]The spellingHurmuz,when used in reference to the writer, was popular in the 1920s, but has since been described as erroneous.[9]The variantOrmuz,sometimes rendered asUrmuz,was also used as a pen name by the activist and novelistA. L. Zissu.[11]

The word[h]urmuz,explained by linguists as a curious addition to theRomanian lexis,[12]generally means "glass bead", "precious stone" or "snowberry".It has entered the language through oriental channels, and these meanings ultimately refer to the international trade in beads centered onHormuz Island,Iran.[12]Anthropologist and essayist Vasile Andru highlights a secondary, scatological, meaning: in theRomani language,a source ofRomanian slang,urmuz,"bead", has mutated to mean "feces".[5]An alternative etymology, exclusive to the author's pseudonym, was advanced by writer and scholarIoana Pârvulescu.It suggests the combination of two contradictory terms:ursuz( "surly" ) andamuz( "I amuse" ).[9]

Biography

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Childhood

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Mitică was the eldest son of a middle class nuclear family: his father, described by Ciprian as "short and mean" (om scund și ciufut),[13]was the director of Curtea de Argeș Hospital in the 1890s.[4]In his spare time, Ionescu-Buzeu Sr. was also a classical scholar, folklorist and activeFreemason.[1]His wife, the writer's mother, was Eliza née Pașcani, sister of the doctor, chemist andUniversity of Parisprofessor Cristien Pascani.[1][14]Urmuz had numerous other siblings ( "a multitude", according to Ciprian),[6]of whom most were daughters. One of Urmuz's sisters, Eliza (married Vorvoreanu) was later a main source of information on the author's childhood and adolescence.[1][5][15]

The future Urmuz was born in the northernMunteniantown ofCurtea de Argeș,and, at age five, spent one year in Paris with his parents.[1][16]The family eventually settled in Romania's capital,Bucharest,where his father was hygiene teacher atMatei Basarab National College,[1][14]later cityhealth inspector,and rented houses inAntim Monasteryquarter.[6]Young Mitică was described by his sister as mainly unpretentious and introverted, fascinated by scientific discovery and, in his childhood years, a passionate reader ofJules Verne's science fiction books.[17]At a later stage, he was also possibly familiarized with and influenced byGerman idealismand by the philosophical views of 19th-century poetMihai Eminescu.[18][19]A more evident influence on the future writer wasIon Luca Caragiale,the main figure in early 20th-century Romanian comic theatre.[20][21][22]

Ionescu-Buzău's family had artistic interests, and Urmuz grew up with a fascination for classical music andfine art,learning to play the piano and taking up amateuroil painting.[23]He got along best with his mother, who was also a pianist. The devout daughter of anOrthodoxpriest, she was unable to instill in her young son the same respect for the Church.[14]

Urmuz's arrival to literary history took place in the atmosphere of Bucharestgymnasia.It was at this junction that he became a mate of Ciprian, who later described their encounter as momentous: "I don't much believe in destiny. [...] Yet I find it such an odd incident that my bench mate, from my failing grade year through to my high school graduation, was [...] this tiny man of a rare originality, who had a massive say on how my life would turn up."[6]Ciprian describes what follows as his own "initiation in artistic matters": he recalls conversations with "Ciriviș" where they debated the "perfection" ofAncient Greek sculpture,and mentions that young Urmuz, unlike himself, regarded theater as a "minor art".[24]Instead, Urmuz preferred to attend concerts at theRomanian Atheneum,and, Ciprian writes, had an advanced understanding ofabsolute musiceven at age thirteen.[25]Reportedly, the young man was also in the attendance at lectures given byTitu Maiorescu,a philosopher and aesthete who had influenced both Eminescu and Caragiale.[19]

Pahucibrotherhood

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Gheorghe Lazăr National College

Some years later, while enrolled at theGheorghe Lazăr National College,Urmuz turned his interest toward mocking the severity of his teachers and challenging the dominance of artistic traditionalism. One such early episode is attested by Ciprian: amused by the creation of aVivat Dacia( "Long LiveDacia") association of nationalist students, Urmuz subverted its meetings, and, withdeadpansnark, suggested that membership fees should be paid in duck heads.[26]Also according to Ciprian, these events soon lost their shock value, leading him and Urmuz to "take to the streets", where they began their activity as pranksters. Their initial experiment was to pressure law-abiding and credulous passers-by into presenting their identity papers for inspection, and the apparent success earned Urmuz an unexpected following in school (his fans even heckledVivat Daciainto accepting poultry heads as means of payment, before the society dissolved itself with ceremony).[27]Another colleague, future traditionalist poetVasile Voiculescu,recalled young Urmuz as "genially knavish", his humor being "cerebral, harder to detect and appreciate".[28]

The core group of Urmuzian disciples, organized as asecret society,comprised Ciprian (nicknamed "Macferlan" by Urmuz), Alexandru "Bălălău" Bujoreanu and Costică "Pentagon" Grigorescu, together known as thepahuci.Allegedly, the obscure word originated from theHebrewfor "yawns".[1]Their activity centered on daring pranks: Urmuz and the other three young men once made an impromptu visit to the isolatedCăldărușani Monastery[ro],inIlfov County,where the deposed and disgracedMetropolitan Ghenadiewas living in banishment. Passing themselves off as newspaper editors, they demanded (and received) honored guest treatment, tested the monks' patience, and were later introduced to a well-disposed Ghenadie.[29]Ciprian also recalls that Urmuz's philosophical musings or deadpansurreal humorwere a direct inspiration for other pranks and experiments. He describes how Ciriviș acted out sadness for the plight of a screechy sledge (declaring "my heart is at one with all things in existence" ), but then duped onlookers into believing that the squeaks came from a woman somehow trapped under the vehicle.[30]Reportedly, Urmuz also approached his seniors training atseminariesor other traditionalist institutions, earned their attention by claiming to share the nationalist agenda, and then began reciting them nonsense lyrics such as an evolving draft of his mock-fable"The Chroniclers".[31]

Outside school, the young man was still introverted, and, Sandqvist notes, "extremely shy, especially with girls."[32]Ciprian recalls Ciriviș's engrossingpick-up lines:he acted familiar to any young woman who caught his eye, assuring her that they had met once before, and, having stirred her curiosity, falsely recounting how they both used to killflesh-fliesfor sport.[33]

Thepahuciwelcomed their graduation with one final act of defiance against the school principal, whom they visited in his office, where they began hopping about in circles.[34]Even though their group did not survive once its members took different career paths, they had regular reunions at the Spiru Godeleatavern,where they earned notoriety for their rude and unconventional behavior.[35]Urmuz enrolled at theBucharest Medical School,allegedly after pressures from his stern father.[36]According to Ciprian, this training did not agree with his friend, who would complain of being "unable to make himself understood by the cadavers."[37]This was probably a sign that the young man could not bear to witnessdissection.[5]He eventually entered theUniversity of BucharestFaculty of Law, which was to be hisalma mater,[38]while also taking lectures in composition andcounterpointat theMusic and Declamation Conservatory.[32]Additionally, he completed his first service term in theRomanian Infantry.[32]

Urmuz became head of his family in 1907. That year, his father and two younger brothers died, and his sister Eliza was married.[32]He also continued to take the initiative in daring acts ofépater le bourgeois.Ciprian recalls the two of them renting a carriage which Urmuz would order around, making a right at every junction, and effectively going around in circles around thePalace of Justice.Urmuz then proceeded to pester the street vendors, stopping over to buy a random assortment of useless items:pretzels,a pile of charcoal, and an old hen which he impaled on his walking cane.[1][39]

Dobrujan career and military life

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Having passed his law examination in 1904, Urmuz was first appointed judge in the rural locality ofCocu (Răchițele),inArgeș County.[40]It is probable that at around this stage (ca. 1908), he was committing to paper the first fragments in his collectionBizarre Pages,some of which were reportedly written during a family reunion in Cocu.[41]According to Eliza Vorvoreanu, he was doing this mainly to entertain his mother and sisters,[42]but Urmuz also amused local potentates, one of whom even offered his daughter's hand in marriage (Urmuz refused).[43]At the time, Mitică also discovered his passion formodern art:he was an admirer ofprimitivistsculptorConstantin Brâncuși,fascinated by his 1907 workThe Wisdom of the Earth.[18]

Eventually, Urmuz was made ajustice of the peacein the remoteDobrujaregion: for a while, he was inCasimceavillage.[32][44]Later, he was dispatched closer to Bucharest, atGhergani,Dâmbovița County.[32]These assignments were interrupted in 1913, when Urmuz was called under arms, in theSecond Balkan WaragainstBulgaria.[43]

Ciprian mentions having lost touch with his friend "for a long time", before receiving a letter in which the latter complained about the provincial apathy and the lack of musical entertainment; attached was a draft of the "Algazy & Grummer" story, which Ciprian was supposed to read to the "seminary brethren", informing them "about the progresses registered in young literature".[45]Ciprian tells of having discovered the writer in Urmuz, and popularizing this and other stories in his own circle of intellectuals.[46]He also mentions that, in his budding acting career, he was basing some of his performances at Blanduzia Garden on Urmuz's letters.[47]

These developments coincided with the outbreak of World War I. Between 1914 and summer 1916, when Romania was still neutral territory, Ciprian's efforts of circulating theBizarre Pagesmay have reached a peak. Urmuz's texts were probably spread around in handwritten copies, becoming somewhat familiar to Bucharest'sbohemian society,but Urmuz himself was still an anonymous figure.[10][48]Both Ciprian and fellow actorGrigore Mărculescuare said to have given public readings from theBizarre PagesatCasa Capșarestaurant.[10][49]According to literary historianPaul Cernat,if rumors about Ciprian's early performances of Urmuz's texts are true, it would constitute one of the first samples ofavant-garde showsinRomanian theatrical tradition.[50]

Around 1916, Urmuz had obtained a relocation, as judge in the Muntenian town ofAlexandria.It was there that he met with poet and schoolteacherMihail Cruceanu,also on assignment. As Cruceanu later recalled, Urmuz was captivated by the artistic revolt carried out in Italy by theFuturistgroup, and in particular by the poetry of Futurist leaderFilippo Tommaso Marinetti.[51]According to literary historianTom Sandqvist,Urmuz may have first read about the Italian initiatives in the local newspaperDemocrația,which had covered them in early 1909.[52]As a result of this or another encounter, he decided to include, as a subtitle to one of his manuscripts, the words:Schițe și nuvele... aproape futuriste( "Sketchesand Novellas... almost Futuristic ").[53]

Having reached the rank of Lieutenant,[43]Demetrescu-Buzău was again called under arms when Romania joined theEntente Powers.In one account, he saw action against theCentral PowersinMoldavia,following the Army'snorthward retreat.[3]However, this is partly contradicted by his correspondence from Moldavia, which shows that his new office was as aquartermaster,and which records his frustration at not having been allowed to fight in the trenches.[5]According to another account, he was mostly bedridden withmalaria,and therefore unable to perform any military duty.[43]

Debut

[edit]

Urmuz was again in Bucharest, working asgrefier(registrar orcourt reporter) at theHigh Court of Cassation and Justice;sources disagree on whether this appointment dated from 1918 or earlier.[9][10][54][55][56]Reportedly, this was a well paid employment with special perks, which may have made Urmuz uncomfortable about his other life as a bohemian hero.[57]A photograph portrait taken in that period, one of the few to survive, was read as an additional clue that Urmuz had becomemelancholyand anxious.[58]Sandqvist also sees him as a "catastrophically lonely" andinsomniaccustomer of thebrothels,adding: "To all appearances as a result of disgusting experiences during the wars, returning home to Bucharest Demetru Demetrescu-Buzău chose to live an extremely ascetic and isolated life with long night walks."[59]Urmuz's feats and pranks were nonetheless attracting more public attention, and he himself allegedly read his work to a bohemian public, in places such asGabroveni Inn;at least some of these were free exercises inoral literature,and as such entirely lost.[9]

The year 1922 brought Urmuz's debut in print. Fascinated by the (then unnamed)Bizarre Pages,poet and journalistTudor Argheziincluded two of them inCuget Românescnewspaper. Arghezi reportedly made efforts to persuade his more serious fellow editors ofCuget,and possibly intended to undermine their attempt of putting out anewspaper of record.[9][60]The gazette had also published a manifesto by Arghezi, in which he had outlined the goal of combating "sterile literature", and his intention of cultivating the "will to power"in post-war literary culture.[9]Urmuz was thus the first avant-garde writer popularized by Arghezi, in a list which, by 1940, also came to include a large section of the younger Romanian modernists.[61]

Arghezi later wrote that his relationship with Urmuz was difficult, especially since thegrefierpanicked that the establishment would discover his other career: "he feared that the Cassation Court would better detect him asUrmuzthan under his own name ".[10]The memoirist refers to Demetrescu-Buzău's perfectionism and unease, enhanced in the week before publication: "He would wake up in the middle of the night and would send a very urgent letter, asking me if the comma after a 'that' should be moved before. I found him wandering around my house at night, shy, restless, fainthearted or in a hopeful trance, that something of substance may or may not be found in his prose, that perhaps there's an error, asking me to publish it, and then again to destroy it; to publish it together with a eulogistic note, and then again to curse him. He bribed [the printers] to change phrases and words that I had to put back into place, as previous editorial interventions were for sure better than his."[55][62]The letters they exchanged show that thegrefierwas not enthusiastic about even seeing his texts and his pseudonym in print, to which Arghezi was replying: "from among the few we'll be cooperating with, you were my first choice".[9]

By May 1922, Urmuz had grown more confident in his strength as a writer. He sent Arghezi a copy of the "Algazy & Grummer" story, which, he joked, needed to be published for "the nation's benefit".[9]He also proposed headlining it with the additional titleBizarre Pages.[9]The work was never published byCuget,probably because of a change in priorities: around that date, the paper hosted traditionalist editorials by culture criticNicolae Iorga,which were incompatible with Arghezi's fronde.[9]

Suicide

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On November 23, 1923, Urmuz shot himself, an event which remains shrouded in mystery. His death occurred in a public location, described as being close toKiseleff Roadin northern Bucharest.[9][63]Some early sources suggest that he may have been suffering from an incurable disease,[1][9][64]but he is also argued to have been fascinated with guns and their destructive potential. In 1914 for instance, he wrote down in his papers a homage to revolvers, crediting them with a magical power over the suicidal brain.[64][65]Reports also show that he was theorizing the purposelessness and hollowness of life, addressing his fears on the subject to family members during the funeral of his brother Constantin (also in 1914).[64]ResearcherGeo Șerbanwrote about Demetrescu-Buzău's well-hidden disappointment, assessing that, during his final year, the writer continued to act cheerful and relaxed, but that a "devastating" tension was building up inside him.[9]At around that time, Urmuz took his one real trip as an adult civilian, visiting theBudaki LagooninBessarabia.[5]

Writing in 1927, Arghezi publicized his regret at not having cultivated the friendship: "I never saw him again and I am weighed down by the irreparable grief of never seeking him out. I believe my optimism could have rekindled in his cerebral chaos those candid and pure things that were beginning to die."[9]Several Urmuz exegetes have traditionally seen the suicide intrinsically linked to Urmuz's artistic attitude. For scholar Carmen Blaga, it was the "dissolution of [his] faith" in Romania's intellectual class, along with economic decline and "an existential void", that prompted the writer to opt himself out.[66]This resonates with claims by the first-generation followers of Urmuz:Geo Bogzasuggests that his mentor killed himself once the deconstructive process, performed by his "sharp intellect", reached a natural conclusion;[67]Sașa Panăclaims that Urmuz was tired of merely amusing the "cretins" and "profiteers" who held sway over Bucharest's literary scene, and, determined to turn his literary persona into "stardust", took the risk of destroying his physical self.[68]Additionally, academicGeorge Călinescuargued that there was a philosophical rationale "very in tune with his century": "he wanted to die in some original way, 'without any cause'."[69]

Kept at the city morgue, the body was assigned to Urmuz's brother-in-law and fellow clerk C. Stoicescu, who stated that the writer had been suffering fromneurosis.[9][64]Urmuz was buried on November 26, in his family plot atBellu cemetery.[9]On the day, the event was publicized by a small obituary inDimineațadaily, signed with the initialC(presumably, for Ciprian).[70]Both this and other press notices failed to mention that thegrefierand the published author were one and the same, and the general public was for long unaware of any such connection.[9]Story goes that an anonymous woman visited the family shortly after the burial, inquiring as to whether the deceased had left any letters.[71]

In its manuscript form, Urmuz's definitive corpus of works covers only 40 pages, 50 at most.[18][72]Various other manuscripts survive, including diaries and hundreds ofaphorisms,but have for long been unknown to researchers.[19][73]

Urmuz's ideas and stylistic affinities

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The avant-garde herald vs. the conservative

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Shortly after his death, Urmuz's work was linked to the emergence of avant-garde rebellion throughout Europe, and in particular to the rise of Romania's own modernist scene: writing in 2007, Paul Cernat describes this version of events as a "founding myth"of Romanian avant-garde literature.[74]A literary critic and modernist enthusiast,Lucian Boz,assessed that Urmuz, likeArthur Rimbaudbefore him, embodied the "lyricalnihilism"of avant-garde currents.[75]In the 1960s, literary historianOvid Crohmălniceanuwrote of his being "the world's first pre-Dadaexercises ".[76]In 2002 however, scholar Adrian Lăcătuș revised this thesis, arguing that it had created a "blockage" in critical reception, and that the actual Urmuz had more complex views on the avant-garde.[19]Others have emphasized that Urmuz's unusual revolt ran contemporary with the revival of intense traditionalism of Romanian literature (theSămănătorulmoment), which would make his pre-Dada inspiration a moment of special significance.[77][78]

The contact withFuturism,although acknowledged by Urmuz, is judged by many of his commentators as superficial and delayed. Literary historianNicolae Balotăfirst proposed that the Romanian had merely wanted to show his sympathy for (and not a like-mindedness with) Futurism; that the works in question date back before theFuturist Manifesto,to theCocuperiod; and that theBizarre Pageshave more in common withExpressionismthan with Marinetti.[79]According to Cernat: "By the looks of it, [theBizarre Pages] were completed largely independent of influence from the European avant-garde movements [...]. We do not know, however, how many of these were already completed in 1909, the year when European Futurism was 'invented'. "[18]Emilia Drogoreanu, a researcher of Romanian Futurism, stresses: "The values and representations of [the] world celebrated through Futurism exist within the Urmuzian text, but are entirely uprooted from the significance offered them by [the Futurists]".[80]Although she finds various similarities between Urmuz and Marinetti, Carmen Blaga notes that the former's jadedness was no match for the latter's militancy.[81]

Various authors have also suggested that Urmuz was actually a radical conservative, whose vehemence against platitude in art only camouflaged a basic conventionalism. This perspective found its voice with Lăcătuș, who sees Urmuz as a conservative heretic, equally annoyed bybourgeoisandanti-bourgeoisdiscourses.[19]Writing in 1958, Ciprian also reflected on the possibility that Ciriviș was actually "teasing" the avant-garde tendencies emerging in his day, but concluded: "I would rather assume that under these various experiments was smoldering the lust for shaking the individual out of his skin, of tearing him away from himself, of disassembling him, of making him doubt the authenticity of accumulated knowledge."[82]He writes that Urmuz's work lashed out at "human nature in its most intimate creases."[83]Accordingly, some authors have even considered Urmuz the inheritor of late-19th-centuryDecadence[84]or of a maturedalexandrinepurity.[85]In other such readings, Urmuz appears to lend his backing to thesexist[86]orantisemitic[19]viewpoints of his contemporaries. Crohmălniceanu also writes: "the musings comprised in his manuscript notebooks [...] are restrained, flat, commonplace, as if the work of a different man."[62]

Much debate surrounds the issue of Urmuz's connection to anabsurdiststreak in earlierRomanian literatureandfolklore.In the 1940s,George Călinescudiscussed in detail an Urmuzian tradition, of as being characteristic for the literary culture of Romania's southern,Wallachian,cities. He noted that Urmuz was one of "the great grimacing sensitive" Wallachians, a "Balkan"succession which also includesHristache the Baker,Anton Pann,Ion Minulescu,Mateiu Caragiale,Ion Barbuand Arghezi.[87]In his definition, the source of Arghezi and Urmuz is in the folkloric tradition of self-parody,where thedoinasongs degenerate into spells or "grotesque whines".[88]The image of a folkloric Urmuz was soon after taken up by other critics, includingEugenio Coșeriuand Crohmălniceanu.[89]

The buffoon vs. the professional writer

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A section among Urmuz's commentators tends to classify him as a genial but superficial prankster, a buffoon rather than a serious author. Although sympathetic to Urmuz's work, George Călinescu called theBizarre Pages"an intelligent literary game" of "witty teenagers".[90]The goal, Călinescu suggested, was "purely epic", "seeming to tell a story without in fact recounting anything".[91]Another verdict of this kind belongs to aestheticianTudor Vianu,who also believed that Urmuz was a satirist ofautomatic behavior,and fundamentally a sarcastic realist.[91]More severe in tone,Pompiliu Constantinescuassessed that Urmuz was superficial, chaotic and amateurish, interesting to researchers only because of defying "the bourgeois platitude".[92]Contrarily, anotherinterwarexegete,Perpessicius,made ample efforts to rehabilitate Urmuz as a thoughtful literary figure with "great creative verve", on the same level as Arghezi and poetAdrian Maniu.[93]

Ciprian noted that Urmuz was unlike the "cheeky, daring, disorganized" pranksters whom he superficially resembled, that nothing in Urmuz's exterior gave the impression that he was in any way "spoiled".[94]Time, he suggests, did not alter Urumuz's "attitude on life": "Only now the about-turns were more daring and the tightrope acts was much more savvy."[95]In 1925, commenting on Urmuz's flair for depicting the "overall pointlessness of [human] existence", Ciprian also argued: "For the mediocre mindset, [Urmuz] may seem incoherent and unbalanced—which is why his work is not addressed to the masses."[96]Critic Adrian G. Romilă writes that the new "paradigm" in Urmuz's literary universe appears significant and laborious, but adds: "That which we do not know is if the writer [...] wasn't purely and simply playing around."[78]However,Ioana Pârvulescuassessed that Urmuz, an author of "extreme originality",[97]"put his own life into play and games [...] and that is why his work is more tragic than comedic or is nested in that no man's land where tragedy and comedy overlap."[22]

Crohmălniceanu sees in theBizarre Pagesindication of a "singular" and tragic experience,[98]whileGeo Șerbanargues that Urmuz's "verve" comes from destructive pressures on his own psychology.[9]Reviewer Simona Vasilache also suggests that theBizarre Pageshide a "long digested" rage, with serious and even dramatic undertones.[65]Other essayists have spoken about Urmuz's "cruelty" in depicting anguishing situations, in criticizing social life and in using language stripped of itsmetaphors;they call him "one of the cruelest authors I ever did read" (Eugène Ionesco) and "cruel in a primitive sense" (Irina Ungureanu).[67]As Ciprian reports, Urmuz was also self-deprecatory, amused by the others' attention, and claiming that his ownelucubrații( "phantasmagorias" ) could only still be used to "trip the seminary brethren".[99]One of his aphorisms hints to his internal drama and its role in creation: "There are cases when God can only help you by giving you more and more suffering."[5]

Kafka, Jarry and "antiliterature"

[edit]

Among those who describe Urmuz as more of an individual rebel than an avant-garde hero, several have come to regard him as the Romanian parallel of solitary intellectuals who likewise made an impact on20th-century literature.In the decades after his death, Romanian reviewers started comparing him toCzechoslovakia'sFranz Kafka,a parallel which was still being supported in the 21st century.[9][19][55][78][97][100]According to Romilă, Urmuzian andKafkaesqueliterature are both aboutdehumanization,in Urmuz's case with a predilection for mechanical oddities which colonize and modify human existence.[78]Other frequent analogies rank Urmuz together withAlfred Jarry,the French proto-Dadaist and inventor of'Pataphysics.[9][55][101][102]He was also described as an equivalent of Anglophone nonsense writers (Edward Lear,Lewis Carroll).[10][103][104]Elsewhere, he is paralleled with Russia'sDaniil Kharms,[105]or modernistPolesfromBruno Schulz[106]toStanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz.[107]Those who speak about his fundamental conservatism or his humorist's talent have also likened Urmuz and theBizarre PagestoGustave Flaubertand his sarcasticDictionary of Received Ideas.[19][108]At the other end, those who focus on Urmuz's bizarre and sad metamorphoses have paralleled his work toTim Burton'sOyster Boystories.[109]

A major disagreement among critics relates to Urmuz's ambiguous positioning, between literature,antiliteratureandmetafiction.In reference to theBizarre Pages,Crohmălniceanu introduced the term "antiprose".[110]In Crohmălniceanu's view, the antiliterary "device" Urmuz invented is impersonal and regulated, in the manner of Dada "readymades",but as such ingenious and therefore inimitable.[111]Authors such asAdrian Marino,Eugen Negrici,Lucian RaicuandMircea Scarlathave spoken about Urmuz as a revolutionist of language, who liberated texts from coherence and evensemantics;whereas others—Livius Ciocârlie,Radu Petrescu,Ion Pop,Nicolae Manolescu,Marin Mincu,Mihai Zamfir—have regarded him as mainly a textualist, interested in reusing and redefining the limits of poetry or narration, but creating a coherent, if personal, universe.[112]According to Vasile Andru, Urmuzian literature is by definition open to all these associations, its antiliterary aspects illustrating the modern gap between "nature and nurture".[5]Critic C. Trandafir, who sees Urmuz's apparent textualism as canceled out by deeper meanings in his prose, writes: "The man who wrote the 'bizarre pages' had a clear critical awareness of the transformations needed within literary discourse."[55]

Esoteric layers

[edit]

AsVasile Voiculescurecalls, Urmuz had been genuinely "tormented bymetaphysicalmatters ".[28]Some of Urmuz's commentators therefore discussed him as a reader of theunconscious mindor propagator ofesotericknowledge, suggesting that a hidden layer of mystical symbolism can be discerned in all his activities. According to Perpessicius, theBizarre Pagesas a whole carry asubtextofmythopoeia,or "fragments of a newmythology".[113]Boz also drew a comparison between Urmuz and the morose poems ofGeorge Bacovia,arguing that they both send the reader on "tragic explorations" and "journeys to the underworld".[114]In Boz's interpretation, Urmuz was not at all a humorist, but rather one who issued a solitary "call to order" and, creating a "magical phenomenon", elevated his reader above the realities of the flesh.[115]He first discussed the connection between theBizarre Pagesand 1930sSurrealism,which likewise turned its attention to theabnormal psychology,to "psychosis"and"dementia".[116]The theoretical proto-Surrealism of such works, which places less importance on their topical humor, has generated a long debate between scholars later in the 20th century: some have denied Urmuzian Surrealism, whereas others have continued to identify him as the earliest Romanian Surrealist.[117]

Simona Popescu,the poet-essayist, presumes that Urmuz's inner motivation was his "psycho-mania", which holds no respect for either convention or posterity, but only for committing one's own "abyssal obsessions" to paper: "death,the Eros,creation, and destruction. "[72]Adrian Lăcătuș also makes note of Urmuz's ambiguous allusions toautoeroticism,incest,bisexualityorparaphilia.[19]Additionally, various commentators suggest that Urmuz's creative spark hides an unresolved conflict with his father. According to Cernat, Urmuz was in conflict with "paternal authority" and more attached to his mother, an "Oedipus complex"also found in some other literary figures of the pre-modernist generation.[118]Others too see in Ciriviș's pranks a planned revenge against parental and social pressures.[67][119]His sister Eliza credited such accounts, by noting: "You can tell he failed in life because he obeyed his parents blindly, and perhaps also in part due to his lack of will, his shyness, his fear of the public."[5]

Urmuz the aphorist genuinely trusted that the "Soul" of the world was aunity of opposites,and, inspired by the philosophy ofHenri Bergson,also spoke of a "universal vital flux".[120]Lăcătuș and others suggest that Urmuz's worldview is the modern correspondent ofGnosticismandManichaeism:in one of the manuscripts he left behind, Urmuz speculates about there being two Gods, one good and one evil.[19]A distinct, and disputed,[121]interpretation was put forth by researcher Radu Cernătescu, who believes that Urmuz's life and work reflected the doctrine ofFreemasonry.Cernătescu reads indications of Masonic "awakening" throughout Urmuz's stories, and notes that thepahucibrotherhood was probably the junior or parody version of a RomanianMasonic Lodge.[1]

Works

[edit]

Early prose

[edit]

Definitions vary in respect to the exact nature and species of Urmuz'sexperimentalworks, which are prose-like in content. Ciprian simply assessed that Urmuz's pieces "do not belong to any literary genre."[83]In line with his comments about the mythological layer of Urmuz's work, Perpessicius suggested that Urmuz created "newfairy tales"and"fantasysketches ".[122]This intuition was given endorsement by other scholars, who included theBizarre Pagesin anthologies of Romanian fantasy literature.[123]Contrarily, Boz found that Urmuz was "the poet of transcendental absurdity", "the reformer of Romanian poetry", and the counterpart of Romania'snational poet,Mihai Eminescu.[124]The Eminescu-Urmuz comparison, which put aside all their differences in style and vision, was a favorite of avant-garde authors, and, late in the century, served to inspire sympathetic academics such asMarin Mincu.[125]

According to Ciprian, one of Urmuz's earliest prose fragments was composed, with "The Chroniclers", duringpahuciescapades. Its opening words, Ciprian recalls, were: "The deputy arrived in a brick and tile cart. He was bringing no news, but offered his friends, upon arrival, a fewLeclanchébatteries ".[126]The same author suggests that these drafts were much inferior to Urmuz's published works, beginning with "Algazy & Grummer".[127]

In its definitive version, the Algazy piece offers a glimpse into the strange life andcannibalisticdeath of its storekeeper characters: Algazy, "a nice old man" with his beard "neatly laid out on a grill [...] surrounded by barbed wire", "does not speak anyEuropean languages"and feeds on municipal waste; Grummer, who has" abilious temper"and" a beak of aromatic wood ", spends most time lying under the counter, but sometimes assaults customers in the middle of conversations about sports or literature. When Algazy discovers that his associate has digested, without giving a thought to sharing," all that was good in literature ", he takes his revenge by consuming Grummer's rubbery bladder. A race begins as to who can eat the other first. Their few remains are later discovered by the authorities, and one of Algazy's many wives sweeps them up into oblivion.[128]A different, early variant is quoted "from memory" and commented in Ciprian. In this account, Algazy the storekeeper is persuaded by his domineering wife to make their only son a magistrate. Grummer prepares the boy for his unexpectednovitiate,strapping him down to the floor of a cave that must have the scent ofcolts.[129]

From its very title, "Algazy & Grummer" references a defunct firm of suitcase manufacturers. Urmuz's own note to the text apologizes for this, explaining that the names' "musicality" is more suited to the two fictional characters than to their real-life models, and suggesting that the company should change name (or that its patrons must adapt their physical shape accordingly).[130][131][132]The narrative may hint to the everyday tensions between these entrepreneurs, and perhaps to the boredom of a career in sales;[132]according to philologist Simona Constantinovici, it is also the confrontation of an entrepreneurialTurk(Algazy) and an intellectualJew(Grummer), represented as a fight between theostrichand theplatypus.[133]Beyond the mundane pretext, the story was often described as Urmuz's manifesto against anyliterary technique,[65][132][133][134][135]and even a witty meditation on thesignified and signifier.[5][104][130][136]Carmen Blaga further proposes that Urmuz philosophic intent is to show the gap between universe, in which all things are possible and random, and man, who demands familiarity and structure.[137]

"Ismaïl and Turnavitu"

[edit]
Lipscanishops around 1900. Photograph by Alexandru Antoniu

In "Ismaïl and Turnavitu", Urmuz further explores the bizarre in its everyday settings. This was noted by Ciprian: "[Urmuz] waged war on nature, he created besides nature and against its laws. He was a solitary summit defying heaven and asking: That's all? [...] Always the same slopes? the samecompasses?the same people? the same beards? "[138]The result, Sandqvist writes, is "breakneck, absurd, and inordinately grotesque."[139]Călinescu singled out the work: "The best of his absurd pieces is 'Ismaïl and Turnavitu', the solemnly academic portraiture and parody of bourgeois mannerisms, where there's always a confusion being made between the three kingdoms, the animal, the vegetal and the mineral".[69]

Ismaïl "is made up of eyes, sideburns, and a dress", tied with rope to a badger and stumbling down Arionoaia Street. Protected from "legal responsibility" in the country ( "a seed-bed at the bottom of a hole inDobruja"), the creature raises an entire badger colony: some he eats raw, with lemon; the others, once they have turned sixteen, he rapes" without the smallest qualm of conscience. "The seed-bed is where Ismaïl also interviews job applicants, received on the condition that they hatch him" four eggs each ". The process is supported by his"chamberlain"Turnavitu, who exchanges love letters with the applicants. Ismaïl's actual residence is kept a secret, but it is presumed that he lives, sequestered from" the corruption of electoral mores ", in an attic above the home of his grotesquely disfigured father, only to emerge in aball gownfor the yearly celebration ofplaster.He then offers his body to the workers, in hopes of thus resolving "the labor issue". Whereas Ismaïl has once worked as an air fan for "dirtyGreekcoffee houses "in theLipscaniquarter, Turnavitu has a past in "politics": he was for long the government-appointed air fan at the fire precinct kitchen. Ismaïl has spared Turnavitu a life of near constant rotation, remunerating his services: the seed-bed interviews, the ritualized apologizes to the leashed badgers, the praise of Ismaïl's fashion sense, and the swabbing ofcanolaover Ismaïl's gowns. Their relationship breaks down as Turnavitu, returning from theBalearic Islandsin the form of ajerrycan,passes thecommon coldto Ismaïl's badgers. Sacked from his job, he contemplates suicide ( "not before seeing to the extraction of fourcaninesin his mouth "), and hurls himself into a pyre made up of Ismaïl's dresses; the patron falls into depression and" decrepitude ", retreating to his seed-bed for the rest of his own life.[140]

Like "Algazy & Grummer", "Ismaïl and Turnavitu" probably has a skeletal structure borrowed from real life: Turnavitu was a distinguished clan within Bucharest's Greek nobility, tracing its origin back to thePhanarioteera.[141]The semi-fictional world is populated by other symbols of Romania's connection to the Orient, that are meant to evoke "the banality of a distinctively Balkan scenery" (Carmen Blaga).[142]Other interpretations have seen in the two protagonists caricatures of political corruption andparvenumorals.[10]

"The Funnel and Stamate"

[edit]

"The Funnel and Stamate" insists on the geographical setting of Urmuzian misadventures. Stamate's townhouse is a haven for objects or beings, their presence inventoried over several rooms. Only accessible through a tube, the windowless first room holds together a sample of thething-in-itself,the statue of aTransylvanianpriest and grammarian, and two humans always "in the process ofdescending from the ape".The second room, decorated in"Turkish style"and" eastern luxury ", is painted once a day and carefully measured, by compass, to prevent shrinkage. A third section, under the" Turkish "room, houses a limitless canal, a tiny room and a stake" to which the entire Stamate family is tethered. "The" dignified "and"elliptical"head of the clan spits chewed-upcelluloidon his fat boy Bufty, who "pretends not to notice". For relaxation, the Stamates contemplateNirvana,located over the canal and "in the same precinct" as them. Old Stamate's musings are interrupted by the provocative intrusion of asiren,who lures him into the deep by presenting him with "an innocent and too decent looking funnel." Stamate returns "a better and more tolerant man", deciding to use the funnel for both the pleasures of sex and those of science. Neglecting his family duties, he goes on nightly expeditions into the funnel, until he discovers in horror that Bufty uses the funnel for a similar purpose. Stamate then decides to part with his wife (sewing her in a bag, to "preserve the cultural traditions of his family" ) and with Bufty: trapped in the funnel, the boy is sent over to Nirvana, where Stamate makes sure he becomes a "bureau sub-chief". Stamate is left alone to contemplate his plight, wandering to and fro at great speed, and submerging "into micro-infinity."[143]

As an early supporter of Urmuz, Ciprian spoke of "The Funnel and Stamate" as "without parallel" in its satire of family life, suggesting that the scene were all the Stamates are tied to a single stake is "more evocative than hundreds of pages from a novel"[144](part of the story has also been read as a sexist joke on fashionableandrogyny,since Stamate has a "tonsured and legitimate wife" ).[86]Urmuz's original version in fact carries the subtitle "A Four-Part Novel", in which Paul Cernat reads the intention of parodying the staple genres of traditional literature;[145]according to Ioana Pârvulescu, the definition needs to be taken seriously, and makes the text ( "perhaps the shortest [novel] inEuropean literature") a" microscopic "Romanian equivalent of modernist works byJames Joyce.[97]Linguist Anca Davidoiu-Roman notes: "Urmuz'santinovel[...] apparently preserves the structures of the novelistic genre, but undermines them from the inside, cultivating the absurd, the black humor, [...] the nonsensical and thezeugma."[146]The core theme is believed to be sexual: a paraphrase ofRomeo and Juliet,with Stamate as the ridiculously abstract thinker falling for the debased stand-in offemininity;[97]or even the detailed creation of "an aberrant mechanism for erotic gratification."[78]Stamate himself is also described as standing in for "the unimaginative bourgeois".[10]

"The Fuchsiad"

[edit]
Photograph of Theodor Fuchs, ca. 1900

Another one of Urmuz's prose creations is "The Fuchsiad", subtitled "An Heroic-Erotic Musical Poem in Prose". Among the scholars,Perpessiciuswas first to argue that the subtext here is a direct reference toGreek mythologyandNorse paganism,re-contextualized "with the sadistic pleasure of children who take apart their dolls".[9][147]The protagonist Fuchs is an eminently musical creature, who came into the world not out of his mother's womb, but through his grandmother's ear. At the conservatory, he turns into "the perfectchord",but out of modesty spends most of his education hiding at the bottom of a piano. Puberty comes and he grows" some kind of genitalia "—in fact a"fig leaf"which keeps rejuvenating. The actual story begins on the one night Fuchs spends in the open air: under the spell of its mysteries, the composer finds his way into Traian Street (Bucharest'sred-light district).

There, a group of "vestals"whisks him away, praying to be shown the beauty of" immaterial love "and begging him to play asonata.His music is overheard by the goddessVenus.Instantly "defeated by passion", she asks Fuchs to join her onMount Olympus.The act of lovemaking between clueless, overanxious Fuchs and the giant goddess is compromised when Fuchs decides to enter his whole body into Venus' ear. The embarrassed and angered audience humiliates the guest and banishes him tothe planet Venus;mercifulAthenaallows him to return home, but on condition he does not reproduce. However, Fuchs still decides to spend some of his time practicing his lovemaking on Traian Street, hoping that Venus will grant him a second chance, and believing that he and the goddess could breed a race ofSupermen.In the end, the prostitutes also reject his advances, deeming him a "dirtysatyr",no longer capable of immaterial love. The story ends with Fuchs' flight into" boundless nature ", whence his music" has been beaming away with equal force in all directions ", fulfilling his destiny as an enemy of inferior art.[148]

Urmuz's story has been variously described as his praise ofartistic freedom,[10]and more precisely as an ironic take on his own biography as a failed musician.[72][149]On a more transparent level, it references classical composerTheodor Fuchs[ro],depicted by posterity as a "puberal" and "clumsy" man, and known as a disgraced favorite ofRomanian Queen-ConsortElisabeth of Wied.[150]"The Fuchsiad" may also containintertextualnods toA Midsummer Night's Dream.[72]

"Emil Gayk" and "Going Abroad"

[edit]

The "Emil Gayk" sketch was the only one which is precisely dated to the early stages of World War I, focusing its satire on the debates of neutralists and interventionists.[151]Gayk, the ever-vigilant, gun-toting, bird-like civilian, who sleeps in histailcoatbut otherwise wears only afestooneddrape, swims about in just one direction ( "for fear of coming out of his neutrality" ) and gets inspired by the military muses. His career is in foreign relations, which he revolutionizes with such novel ideas as the negotiated annexation of aunidimensional,arrow-like, territory atNăsăud—pointed towardLuxembourg,in memory of the1914 invasion.Gayk has an adoptive daughter, educated on his behalf by waiters, who makes her home in the fields and eventually demands access to the sea. Angered by this claim, Gayk begins a large-scale war against her; the conflict ends in a stalemate, as Gayk can no longer accessorize his marshal's uniform, and the girl has lost her supplies of gasoline and beans. The father is placated with regular gifts offeed grain,whereas the daughter is allowed a two-centimeter-wide littoral.[152]

In its subtext, "Emil Gayk" teases theirredentistambitions of the interventionist camp, in respect toTransylvaniaprovince. Urmuz quotes a humorous slogan, circulated as a lampoon of nationalist attitudes: "Transylvania without the Transylvanians". This probably references the fact that, although Romanian by culture or ethnicity, many Transylvanian intellectuals were primarily the loyal subjects of theHabsburg monarchy.[153]According to Crohmălniceanu, the actual purpose is to overturn "ossified" constructs, as in the case of territorial demands which cover no real surface.[154]Similarly, Șerban speaks about "Emil Gayk" as a piece in which magnified "paltry aspects" and "anomalies" are supposed to send the reader into a "state of vigil".[9]

The plot of "Going Abroad" depicts someone's convoluted attempt to leave the country for good. The unnamed seven-year-old "he" in the story settles his scores with the assistance of "two old ducks" and embarks for the voyage, only to be pulled back in by "paternal feelings"; he consequently isolates himself in a tiny room, where he converts to Judaism, punishes his servants, celebrates hisSilver Jubilee,and rethinks his escape. His wife, jealous of his contacts with a seal, decides against it, but offers him various parting gifts:flatbread,akite,and a sketchbook by art teacher Borgovanu. This results in a quarrel, and the protagonist finds himself tied by the cheekbones, "delivered unceremoniously on dry land." For a third attempt at leaving, the husband relinquishes wealth and titles, strips down and, bound with a bark rope, gallops to another town, joining thebar association.[155]The story ends with a rhyming "moral":

"Going Abroad" is possibly about Urmuz's own difficulties in deciding his own fate, transposed into a faux sample oftravel literature,an example of what Balotă calls the failedhomo viator( "human pilgrim" ) in Urmuz.[54]

Unclassified prose

[edit]

Two samples of Urmuz's prose have been traditionally seen as his secondary, less relevant, contributions. These are "After the Storm" and the posthumous "A Little Metaphysics and Astronomy".[65]In the former, an unnamed cavalier makes his way into a grim monastery, his heart moved at the sight of a pious hen; the repentant man then finds "ecstasy" in nature, leaping through the trees or releasing captive flies. Agents of therevenue servicemake efforts to confiscate his tree, but the protagonist is still able to squat on one of the branches after he gives proof ofnaturalization,and then—swimming his way through an "infected pond" —shames his adversaries into giving up their claim. Born-again as a cynic, strengthened by his affair with the hen, he heads back to his "native village" to train folks in the "art ofmidwifery."[158]According to critics, "After the Storm" should be seen as a caricature of minorRomanticism,of conventional fantasy, or of travel literature.[65][159]Simona Vasilache likens it to "anOdysseycovering some twenty lines "," a misalliance of heroism and pilferage "with echoes from Urmuz's heroIon Luca Caragiale.[160]

"A Little Metaphysics and Astronomy", which is structured like a treatise, opens with a pun on thecreation narrative,postulating that God createdfingerspellingbefore "the Word", and venturing to suggest that "the heavenly bodies", like abandoned children, are in fact nobody's creation, that their spin is really a form ofattention seeking.Here, Urmuz questions the possibility of a single cause in the universe, since God's interest is in unnecessary duplications or multitudes in stars, men and fish species.[161]Beyond the jokes on scientific pretense, Vasilache reads "A Little Metaphysics..." as a clue to Urmuz's own disillusioned worldview, which she traces back to the suicidal warnings in Urmuz's notebooks. She argues that such a melancholy and lonely diarist is in contrast with Urmuz's literary persona, as known from theBizarre Pages.[65]Likewise, Carmen Blaga describes the text as a sober meditation on "the tragic sense of history" and "the fall intotemporality".[162]

Among the last Urmuzian works to be discovered is "Cotadi and Dragomir". The first in the duo is a muscular but short and insect-like merchant, who wears dandruff,tortoiseshellcombs, alatharmor which greatly hiders his movements, and a piano lid screwed to his buttocks. The descendant ofMacedoniannobility, Cotadi feeds on ant eggs and excretessoda water,except when he corks himself to solve the "agrarian question".For fun, he lures his clients into angry conversations—these end with him banging the piano lid, which is also a urinating wall, on the shop's floor. Dragomir is long, crooked, brownish and kind-hearted; he intervenes in the disputes between Cotadi and the more stubborn customers, imposing respect with his main prop: a cardboard contraption that extends upwards from his neck. Cotadi rewards such attentions with servings of octopus,sorb-pearsand paint, granting Dragomir the right to nest inside his gate wall. They plan to be buried together, "in the same hole", with French oil as a daily supply. From such an oily grave, Cotadi hopes, an olive tree plantation may spring up, to benefit of his descendants.[163]Like "Algazy & Grummer", "Cotadi and Dragomir" can be read as alluding to the triteness of business life.[10]

"The Chroniclers"

[edit]

Written in the manner offables,but lacking any directly interpretable message, Urmuz's "The Chroniclers" referencedAristotle,Galileo Galileiand the turn-of-the-centuryBalkaninsurgentBoris Sarafov(Sarafoff). Its opening lines suggest that the eponymous chroniclers, for lack of baggy pants, approach someone with the surname "Rapaport"and demand to be issued passports.[164]The lyrical convention breaks down toward the end, which states:

Ciprian simply discussed the piece as "Urmuz's idiotic lyrics",[47]while Călinescu found it a "pure fable, on the classical canon, but nonsensical".[167]Cernat also described its "moral" as "empty" and "tautological",[168]but other critics see a hidden layer of meaning in the seemingly random cultural imagery.Ion Pop,commenting on Urmuz'shypertextuality,assumes that the "pelican and pouchbill" motif comes from a book once used as teaching aid.[169]He also suggests that the passion and hunger which ties together the various characters is in fact the thirst for freedom, for movement and for exotic settings: "Rapaport" is theWandering Jew,Aristotle is the mentor ofa great conqueror,and Galilei is invoked for his remark "And yet it moves".[54]The mention of "Sarafoff" has been read as an indirect homage to Caragiale—whose humorous sketches helped give Sarafov a Romanian fame.[54][170][171]

Legacy

[edit]
Urmuz and a copy of his writing on a 2018 postage stamp and label of Romania

Contimporanulcircle

[edit]

Paul Cernat notes that the Ciriviș's "posthumous destiny", leading to an unexpected glorification, was itself an "Urmuzian" affair.[18]Cernat also cautions that the image of Urmuz as an absolute predecessor of Romanian modernism is "erroneous", since the experiments of Jarry,Charles Cros,Jules Laforgue,Edward Learand others were just as important in its formative process.[172]He concludes that the avant-garde "apologetes" were projecting their own expectations into theBizarre Pages,in which they read the antithesis of "High Romanticism", and into the writer, who became Romanian version of apoète maudit.[173]Ion Pop also suggests: "In [Urmuz's] human destiny, and in his writing too, [the avant-garde writers] find issues which trouble them as well in prefiguring their own destinies. He satisfies the pride of those who carry on with an uncertain and anxious existence, endlessly in conflict with the world..."[8]According to Andru: "Enthusiastic, ingenious, skeptical, rhetorical, or indecent words have been uttered about [theBizarre Pages]. People used terms having to do with the literary revolutions of the 20th century [...]. In his pages people found themes present in all the innovating actions that gained momentum especially since 1922–1924 ".[5]

Cernat describes the growth of Urmuz's myth as similar toEarly Christianity:Ciprian as a "prophet", Arghezi as a "baptist", the modernist aficionados as "apostles" and "converts".[174]Over time, various exegetes have noted that the modernist aspects of Arghezi's prose, written after 1923, show his debt to Urmuz's absurdism andnonsense humor.[9][175]Arghezi'sBilete de Papagalreview was also a promotional instrument for theBizarre Pages:in 1928, continuing theCuget Românescproject, it circulated "Algazy & Grummer".[9][55][76][132]

While his role as a pre-Dadaist is up for debate, Urmuz is thought by many to have been a considerable influence on a Romanian founder of Dada,Tristan Tzara.[170][176][177]During its first years, the Romanian avant-garde would generally not mention Urmuz outside Arghezi's circle, but a surge in popularity came in stages after the European-wide impact of Dadaism, and especially after Tzara alienated some of his Romanian partners. This was the case of poetIon Vineaand painterMarcel Janco,who together founded a modernist art magazine calledContimporanul.Late in 1924,Contimporanulteamed up with Ciprian, who gave a public reading from Urmuz during theContimporanulInternational Art Exhibit.[178]

The following year, Ciprian's eponymous text "Hurmuz", published inContimporanul,listed the main claims about Urmuz's pioneering role.[179]Also then, the Futurist journalPunct,a close ally of Vinea and Janco, gave exposure to various unknown Urmuzian pages.[9][180]In December 1926, aContimporanuleditorial signed by Vinea announced to the world that Urmuz was "the discreet revolutionist" responsible for the reshaping of Europe's literary landscape: "Urmuz-Dada-Surrealism, these three words create a bridge, decipher a parentage, clarify the origins of the world's literary revolution in the year 1918."[181]In its coverage of the international scene, the journal continued to suggest that the suicidal author had anticipated the literary fronde, for instance callingMichel Seuphora writer "à la Urmuz".[182]In addition to republishing some of theBizarre Pagesin its own issues, it took the initiative in making Urmuz known to an international audience: the Berlin-based magazineDer Sturmincluded samples from Urmuz in its special issue Romania (August–September 1930), reflecting aContimporanulwho's who list.[183]At around the same time, poetJenő Dsidacompleted the integral translation of theBizarre PagesintoHungarian.[184]

In hisContimporanulstage, Janco drew a notorious ink portrait of Urmuz.[185]In old age, the same artist completed several cycle of engravings and paintings that alluded to theBizarre Pages.[186]Vinea's own prose of the 1920s was borrowing from Urmuz's style, which it merged with newer techniques from the avant-garde groups of Europe.[9][187]He followed Urmuz's deceptive "novel" genre of "The Funnel and Stamate", which also became a characteristic of works by otherContimporanulwriters:Felix Aderca,F. Brunea-Fox,Filip Corsa,Sergiu DanandRomulus Dianu.[188]In addition,Jacques G. Costin,who moved betweenContimporanuland the international Dada scene, was for long thought an imitator of Urmuz's style.[189][190]Several critics have nevertheless revised this verdict, noting that Costin's work builds on distinct sources, Urmuz being just one.[191]

unuand the 1930s literati

[edit]

Another stream of Urmuzianism bled into the Surrealist magazineunu.Its main contributors, including Pană,Geo Bogza,Ilarie Voronca,Ion Călugăru,MoldovandStephan Roll,were all Urmuz enthusiasts from the far left.[192]In 1930, Pană collected and published as a volume the complete works of Urmuz: titledAlgazy & Grummer,it notably included "The Fuchsiad".[55][193]Pană and Bogza visited the unpublished archive, which gave them a chance to acknowledge, but also to silence, the more conventional and antisemitic Urmuz revealed through the aphorisms.[19]These manuscripts were kept in possession by the Pană family, and exhibited in 2009.[67]

Bogza was previously editor of a short-lived magazine namedUrmuz,published inCâmpinawith support from poetAlexandru Tudor-Miu,and keeping contact with other Urmuzian circles: it was saluted by Arghezi and published a drawing portrait of Urmuz (probably Marcel Janco's).[28]Bogza's first editorial piece proclaimed: "Urmuz lives. His presence among us whips to lash our consciousness."[2][55][177]Later, inunu's inauguralart manifesto,Bogza described his suicidal mentor as "The Forerunner".[194]Others in this group incorporated "Urmuzian" metamorphoses into their technique and, at that stage, theBizarre Pageswere also imitated in style by Pană's sister, Magdalena "Madda Holda" Binder,[28]influencing stories by Pană's young followerSesto Pals[195]and novels by the isolated SurrealistH. Bonciu.[196]In the mid-1930s,unuillustratorJules Perahimdrew his own version of Urmuz's portrait.[197]

After theContimporanulgroup split and a young generation reassimilated modernism into a spiritualistic framework (Trăirism), criticLucian Bozwas the first professional to find no fault with theBizarre Pages,and made Urmuz interesting for mainstream and elitist criticism.[198]Between theunuSurrealists and Boz's version of modernism were figures such asIon Biberi(who popularized Urmuz in France)[199]andMarcel Avramescu.Avramescu (better known then asIonathan X. Uranus) was notably inspired by Urmuz's pre-Dadaist prose, which he sometimes imitated.[9][200][201][202]Other authors in this succession wereGrigore "Apunake" Cugler,widely credited as a 1930s Urmuz,[9][202][203]andConstantin Fântâneru.[204]The early 1930s also brought the publication of several new works of memoirs mentioning Demetrescu-Buzău, including texts by Cruceanu andVasile Voiculescu—the latter was also the first to mention Urmuz onRomanian Radio(January 1932);[205]another such Radio homage was later authored by Pană.[197]

The channels of communication once opened, Urmuz came to be discussed with unexpected sympathy by Perpessicius, Călinescu and other noted cultural critics, consolidating his reputation as a writer.[206]Călinescu's attitude was particularly relevant: the condescending but popularizing portrayal of Urmuz, which became part of Călinescu's 1941 companion to Romanian literature (Urmuz's earliest mention in such a synthesis), was first sketched in his literary magazineCapricorn(December 1930) and his 1938 university lectures.[207]Although he confessed an inability to view Demetrescu-Buzău as a real writer, Călinescu preferred him over traditionalism, and, critics note, even allowed theBizarre Pagesto influence his own work as novelist.[208]Meanwhile, a blunt negation of Urmuz's contribution was restated by the academic figurePompiliu Constantinescu,who nevertheless commented favorably on the writer's "ingeniousness".[209]Eugen Lovinescu,another mainstream literary theorist, angered the avant-garde by generally ignoring Urmuz, but made note of Ciprian's readings "from Hurmuz's repertoire" at theSburătorulliterary sessions.[210]

Urmuz may have acted as a direct or indirect influence of mainstream authors of fiction, one case being that of satiristTudor Mușatescu.[211]Similar observations were made regarding the work of modern novelistsAnișoara Odeanu[212]orAnton Holban.[213]

The Drake's Head

[edit]

By the late 1930s, Ciprian had also established himself as a leading modernist dramatist and director, with plays such asThe Man and His Mule.Although his work in the field is described as the product of 1920sExpressionist theater,[214]he was sometimes branded aplagiaristof his dead friend's writings. This claim was traced back to Arghezi, and was probably apublicity stuntmeant to increase Urmuz's exposure,[215]but taken with seriousness by another opinion maker, journalistConstantin Beldie.[216]The ensuing scandal was amplified by the young Dadaists and Surrealists, who took the rumor to be true: Avramescu-Uranus, himself accused of plagiarizing Urmuz, made an ironic reference to this fact in a 1929 contribution toBilete de Papagal.[201][217]Unwittingly, Arghezi's allegations cast a shadow of doubt on Ciprian's overall work for the stage.[1]

The Drake's Head[218]was Ciprian's personal homage to thepahuci:it shows a grown-up Ciriviș, the main protagonist, returning from a trip abroad and reuniting with his cronies during an overnight party. TheDrake's Headbrotherhood spends the small hours of the morning bullying passers-by, chasing them "like birds of prey" and pestering them with absurd proposals. Quite jaded and interested in wrecking the very "pillars of logic", Ciriviș convinces his friends to follow him on a more daring stunt: trespassing private property, they take over an apple tree and treat it as a new home. Claiming that land ownership only covers the actual horizontal plane, they even strike out an agreement with the stupefied owner. Nevertheless, a pompous and indignant "Bearded Gentleman" takes up the cause of propriety and incites theRomanian Policeto intervene. The play premiered in early 1940. The original cast includedNicolae Băltățeanuas Ciriviș andIon Finteșteanuas Macferlan, with additional appearances byIon Manu,Eugenia Popovici,Chiril Economu.[219]

Cernat seesThe Drake's Headas a sample of Urmuzian mythology: "Ciriviș [...] is shown as a quasi-mythological figure, the Boss of a parodic-subversive fellowship which seeks to rehabilitate a poetic, innocent, apparently absurd freedom".[70]According to Cernat, it remains Ciprian's only truly "nonconformist" play, particularly since it is indebted to "the absurd Urmuzian comedy".[220]Some have identified the "Bearded Gentleman" asNicolae Iorga,the traditionalist culture critic—the claim was later dismissed as mere "innuendo" by Ciprian, who explained that his creation stood for all "demagogue"politicians of the day.[221]

Communist ban and diaspora recovery

[edit]

Upon the end of World War II, Romania came undercommunist rule,and a purge of interwar modernist values followed: Urmuz's works were among the many denied imprimatur by the 1950s. Beforecommunist censorshipbecame complete, Urmuz still found disciples in the last wave of the avant-garde. Cited examples includeGeo Dumitrescu,[222]Dimitrie Stelaru[223]andConstant Tonegaru.[224]Also at the time, writerDinu Pillatdonated a batch of Urmuz's manuscripts to theRomanian Academy Library.[225]

The anti-Urmuzian current, part of a largeranti-modernist campaign,found an unexpected backer in George Călinescu, who became afellow travelerof communism. In his new interpretation, theBizarre Pageswere depicted as farcical and entirely worthless.[226]For a while, theBizarre Pageswere only cultivated by theRomanian diaspora.Having discovered the book in interwar Romania, the dramatist and culture criticEugène Ionescomade it his mission to highlight the connections between Urmuz and European modernism. Ionesco's work for the stage, a major contribution to the internationalTheater of the Absurdmovement, consciously drew upon various sources, including the RomaniansIon Luca Caragialeand Urmuz. The contextual importance of such influences, which remain relatively unknown to Ionesco's international audience, has been assessed differently by the various exegetes,[9][21][55][133][227][228]as Ionesco himself once stated: "Nothing in Romanian literature has ever truly influenced me."[102]Thanks to Ionesco's intervention, Urmuz's works saw print inLes Lettres Nouvellesjournal.[229]Allegedly, his attempt to publish Urmuz's work withÉditions Gallimardwas sabotaged by Tristan Tzara, who may have feared that previous claims about his absolute originality would come under revision.[230]Upon translating Urmuz's writings, Ionesco also drafted the essayUrmuz ou l'Anarchiste( "Urmuz or the Anarchist", ca. 1950), with a new drawing of Urmuz byDimitrie Vârbănescu(Guy Lévis Mano collection).[231]

The entirety of Urmuz's work was republished in English by writerMiron Grindeaand his wifeCarola,inADAM Review(1967, the same year when new German translations were published inMunich'sAkzentejournal).[232]From his new home in Hawaii, Romanian writerȘtefan Baciu,whose own poetry borrows from Urmuz,[233]further popularized theBizarre Pageswith Boz's assistance.[234]Another figure of theanti-communistdiaspora,Monica Lovinescu,adopted Urmuzian aesthetics in some of her satirical essays.[235]The diaspora community was later joined byAndrei Codrescu,who became a neo-Dadaist and wrote stories he calls "à la Urmuz".[236]

From Onirism to theOptzeciști

[edit]

In the 1950s and 1960s, a literary underground, reacting against the communist worldview, began to emerge at various locations in Romania. It tried to reconnect with modernism, and in the process rediscovered Urmuz. Inside themeta-andautofictionalgroup known as theTârgoviște School,Urmuz's style was mainly perpetuated byMircea Horia Simionescu.[130][237][238]TheBizarre Pagesalso inspired some other writers in the same group: Radu Petrescu,Costache Olăreanu[190][239]and theBessarabian-bornTudor Țopa.[240]Elsewhere, Urmuz's work rekindled Romania's new poetry and prose, influencing some of theOniristand post-Surrealist writers—fromLeonid Dimov,Vintilă IvănceanuandDumitru ȚepeneagtoIordan Chimet[241]andEmil Brumaru.[242]An icon of neo-modernist poetry wasNichita Stănescu,whose contributions include tributes to Urmuz andpastichesof his writings, hosted byManuscriptumin 1983.[243][244]Between 1960 and 1980, theBizarre Pagesalso stimulated the work of isolated modernist authors, such asMarin Sorescu,[245]Marius Tupan,[246]Mihai Ursachiand, especially,Șerban Foarță.[8][247][248]

Although the ban on Urmuz was still in place, George Ciprian made a daring (and possibly subversive) gesture by publishing his affectionate memoirs in 1958.[249]A few years later, the episodic relaxation of communist censorship allowed for the republication of theBizarre Pages,mistakenly included in a complete edition of Ciprian's literary works (1965).[1]Such events heralded a revival of scholarly interest in proto-Dadaism, beginning with a 1970 monograph on Urmuz, by theSibiu Literary CirclememberNicolae Balotă.[250]Also then, Pană was free to circulate a new revised edition of his interwar anthology, reissued in collaboration withEditura Minerva.[65][251][252]It was later completed by an Urmuz corpus, which notably hosted the scattered diaries, as recovered by critic Gheorghe Glodeanu.[252]In 1972, Iordan Chimet also included "The Chroniclers" in a nonconformist anthology ofyouth literature.[253]In those years, theBizarre Pagesalso inspired critically acclaimed illustrations byNestor Ignat[254]and Ion Mincu,[65][252]and the multimedia eventCumpănă( "Watershed" ) by composerAnatol Vieru.[255]

With the 1960s, anational-communistideology was officially established in Romania, and this encouraged the rise of "protochronism"as a cultural phenomenon. The protochronists exaggerated past Romanian achievements, and magnified previous claims about the folkloric roots of Urmuz's literature. Some protochronists also described a positive, jocular,"village idiot"Urmuz, more presentable than Europe's misanthropic avant-garde.[256]A leading representative of this trend was literary theoristEdgar Papu,who exaggerated Vinea and Ionesco's homage to Urmuz and Caragiale to argue that Romania was the actual origin of Europe's avant-garde movements.[257]The idea proved popular beyond protochronism, and was arguably found in essays by Nichita Stănescu[243][244]andMarin Mincu.[258]ManyEuropeanistintellectuals rejected protochronism, but, in their bid of making Urmuz palatable to cultural officials, often interpreted him strictly through the grid ofMarxist humanism(as used by Balotă,Matei CălinescuorNicolae Manolescu).[259]A third camp, comprising more or less vehement opponents of Urmuz, joined the literary debates after 1970; it includesAlexandru George,Gelu Ionescu,Alexandru PiruandMarin Nițescu.[260]

Some years later, Romania witnessed the birth of theOptzeciștigeneration, whose interest was in recovering Caragiale, Urmuz and the 1930s avant-garde as its models to follow, and who reactivated corrosive humor as a way of fighting oppression.[261]Among the individualOptzeciștiwho took special inspiration from theBizarre PagesareMircea Cărtărescu,[262]Nichita Danilov,[263]Florin Iaru,[264]Ion Stratan[265]and "the sentimental Urmuz"Florin Toma.[266]DissidentpoetMircea Dinescualso paid homage to Urmuz, imitating his style in one of his addresses to the communist censors.[267]

With that, the influence of Urmuz again radiated outside the Romanian-speaking circles: while poetOskar Pastiortranslated theBizarre Pagesinto German,[268]Herta Müller,aGerman Romaniannovelist and dissident, is thought to have been influenced by some of Urmuz's writing techniques.[269]Marin Mincu and Marco Cugno also introduced Urmuz's literature to theItalophonepublic, with a 1980 collection.[232]In Romania, as part of centennial celebrations, scattered translations old and new were issued by Minerva as a hexalingual album, with noted contributions from Ionesco, Voronca, Mincu, Cugno, Leopold Kosch,Andrei Bantașetc.[65][270]Other translations from Urmuz were pioneered in English by Stavros Deligiorgis (standard bilingual edition, 1985)[232][252]and later by Julian Semilian.[271]The same effort was undertaken inDutchby Jan Willem Bos[272]and inSwedishby Dan Shafran.[228][273]

Postmodern Urmuzianism

[edit]

A noted rise in interest for Urmuzian literature followed in the wake of the1989 Revolution.In 2011, a poll among Romanian literati, organized byObservator Culturalreview, listed "The Funnel and Stamate" as the 22nd-best Romanian novel; this rekindled polemics about whether the work should even be considered a novel.[274]With the appearance of new "alternative" schoolbooks during the 1990s, Urmuz earned more exposure as an optional addition to thestandard curriculum.[275]New editions of his various works were published at a fast rate, in both Romania and neighboringMoldova:in just two years (2008–2009), there were three separate print versions of his collected texts, academic as well as paperback, and twoaudiobooks.[252]These texts provided visual inspiration forDan Perjovschi,whose tribute "pictograms"were included in the 2009Editura Cartierreprint of theBizarre Pages.[67][252][276]In March 2006,Curtea de Argeșcity honored the writer with a series of special events and displays.[277]

The literary currents ofpostmodernismoften appropriated Urmuz as their guide. This tendency was illustrated by the writings of new figures in Romanian literature: theminimalistsandneo-naturalists(Sorin Gherguț,[278]Andrei Mocuța,[279]Călin Torsan),[280]the neo-Surrealists (Cristian Popescu,[281]Iulia Militaru,[282]Cosmin Perța,Iulian Tănase,[283]Stelian Tănase),[284]thefeminists(Catrinel Popa,[285]Iaromira Popovici),[134]the political satirists (Dumitru Augustin Doman,[286]Pavel Șușară)[9][238][248]and theelectronic literaturewriters (Cătălin Lazurcă).[287]

There were also loose stage or multimedia adaptations of theBizarre Pages,including ones by Mona Chirilă (2000),[288]Gábor Tompa(2002),[289]Radu Macrinici(2005),[290]Pro Contemporania ensemble (2006),[291]Christian Fex[228]and Ramona Dumitrean[292](both 2007); Urmuz's work has also been cited as an influence by the Romanian-born dramaturgeDavid Esrig,who has used it in workshops.[293]A theatrical company with Urmuz's name existed for a while inCasimcea,home of theZilele UrmuzFestival.[44]In 2011, two separate operatic renditions of Urmuz's work were showcased by Bucharest's SIMN Festival.[294]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^abcdefghijklm(in Romanian)Radu Cernătescu,"Noi argumente pentru redeschiderea" cazului Urmuz' ",inRomânia Literară,Nr. 27/2010
  2. ^abcSandqvist, p.221
  3. ^abDeligiorgis edition, p.5
  4. ^abNicolae Moisescu, "Primarii orașului Curtea de Argeș între anii 1877–2009 și realizările lor pe timpul mandatului", inMuzeul Municipal Curtea de Argeș. Studii și Comunicări,Vol. V, 2013, p.139
  5. ^abcdefghijkVasile Andru,"Urmuz – A Great Innovator in Spite of Himself (Urmuz and Anti-Literature as Hyper-Life)",inPlural Magazine,Nr. 19/2003
  6. ^abcdCiprian, p.40
  7. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.340; Deligiorgis edition, p.5; Sandqvist, p.221
  8. ^abc(in Romanian)Vasile Iancu,"Avangardiștii de ieri și de azi",inConvorbiri Literare,May 2005
  9. ^abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzaaabacadae(in Romanian)Geo Șerban,"Cursă de urmărire, cu suspans, prin intersecțiile avangărzii la români",inLettre InternationaleRomanian edition, Nr. 58, Summer 2006
  10. ^abcdefghij(in Romanian)Gabriela Ursachi,"Martie",inRomânia Literară,Nr. 12/2003
  11. ^(in Romanian)"Situația creatorilor de artă și literatură, în anii Holocaustului",inRealitatea Evreiască,Nr. 237 (1037), September 2005, p.9; Liviu Rotman (ed.),Demnitate în vremuri de restriște,Editura Hasefer,Federation of Jewish Communities of Romania&Elie Wiesel National Institute for Studying the Holocaust in Romania,Bucharest, 2008, p.175.ISBN978-973-630-189-6
  12. ^ab(in Romanian)C. Lacea,"Curiozități semantice",inTransilvania,Nr. 10-12/1914, p.469 (digitized by theBabeș-Bolyai UniversityTranssylvanica Online Library)
  13. ^Ciprian, p.40. According to Sandqvist (p.224), the man was "extremely authoritarian".
  14. ^abcSandqvist, p.224
  15. ^Blaga, p.324, 326; Cernat,Avangarda,p.91–92, 339–340, 352
  16. ^Călinescu, p.888; Deligiorgis edition, p.5
  17. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.340; Sandqvist, p.224–225
  18. ^abcdeCernat,Avangarda,p.340
  19. ^abcdefghijk(in Romanian)Paul Cernat,"Urmuz: un conservator eretic?",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 193, November 2003
  20. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.340; Sandqvist, p.209
  21. ^ab(in Romanian)"Anchetă. I. L. Caragiale – azi",inConvorbiri Literare,February 2002
  22. ^abIoana Pârvulescu,Lumea ca ziar. A patra putere: Caragiale,Humanitas,Bucharest, 2011, p.87.ISBN978-973-50-2954-8
  23. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.340, 341; Ciprian, p.40–42
  24. ^Ciprian, p.40–42
  25. ^Ciprian, p.42
  26. ^Ciprian, p.47–49
  27. ^Ciprian, p.49
  28. ^abcdCernat,Avangarda,p.344
  29. ^Ciprian, p.50–57
  30. ^Ciprian, p.59–60
  31. ^Ciprian, p.61–62
  32. ^abcdefSandqvist, p.225
  33. ^Ciprian, p.63–64
  34. ^Ciprian, p.71–72
  35. ^Ciprian, p.72–73, 373
  36. ^Sandqvist, p.224–225
  37. ^Ciprian, p.73. See also Sandqvist, p.225
  38. ^Ciprian, p.77; Crohmălniceanu, p.570–571; Deligiorgis edition, p.5
  39. ^Ciprian, p.73–77; Crohmălniceanu, p.571. See also Sandqvist, p.19
  40. ^Sandqvist, p.225, 227
  41. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.9, 91–92
  42. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.91–92, 339–340, 352–353
  43. ^abcdSandqvist, p.227
  44. ^ab(in Romanian)Doru Mareș,"Teatru. Teatru dobrogean",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 7, April 2000
  45. ^Ciprian, p.77–78. See also Sandqvist, p.227
  46. ^Ciprian, p.78–79, 82
  47. ^abCiprian, p.114
  48. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.9, 269, 340, 342, 343. See also Crohmălniceanu, p.55
  49. ^Crohmălniceanu, p.571–572
  50. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.269, 342
  51. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.91
  52. ^Sandqvist, p.22
  53. ^Blaga, p.323; Cernat,Avangarda,p.91, 340, 381; Sandqvist, p.22, 237
  54. ^abcd(in Romanian)Ion Pop,"'Călătoriile' avangardei românești (I)"ArchivedOctober 2, 2011, at theWayback Machine,inTribuna,Nr. 175, December 2009, p.10–11
  55. ^abcdefghi(in Romanian)C. Trandafir,"Înainte-mergătorul fără voie",inRomânia Literară,Nr. 9/2009
  56. ^Călinescu, p.888; Cernat,Avangarda,p.340, 341, 379; Crohmălniceanu, p.55, 571; Sandqvist, p.227
  57. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.379
  58. ^Crohmălniceanu, p.571; Sandqvist, p.227
  59. ^Sandqvist, p.19, 227
  60. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.340, 356; Sandqvist, p.221
  61. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.48, 340
  62. ^abCrohmălniceanu, p.571
  63. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.340; Pană, p.71; Sandqvist, p.233
  64. ^abcdSandqvist, p.233
  65. ^abcdefghi(in Romanian)Simona Vasilache,"După masa lui Grummer",inRomânia Literară,Nr. 46/2008
  66. ^Blaga, p.325–326
  67. ^abcde(in Romanian)Cezar Gheorghe,"Trăim într-o lume urmuziană",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 469, April 2009
  68. ^Pană, p.70–71
  69. ^abCălinescu, p.888
  70. ^abCernat,Avangarda,p.342
  71. ^Sandqvist, p.234
  72. ^abcdSimona Popescu,"Urmuz, the Solitary",inPlural Magazine,Nr. 19/2003
  73. ^Blaga,passim;Cernat,Avangarda,p.381; Crohmălniceanu, p.570, 571
  74. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.339, 346
  75. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.334, 347
  76. ^abCrohmălniceanu, p.55
  77. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.352, 374, 386;(in Romanian)Bogdan Crețu,"'Avangarda prudentă'",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 350, December 2006
  78. ^abcde(in Romanian)Adrian G. Romilă,"Universul mecanic al lui Urmuz",inConvorbiri Literare,March 2002
  79. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.91, 361–362
  80. ^(in Romanian)Dan Gulea,"Perspective asupra futurismului",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 231, July 2004
  81. ^Blaga, p.325–328, 330
  82. ^Ciprian, p.62–63
  83. ^abCernat,Avangarda,p.342; Ciprian, p.82
  84. ^(in Romanian)Paul Cernat,"Futurism și interculturalitate",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 231, July 2004
  85. ^(in Romanian)Alexandru Ruja,"Cultură și sens",inOrizont,Nr. 7/2007, p.9
  86. ^ab(in Romanian)Ioana Pârvulescu,"Erau interbelicii misogini?",inRomânia Literară,Nr. 6/2010
  87. ^Călinescu, p.53, 814; Cernat,Avangarda,p.351, 352, 357
  88. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.351–352
  89. ^Crohmălniceanu, p.184. See also Sandqvist, p.228, 230, 248
  90. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.340, 350, 352–355
  91. ^abCernat,Avangarda,p.353
  92. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.349–350
  93. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.322, 329
  94. ^Ciprian, p.60–61
  95. ^Ciprian, p.77
  96. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.343
  97. ^abcd(in Romanian)Ioana Pârvulescu,"Drumuri care se bifurcă",inRomânia Literară,Nr. 44/2004
  98. ^Crohmălniceanu, p.570–571
  99. ^Ciprian, p.78–79
  100. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.330, 362, 363, 365, 367, 377, 388, 404;(in Romanian)Michael Finkenthal,"Mihail Sebastian: cîteva observații cu ocazia unui centenar",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 391, September 2007; Sandqvist, p.224
  101. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.334, 344, 352, 367, 390; Sandqvist, p.225, 228
  102. ^ab(in Romanian)Marie-France Ionesco,"Ionesco s-a simțit în exil în România, nu în Franța",inEvenimentul Zilei,July 10, 2009
  103. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.353–354; Sandqvist, p.228
  104. ^ab(in Romanian)Nicolae Balotă,"Plăcut este să-l cunoști pe domnul Lear",inContemporanul,Nr. 12/2009, p.5
  105. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.383, 388;(in Romanian)"Un scriitor de (re)descoperit",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 32, October 2000
  106. ^(in Romanian)Alice Georgescu,"Ambiții naționale (II)",inZiarul Financiar,November 16, 2007
  107. ^(in Romanian)Marius Lazurcă,"Polonia mea",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 147-148, December 2002
  108. ^(in Romanian)Marian Victor Buciu,"N. Manolescu despre proza românească. Interbelicii",inContemporanul,Nr. 9/2010, p.17; Cernat,Avangarda,p.364–365, 384
  109. ^(in Romanian)Elisabeta Lăsconi,"Gotic târziu și absurd timpuriu",inViața Românească,Nr. 6-7/2009
  110. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.382–383; Crohmălniceanu, p.570–576
  111. ^Crohmălniceanu, p.56–57, 570–576
  112. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.370–372, 375–377, 383–384, 390–391
  113. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.321–322, 349
  114. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.334, 348
  115. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.347
  116. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.335
  117. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.359–366, 368, 376–377, 382, 387–388
  118. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.18, 385
  119. ^Blaga, p.324
  120. ^Blaga, p.326–327
  121. ^(in Romanian)Ștefan Borbély,"Luciferism și literatură",inApostrof,Nr. 5/2011; Ioana Bot, "Maledicțiunea omniefabilei confuzii masonice", inDilemateca,June 2011, p.62
  122. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.321, 349
  123. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.349, 363–365
  124. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.330–331
  125. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.331, 346, 359–360, 373
  126. ^Ciprian, p.62
  127. ^Ciprian, p.78
  128. ^Deligiorgis edition, p.54–63. See also Sandqvist, p.19–20, 230
  129. ^Ciprian, p.77–78
  130. ^abc(in Romanian)Gheorghe Crăciun,"How to Do Characters with Words",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 24, August 2000
  131. ^Blaga, p.327; Deligiorgis edition, p.54–55
  132. ^abcd(in Romanian)Simona Vasilache,"Doi coțcari",inRomânia Literară,Nr. 27/2010
  133. ^abc(in Romanian)Simona Constantinovici,"Eveniment: Festivalul 'Zile și nopți de literatură'. De ce (nu) ne place excentricul și grotescul personaj urmuzian? Cazul Algazy & Grummer",inRomânia Literară,Nr. 27/2010
  134. ^ab(in Romanian)Ana-Maria Popescu,"Povești postmoderne și ușor feministe",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 295, November 2005
  135. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.383, 390
  136. ^Blaga, p.326, 327
  137. ^Blaga, p.327, 330
  138. ^Ciprian, p.82. See also Cernat,Avangarda,p.343
  139. ^Sandqvist, p.223
  140. ^Deligiorgis edition, p.23–29. A short variant, quoted "from memory" and commented upon, in Ciprian, p.78–79. See also Sandqvist, p.20, 223
  141. ^(in Romanian)Mihai Sorin Rădulescu,"Genealogii: Discreția unui bucureștean de altădată",inZiarul Financiar,August 29, 2008
  142. ^Blaga, p.330
  143. ^Deligiorgis edition, p.6–21. See also Ciprian, p.79–82; Sandqvist, p.221–223
  144. ^Ciprian, p.82
  145. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.195
  146. ^(in Romanian)Anca Davidoiu-Roman,"Mască și clonă. Despre atitudinile parodiei",inFamilia,Nr. 9/2009, p.102
  147. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.321–322
  148. ^Deligiorgis edition, p.72–91. See also Sandqvist, p.230–233
  149. ^Sandqvist, p.230–233
  150. ^Sandqvist, p.231–233
  151. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.343. According to Sandqvist (p.230), the story "indirectly refers to the author's own experiences during the war".
  152. ^Deligiorgis edition, p.30–37. See also Sandqvist, p.20, 230
  153. ^(in Romanian)Adrian Marino,"Naționalismul provincial",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 88, October 2001
  154. ^Crohmălniceanu, p.56
  155. ^Deligiorgis edition, p.38–42
  156. ^Crohmălniceanu, p.576; Deligiorgis edition, p.42
  157. ^Deligiorgis edition, p.43
  158. ^Deligiorgis edition, p.64–69. See also Sandqvist, p.223–224
  159. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.383
  160. ^(in Romanian)Simona Vasilache,"Mica Odisee",inRomânia Literară,Nr. 22-23/2010
  161. ^Deligiorgis edition, p.92–95
  162. ^Blaga, p.326
  163. ^Deligiorgis edition, p.44–53. See also Sandqvist, p.20–21, 230
  164. ^Ciprian, p.62; Deligiorgis edition, p.96, 97
  165. ^Călinescu, p.889; Ciprian, p.62; Deligiorgis edition, p.96
  166. ^Deligiorgis edition, p.97
  167. ^Călinescu, p.888; Cernat,Avangarda,p.353
  168. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.191
  169. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.391
  170. ^ab(in Romanian)Ion Pop,"Avangarda românească, avangarda europeană",inCuvântul,Nr. 325
  171. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.372, 390
  172. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.341
  173. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.341–342, 346
  174. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.342–351, 357
  175. ^Călinescu, p.690, 815; Cernat,Avangarda,p.334, 345, 348, 351, 377; Crohmălniceanu, p.57;(in Romanian)Loredana Ilie,"Hipotextul caragialian în opera lui Tudor Arghezi",in theUniversity of Iași'sPhilologica Jassyensia,Nr. 2/2010, p.87, 90
  176. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.110, 128–129, 341, 343, 346, 367–368; Sandqvist, p.209, 227, 234–235, 248
  177. ^ab(in Romanian)Liviu Grăsoiu,"Redescoperire",inConvorbiri Literare,December 2007
  178. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.156
  179. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.342–343
  180. ^Sandqvist, p.230
  181. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.128–129, 343;(in Romanian)Cornel Ungureanu,"Ion Vinea și iubirile paralele ale poeților",inOrizont,Nr. 5/2007, p.2
  182. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.217
  183. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.221, 362, 367; Grigorescu, p.389
  184. ^(in Romanian)Dragoș Varga-Santai,"Poezia maghiară din Ardeal în traducerea lui Kocsis Francisko",inTransilvania,Nr. 11-12/2006, p.57
  185. ^Sandqvist, p.226, Plate 11
  186. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.368;(in Romanian)Ion Pop,"Un 'misionar al artei noi': Marcel Iancu (II)",inTribuna,Nr. 178, February 2010, p.11; Liana Saxone-Horodi,"Marcel Ianco (Jancu) într-o nouă prezentare",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 571, April 2011
  187. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.181–185, 351
  188. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.194–198
  189. ^Călinescu, p.906; Cernat,Avangarda,p.187, 189–191, 398; Crohmălniceanu, p.570;(in Romanian)Ion Pop,"Exercițiilelui Jacques G. Costin ",inTribuna,Nr. 160, May 2009, p.8–9
  190. ^ab(in Romanian)Dan Gulea,"Jacques Costin, avangardistul",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 181, August 2003
  191. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.190–191, 322–323, 329
  192. ^Călinescu, p.889; Cernat,Avangarda,p.322, 331, 335, 339, 344, 345–346, 347, 348, 349, 382, 404;(in Romanian)Ion Pop,"Moldov, pe urmele lui Urmuz",inTribuna,Nr. 166, August 2009, p.11, 15
  193. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.343, 344; Crohmălniceanu, p.55, 570, 640
  194. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.331, 346. See also Sandqvist, p.372–373, 375
  195. ^(in Romanian)Michael Finkenthal,"Sesto Pals, dialoguri între întuneric și lumină",inViața Românească,Nr. 11-12/2009
  196. ^Călinescu, p.900;(in Romanian)Gabriela Glăvan,"H. Bonciu – Dincolo de expresionism",in theWest University of TimișoaraAnale. Seria Științe Filologice. XLIV,2006, p.265; Florina Pîrjol,"Neaparat cîte un exemplar în liceele patriei!",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 279, July 2005
  197. ^ab(in Romanian)Simona Vasilache,"Unicate",inRomânia Literară,Nr. 28/2008
  198. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.330–331, 333, 334, 339, 346, 347–348
  199. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.330, 404
  200. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.333, 344–345, 346, 347; Crohmălniceanu, p.570
  201. ^ab(in Romanian)Marian Victor Buciu,"Un avangardist dincoace de ariergardă",inRomânia Literară,Nr. 17/2006
  202. ^ab(in Romanian)Ion Pop,"Un urmuzian: Ionathan X. Uranus",inTribuna,Nr. 96, September 2006, p.6–7
  203. ^(in Romanian)Șerban Axinte,"Grigore Cugler, prin literatura 'de unul singur'",inCuvântul,Nr. 378; Cernat,Avangarda,p.344, 369–370; Crohmălniceanu, p.570;Ion Pop,"Un urmuzian: Grigore Cugler",inTribuna,Nr. 161, May 2009, p.7–9;Ion Simuț,"Al doilea Urmuz",inRomânia Literară,Nr. 23/2004; Vlad Slăvoiu,"Un avangardist recuperat",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 316, April 2006
  204. ^(in Romanian)Igor Mocanu,"C. Fântâneru. Absurd și suprarealism – o îngemănare inedită",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 354, January 2007
  205. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.344, 346
  206. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.321–323, 331, 339, 344, 346–354
  207. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.344, 346, 350–353
  208. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.350, 352–355
  209. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.344, 349
  210. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.348
  211. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.323
  212. ^(in Romanian)Bianca Burța-Cernat,"Înainte de Ionesco",inRevista 22,Nr. 1020, September 2009; Cernat,Avangarda,p.345
  213. ^(in Romanian)Daniel Dragomirescu,"Modernismul lui Anton Holban",inRomânia Literară,Nr. 38/2008
  214. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.271; Grigorescu, p.423–424
  215. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.342, 344–345. See also Călinescu, p.921
  216. ^(in Romanian)Z. Ornea,"Dezvăluirile lui Constantin Beldie",inRomânia Literară,Nr. 46/2000
  217. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.344–345
  218. ^Summarized in Ciprian, p.373–411
  219. ^Ciprian, p.261–261, 408–410
  220. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.271
  221. ^Ciprian, p.408, 410–411
  222. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.381–382
  223. ^(in Romanian)Veronica-Alina Constănceanu,"Dimitrie Stelaru, dramaturg",inOrizont,Nr. 11/2009, p.11
  224. ^(in Romanian)Daniel Vighi,"Constant Tonegaru în note de curs",inOrizont,Nr. 11/2010, p.21
  225. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.381
  226. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.354–356
  227. ^Lucian Boia,Romania: Borderland of Europe,Reaktion Books,London, 2001, p.261.ISBN1-86189-103-2;Cernat,Avangarda,p.345, 356, 358, 365;(in Romanian)Martine Dancer,"Desenele de atelier și 'universul' operei",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 100, January 2002;Gelu Ionescu,"Ionescu/Ionesco",inApostrof,Nr. 12/2006;Ion Pop,"Eugen Ionescu și avangarda românească",inViața Românească,Nr. 1-2/2010;(in Romanian)Ștefana Pop-Curșeu,"Eugène Ionesco cel românesc în viziune occidentală",inTribuna,Nr. 175, December 2009, p.7;Ion Vianu,"Ionesco, așa cum l-am cunoscut (evocare)",inRevista 22,Nr. 1029, November 2009
  228. ^abc(in Romanian)Gabriela Melinescu,"Absurdul ca un catharsis",inRomânia Literară,Nr. 17/2007
  229. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.404;(in Romanian)Geo Șerban,"Mic și necesar adaos",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 315, April 2006
  230. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.110, 367–368
  231. ^Monica Breazu, "Un manuscris inedit de Eugen Ionescu în arhivele editorului Guy Lévis Mano", inMagazin Istoric,January 2010, p.17–18
  232. ^abcCernat,Avangarda,p.368
  233. ^(in Romanian)Simona Sora,"Poezia unui șpriț la gheață",inDilema Veche,Nr. 133, August 2006
  234. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.368;(in Romanian)Ilie Rad,"Scrisorile din exil ale lui Lucian Boz",inContemporanul,Nr. 11/2009, p.35
  235. ^(in Romanian)Serenela Ghițeanu,"Prima piesă din puzzle",inRevista 22,Nr. 913, September 2007
  236. ^Andrei Codrescu,"Word to the Reader", inA Bar in Brooklyn: Novellas & Stories, 1970–1978,Black Sparrow Books,Boston, 1999, p.7.ISBN1-57423-097-2
  237. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.345, 356;(in Romanian)"M.H.S. și Comedia Lumii pe Dos",inCuvântul,Nr. 378; Alin Croitoru,"Cum se face roman",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 171, June 2003
  238. ^ab(in Romanian)Luminița Marcu,"Poezii cu dichis de Pavel Șușară",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 70, June 2001
  239. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.345, 356, 383–384;(in Romanian)Dan Pătrașcu,"Sinuciderea din Grădina Botanicăde Radu Petrescu sau memorialul oniric al realității ",in theVasile Goldiș West University of AradStudii de Știință și Cultură,Nr. 2 (21), June 2010, p.191;Ioan Stanomir,"Un fantezist seducător",inRomânia Literară,Nr. 3/1999
  240. ^(in Romanian)Gheorghe Crăciun,"Pactul somatografic. 'Încercările' lui Tudor Țopa",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 144, November 2002
  241. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.345, 361–362
  242. ^(in Romanian)Mircea A. Diaconu,"Paradisul senzual",inRomânia Literară,Nr. 25/2006
  243. ^abCernat,Avangarda,p.385–386
  244. ^ab(in Romanian)"O 'integrală' a ineditelor lui Nichita Stănescu, în revistaManuscriptum",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 221, May 2004
  245. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.384–385;(in Romanian)Nicolae Manolescu,"Marin Sorescu (19 februarie 1936-6 decembrie 1996)",inRomânia Literară,Nr. 8/2006
  246. ^(in Romanian)Barbu Cioculescu,"Un roman al hipersimțurilor",inRomânia Literară,Nr. 22/2001
  247. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.345, 385;(in Romanian)Gheorghe Grigurcu,"Gheorghe Grigurcu în dialog cu Șerban Foarță",inRomânia Literară,Nr. 51-52/2007
  248. ^ab(in Romanian)Alex. Ștefănescu,"Șerban Foarță",inRomânia Literară,Nr. 26/2002
  249. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.356
  250. ^Blaga, p.323; Cernat,Avangarda,p.346, 357, 365–366
  251. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.357; Crohmălniceanu, p.640
  252. ^abcdef(in Romanian)Ion Bogdan Lefter,"Urmuz în trei tipuri de ediții",inApostrof,Nr. 4/2010
  253. ^(in Romanian)Marina Debattista,"Subversiunea inocenței",inRomânia Literară,Nr. 22/2007
  254. ^(in Romanian)Daria Ghiu,"Nestor Ignat: realitatea întoarsă pe dos",inRevista 22,Nr. 1094, February 2011
  255. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.389
  256. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.357–358, 369, 372–377, 385–388, 404
  257. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.358–359, 373, 387; Mihăilescu, p.145–146
  258. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.359, 360, 373–376
  259. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.364–366, 377, 385, 404
  260. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.361, 378–382
  261. ^Mihăilescu, p.215, 234
  262. ^(in Romanian)Octavian Soviany,"A doua carte a nostalgiei",inCuvântul,Nr. 327
  263. ^(in Romanian)Adina Dinițoiu,"Goana după metafizica literaturii",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 411, February 2008;Horia Gârbea,"Monolog politic în tramvaiul 5",inLuceafărul,Nr. 7/2008;Alex. Ștefănescu,"Nichita Danilov, poet și prozator",inRomânia Literară,Nr. 10/2008;Eugenia Țarălungă,"Miscellanea. Breviar editorial",inViața Românească,Nr. 8-9/2008
  264. ^(in Romanian)Sorin Alexandrescu,"Retrospectiva Nicolae Manolescu (V)",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 92, November 2001; Ioan Holban,"Înnebunesc și-mi pare rău",inConvorbiri Literare,November 2005
  265. ^(in Romanian)Mihai Vieru,"Perimetre de exprimare ale liricii strataniene",inFamilia,Nr. 7-8/2009, p.97–98
  266. ^(in Romanian)Bianca Burța-Cernat,"Minunata călătorie a lui Florin Toma în Imaginaria",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 309, February 2006
  267. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.388–389
  268. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.368;(in Romanian)Ernest Wichner,"Oskar Pastior, laureat al Premiului Büchner",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 323, June 2006
  269. ^(in Romanian)Nora Iuga,"Poezie germană cu rădăcini românești",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 319, May 2006;Bogdan Suceavă,"Timpul cîndNiederungena apărut în România ",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 496, October 2009
  270. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.368, 386–388
  271. ^(in Romanian)Rodica Grigore,"Gândurile sunt cuvinte",inZiarul Financiar,May 27, 2008
  272. ^(in Romanian)Ovidiu Șimonca,"'E anormal ca în România să nu se citească literatură română'. Interviu cu Jan Willem Bos",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 450, November 2008
  273. ^(in Romanian)Andrei Pleșu,"Legi împotriva competenței",inDilema Veche,Nr. 119, May 2006
  274. ^(in Romanian)"150 de romane","Clasamente și comentarii (IV)","Clasamente și comentarii (V)",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 45-46, January 2001;Ștefan Agopian,"Se putea și mai bine",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 54, March 2001
  275. ^Cernat,Avangarda,p.381;(in Romanian)"Ofensiva manualelor alternative (II)",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 31, September 2000;"Învățământ. Referințe critice despre proza românească",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 80, September 2001;Carmen Mușat,Paul Cernat,"Ofensiva de toamnă a manualelor școlare",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 33, October 2000
  276. ^(in Romanian)"La zi",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 468, April 2009
  277. ^(in Romanian)"La zi",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 313, March 2006
  278. ^(in Romanian)Paul Cernat,"Un 'trimbulind' underground",inRevista 22,Nr. 1102, April 2011
  279. ^(in Romanian)Adina Dinițoiu,"Povești 'pe limba alambicului'",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 503, December 2009
  280. ^(in Romanian)Bianca Burța-Cernat,"Poetica deșeurilor reciclate",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 414, March 2008
  281. ^(in Romanian)Iulian Boldea,"Remember Cristian Popescu. Visul himeric",inCuvântul,Nr. 297
  282. ^(in Romanian)Cezar Gheorghe,"Poeme despre spaima devenirii-copil",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 532, July 2010
  283. ^(in Romanian)Adina Dinițoiu,"O nouă colecție de poezie pe piața literară",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 499, November 2009;"Căutătorii inimii grifonului",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 544, October 2010
  284. ^(in Romanian)Stelian Tănase,Gabriela Adameșteanu,"București, strict secret",inRevista 22,Nr. 910, August 2007
  285. ^(in Romanian)Adina Dinițoiu,"Poezie. Catrinel Popa,Caietul oranj",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 120, June 2002
  286. ^(in Romanian)"Contact. Dumitru Augustin Doman,Concetățenii lui Urmuz,Ed. Muzeul Literaturii Române, 2007 ",inArca,Nr. 1-2-3/2008
  287. ^(in Romanian)Lucia Simona Dinescu,"Stil dublu rafinat",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 374, May 2007
  288. ^(in Romanian)Gabriela Riegler,"Teatru. Dramaturgia românească la Timișoara",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 33, October 2000
  289. ^(in Romanian)Cristina Rusiecki,"Info teatral",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 129, August 2002
  290. ^(in Romanian)Doina Ioanid,"Un spectator la Unidrama",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 299, December 2005
  291. ^(in Romanian)Oltea Șerban-Pârâu,"Viziuni hipnotice",inZiarul Financiar,September 1, 2006
  292. ^(in Romanian)"Trei știri teatrale",inApostrof,Nr. 1/2008
  293. ^(in Romanian)Simona Chițan,"Esrig: 'Nu orice țipăt e teatru'",inEvenimentul Zilei,August 5, 2009; Iulia Popovici,"Teatru. Arta, munca și ștacheta",inObservator Cultural,Nr. 436, August 2008
  294. ^(in Romanian)Oltea Șerban-Pârâu,"SIMN 2011 – să auziți ce n-ați mai văzut",inZiarul Financiar,May 26, 2011

References

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