Saddening Encounters. Children and Animals in Romanian Fiction and Beyond (original) (raw)

From Empathy to Ethical Reflection: Polish Children’s and Young Adult Literature (19th–21st Century) in a Cultural Animal Studies Perspective – Selected Problems

2020

The goal of this article is to analyse the changes in the depiction of animal themes in Polish children’s and young adult literature in the context of cultural animal studies (CAS). The focus is mainly on Polish prose created in the 21st century, but older texts, starting from the 19th century, are discussed with the use of animal studies tools too. The starting point of the article is the assumption that empathy towards animals, inscribed in the majority of works for children and young people, may become the basis for further ethical reflection. The author analyses texts at the centre of which are such aspects of the human-animal relation as hunting, animal treatment and protection (e.g., veterinary clinics, sanctuaries, reserves), using animals for work (mines, army), as well as ethical aspects related to meat-eating.

Beyond Human: The Flight Towards an Animal in the Central European/Czech Literature (Čapek, Kundera—Kafka, Hašek)

eTopia

The objective of this paper is to argue—to put it somewhat emphatically—that European culture and society regards humanity highly while at the same time degrades and mutilates animals, physically or epistemologically, by exploiting, venerating and pampering them. As the paper tries to argue, these cultural and social attitudes would benefit from the radically deterritorializing schizophrenic treatment of Deleuze as it is anticipated in the works of two Central European modernist authors, Franz Kafka and Jaroslav Hašek.As to the outline of the paper, I would like to make few brief notes on the passagefrom the Nietzschean to Deleuzian tradition of an anti-humanist thinking (provided these two can be at all seen as distinct and separate), as well as on the anti-humanist topoi in Western and Central European literature. Second, on the backdrop of this brief and fragmented observation on the genealogy of anti-humanist writing, I would like to offer a further discussion of texts of the fo...

Buffeted by Political Winds: Children’s Literature in Communist Romania

Boyhood Studies, 2017

This article provides insight into the practically uncharted territory of children’s literature published during the Communist regime in Romania, with a special emphasis on boys’ roles and masculinity in the context of major themes and obsessions. Its purpose is to reveal both the nonideological side of this literature and the extent to which it might have exerted a decisive influence on education. The conclusion is that the power of nonideological seduction was greater than that of indoctrination.

Children's Literature in Romania

Transylvanian review • Vol. xxxi, Supplement no. 1 (2022), 2022

The domain labeled "children's literature" poses problems in terms of both its definition and historical evolution. The literary histories and panoramas dealing with this particular subject suggest extremely variable timeframes. As I anticipated, the difficulty of pinpointing its exact time of birth stems from the difficulty of defining and delimiting children's literature. Is it a genre, one similar to romance or crime fiction? Or is it a hypergenre that incorporates and adapts a series of genres and subgenres for a juvenile readership? Is it, then, merely a type of literature addressed particularly to children or, on the contrary, as Jacqueline Rose suggested in her 1984 The Case of Peter Pan or The Impossibility of Children's Fiction, is it just a form that is illegible to children, a form that incorporates the fantasies of the actual adults who write this type of literature (though there are also works penned by children)? However, this paper does not set out to shed light on these particular aspects. My aim, a humbler one, is to outline the historical development of the morphology of the domain labelled children's literature-not necessarily under this exact label-in Romania. The concept I work with is largely retroactive: my endeavor focuses on the concept's present meaning and academic significance-the interest shown by academics to this topic is fairly recent-in order to look for and identify the "symptoms" of its development throughout Romania's history.

Rethinking Romanian Literature Collectively: The Inter imperial Modern Novel

Transilvania , 2022

The present essay aims at discussing the recent volume Creolizing the Modern: Transylvania across Empires (2022) by Anca Parvulescu and Manuela Boatcă as a significant contribution to the recent attempts at rethinking Romanian literature. In this regard, the examination of the volume is constantly reckoned in dialogue with some of the previously undertaken projects. The dialogic approach highlights two significant aspects, related to both the volume and the context in which it is received. On the one hand, it shows that the theoretical and methodological framework deployed in the volume can constitute the ground for future studies. On the other hand, it draws attention to the fact the rethinking of Romanian literature has been a collective and gradual endeavor.

Journal of Romanian Literary Studies, nr. 29, 2022

Journal of Romanian Literary Studies, 2022

Journal of Romanian Literary Studies is an international online journal published by the ALPHA Institute for Multicultural Studies in partnership with the Department of Philology at UMFST in Targu-Mures and the "Gh. Șincai" Institute of Social and Human Research Research of the Romanian Academy. It is an academic publication open to academics, literary critics, theoreticians or researchers who are interested in the study of Romanian literature, as well as the Humanities. Our essential goal is to set communication paths between Romanian literary and humanistic research and the contemporary European cultural discourse, bringing the most valuable phenomena recorded in the Romanian culture into a beneficial dialogue with the other European cultures.

Romanian Literature for the World: A Matter of Property

World Literature Studies, 2015

Starting from the recent developments in the fields of transnational studies and world literature, this article analyses the presence of Romanian literature in the world and its specific manner of relating to the world. Thus, my paper consists of three parts. The first part approaches, in short, the way in which Romanian culture envisaged national literature, world literature, and the relationship between the two over the past two centuries. The second part is an attempt to systematize the manner in which Romanian literature asserted its presence in the world until now, by identifying four successive waves of its dissemination beyond national borders (the avant-garde, the Young Generation, trauma literature, and the comparatist wave). Finally, the third part of the article poses a new approach toward the problem, meant to contribute to a better understanding and, at the same time, an improvement of the presence of Romanian literature in the world.

CfP: Violent Child-Animal Encounters in Literature. Interdisciplinary Perspectives 09/23

2022

The focus of this conference is on violent encounters between human and non-human animals in literature and their meaning(s). We are particularly interested in the intersection of child and animal interactions and like to invite colleagues from different philologies, but also non-philological disciplines (such as anthropology, psychology and ethics) to compare texts, enhance text comprehension and better understand the phenomenon itself.

Swedish Journal of Romanian Studies Vol. 1 No 1 / 2018

Dana Radler, Titela VILCEANU, Felix Nicolau, Felix Nicolau, Lucian Vasile Bagiu, Monica Manolachi, Danciu Petru Adrian, Marina-Cristiana Rotaru, Magdalena Filary, Simina Pîrvu, Chris Tanasescu (MARGENTO), Carmen Darabus

Swedish Journal of Romanian Studies, 2018

In the first volume of Swedish Journal of Romanian Studies (ISSN 2003-0924) we are happy to welcome ten articles and two book reviews on Romanian language, literature, culture and film, written either in English or Romanian, by academics from various established universities. Literature section is well represented by authors with affiliation to University of Bucharest, Bucharest University of Economic Studies, The “A. Philippide” Institute of Romanian Philology, Iași, West University of Timișoara and “1 Decembrie 1918” University of Alba Iulia. The articles explore alluring and sensitive issues such as censorship, identity, marginality, prophetism, adaptation or escape, casting innovative visions on the works of canonical Romanian writers (Mihail Sadoveanu, Ionel Teodorenu, Mircea Eliade, Gabriel Liiceanu) and on the creations of less explored artists (Tia Șerbănescu, Liliana Corobca, Henriette Yvonne Stahl, Cătălin Dorian Florescu). Film section benefits from the original insights of academics from Technical University of Civil Engineering, Bucharest and Alexandru Ioan Cuza University of Iași, centring mostly on contemporaneity, in interdisciplinary approaches: a documentary by Sorin Ilieșiu turns out a perfect ground for social semiotics and the Romanian New Wave is decoded through the psychological and social symbolism of colours. Thanks to “1 Decembrie 1918” University of Alba Iulia Cultural studies depict the realm of ethnology and sacred folk literature, dissecting the metamorphosis of a deity from a prehistoric totem, due to the masculine Dacian cults, into a demon with Semite elements, finally corrected by Christian syncretism by its transformation into a legend. The same university offers in the Linguistics section an interdisciplinary approach which combines historical linguistics, semantics, pragmatics, lexicology, lexicography, history and cultural studies in a suggestion for an alternate etymological approach to a few words used to depict the realm of the Dacians in a contemporary novel, a stylistic endeavour which may have actually voiced the little-known substratum idiom. Owing to University of Craiova and Lund University the Book reviews section approaches a Polish exegesis to the philosophical anthropology of Mircea Eliade and a presentation of a literary theory tome (comprising translation studies and semiotic tackling) by Romulus Bucur. Swedish Journal of Romanian Studies is published in collaboration with “1 Decembrie 1918” University of Alba Iulia, Romania and welcomes contributions from scholars all over the world.