Eugen Barbu
{{Short description|Romanian writer, journalist (1924–1993)}}
{{Infobox writer
| name = Eugen Barbu
| image = Eugen Barbu.jpg
| imagesize =
| caption =
| pseudonym =
| birth_date = {{birth date|1924|2|20|df=y}}
| birth_place = Bucharest, Kingdom of Romania
| death_date = {{death date and age|1993|9|7|1924|2|20|df=y}}
| death_place = Bucharest, Romania
| resting_place = Bellu Cemetery, Bucharest
| occupation = Novelist, short story writer, screenwriter, journalist
| period = 1955–1993
| genre = historical novel, fiction
| subject =
| movement = Realism, neorealism
| signature =
| website =
| spouse = Marga Barbu
}}
Eugen Barbu ({{IPA|ro|e.uˈdʒen ˈbarbu}}; 20 February 1924 – 7 September 1993) was a Romanian modern novelist, short story writer, journalist, and correspondent member of the Romanian Academy. The latter position was vehemently criticized by those who contended that he plagiarized in his novel Incognito and for the anti-Semitic campaigns he initiated in the newspapers Săptămâna and România Mare which he founded and led.Grigurcu; Martin; Tismăneanu, p.183, 225{{cite book|first=Radu|last=Ioanid|editor-first1=David S.|editor-last1=Wyman|editor-first2=Charles H.|editor-last2=Rosenzveig|title=The World Reacts to the Holocaust|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=U6KVOsjpP0MC&pg=PA239|date=24 September 1996|publisher=Johns Hopkins University Press|isbn=978-0-8018-4969-5|page=239}}{{cite book|first=Tom|last=Gallagher|editor-first=Bernard A.|editor-last=Cook|title=Europe Since 1945: An Encyclopedia|chapter=Barbu, Eugen (1924–93)|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=P7-2AgAAQBAJ&pg=PT124|date=27 January 2014|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-135-17932-8|page=124}} He also founded, alongside his disciple Corneliu Vadim Tudor, the nationalist Greater Romania Party (PRM).Martin
His most famous writings are the novels Groapa (1957) and Principele (1969).Călin Barbu's prose, in which the influence of neorealism has been noted, drew comparison to the works of Mateiu Caragiale, Tudor Arghezi, and Curzio Malaparte.Iliescu It was however, considered unequal by several critics, who took into measure Barbu's preference for archaisms, as well as his fluctuating narrative style.Grigurcu; Iliescu
Barbu also wrote several film scripts,Călin; Iliescu some of which were for films starring his wife, the actress Marga Barbu (Florin Piersic's Mărgelatu series).
Biography
=Early life and literature=
The son of writer and journalist N. Crevedia,{{Cite web |url=http://www.curierulnational.ro/Eveniment/2003-01-17/%E2%80%9CEugen+Barbu+e+fiul+lui+Nicolae+Crevedia%E2%80%9D |title=Curierul National - 17 Ianuarie 2003 » "Eugen Barbu e fiul lui Nicolae Crevedia" |access-date=2011-05-04 |archive-date=2011-09-28 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110928072421/http://www.curierulnational.ro/Eveniment/2003-01-17/%E2%80%9CEugen+Barbu+e+fiul+lui+Nicolae+Crevedia%E2%80%9D |url-status=dead }}Dorin Tudaran, Eu, fiul lor- Dosar de Securitate, Bucharest, Polirom 2010, p.76 Barbu was born in Bucharest, and briefly attended the University of Bucharest's Faculty of Law, and then graduated from the Faculty of Letters (1947); he subsequently worked as a journalist for the left-wing press. Attending meetings of the Sburătorul society, he made his debut in 1955 (with the novella Munca de jos). The following year, he published his first novel, Balonul e rotund.
One of the few persons trusted with official criticism on both political and literary issues during the communist regime — under Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej, and especially under Nicolae CeaușescuMartin; Tismăneanu, p.183, 225 — he was noted for his early writings in praise of Soviet achievements such as the Sputnik program,Grigurcu and his progressive move to a more nationalist tone as this became condoned (and later encouraged).Grigurcu; Martin He was also involved in the censorship apparatus, a position which, some have argued, he used indiscriminately against his literary rivals.Grigurcu; Ioanid
=Official appointments=
His Principele novel, set during the Phanariote era, was interpreted to be an ironic reference to Gheorghiu-Dej's rule and the labor camps of the Danube–Black Sea Canal, and was condoned by the regime during a period of relative liberalization — cut short by the July Theses of 1971.Deletant, p.182 At the time, he was also an editor of Luceafărul, before being dismissed following his prolonged and notorious conflicts with younger writers (while the regime was interested in ensuring the latter's confidence). Barbu was an informal envoy to the United States during the late 1960s, visiting the influential exiled scholar Mircea Eliade at his home in Chicago, unsuccessfully calling for his return, and vouching for a "magnificent reception" to his home country (in order to mark the potential image coup).Șimonca
He was several times elected to the Great National Assembly,Grigurcu; Teodorescu & Mihai until the plagiarism scandal prevented him from being again proposed for the office.Teodorescu & Mihai In 1977, Barbu won the Herder Prize, which permitted him to offer his protégé Tudor a scholarship year in Vienna.
=Plagiarism scandal and ''Săptămâna''=
In 1979, România Literară published a special section in which it placed side by side a text from Incognito and one taken from a translated work by the Soviet writer Konstantin Paustovsky; the two sections were considered virtually identical.Groşan; Teodorescu & Mihai The ensuing scandal animated the literary world, and has often been cited as a reference for similar and more recent controversies. Speaking at the time, Barbu dismissed the accusations as character assassination.
During the 1970s and '80s, he notably launched verbal attacks against Romanian intellectuals who had defected the country, as well as against writers who were critical of the regime"File dintr-un..."; Tismăneanu, p.225 (the latter included Paul Goma, whom, in 1977, he called "a non-entity").Ioanid
Barbu's polemic articles were often obscene in tone,Tismăneanu, p.225 and their message offered Ceauşescu a nationalist support which Vladimir Tismăneanu has identified as "chauvinistic". By 1980, Tudor's editorials in Săptămâna drew complaints from members of the Jewish-Romanian community;Savaliuc consequently, Barbu and Tudor came under the attention of the Securitate. According to Ziua, a Securitate file of the time reveals that the two had begun questioning the détente between Romania and the United States, contradicting official policy, and theorizing that the Most favored nation status, which Romania had just received, was actually harming the country (while arguing that data to prove this had been kept hidden by a Jewish plot).
Many attacks focused on Monica Lovinescu, who was broadcasting anti-communist messages on Radio Free Europe — in one instance during 1987, Barbu used his column in Săptămâna to belittle the work of Eugen Lovinescu, a major literary critic who was Monica Lovinescu's father; this drew criticism from the Romanian Communist Party (of which Barbu was a member) and alarm from the Securitate, as it went against more restrained official guidelines regarding the works of Eugen Lovinescu."File dintr-un..."
=Post-Revolution=
After the Romanian Revolution of 1989, Barbu and Tudor emerged as ideologists of a new nationalist trend, which largely repeated themes present in previous official discourse, while casting aside references to communism.Tismăneanu, p.249 Between 1992 and the time of his death, Barbu served in the Romanian Chamber of Deputies as representative of the Greater Romania Party for Bucharest.
In early 2005, eleven years after his death, the satirical magazine Academia Cațavencu uncovered and publicized a Securitate file which seems to indicate that Barbu had sexual encounters with underage girls, provided by Tudor and paid for their services.Popescu Tudor initially called on the National Council for the Study of the Securitate Archives to explain if the find was real, and received a positive answer. He later vehemently dismissed the allegations, indicating that virtually all of the girls' personal data was not found in census records, and that Anita Barton, the only one of them to have actually been found, was aged 19 at the time of her alleged meeting with Barbu.
He died in Bucharest in 1993 and was buried at Bellu Cemetery, on Writer's Alley, close to Mihai Eminescu's resting place. His wife, Marga Barbu, was buried next to him when she died in 2009.{{cite web|url=https://pro2.protv.ro/stiri/la-povestiri-adevarate-actrita-marga-barbu-a-fost-inmormantata-cu-onoruri-militare-la-cimitirul-bellu.html|title=La povestiri adevărate: Actrița Marga Barbu a fost inmormântată cu onoruri militare la Cimitirul Bellu|language=ro|publisher=Pro 2|year=2009|access-date=February 11, 2021}}
Notes
{{Reflist|2}}
References
- {{in lang|ro}} [https://web.archive.org/web/20060515022753/http://www.revista22.ro/html/index.php?art=1311&nr=2004-11-25 "File dintr-un dosar controversat: C.V. Tudor" ("Sheets from a Controversial File: C.V. Tudor")], in 22, November–December 2004
- Liviu Călin, "Tabel cronologic" ("Chronological Table") to the 4th edition of Principele, Minerva, Bucharest, 1977
- Dennis Deletant, Ceauşescu and the Securitate: Coercion and Dissent in Romania, 1965–1989, M.E. Sharpe, London, 1995 {{ISBN|1-56324-633-3}}
- {{in lang|ro}} [https://web.archive.org/web/20070927030725/http://193.226.7.140/~leonardo/n06/Grigurcu3.htm Gheorghe Grigurcu, "Evocându-l pe Eugen Barbu" ("Recalling Eugen Barbu"), at E-Leonardo] (review of Dan Ciachir's Când moare o epocă ("When an Epoch Dies"), Volume II)
- {{in lang|ro}} Ioan Groşan, [https://web.archive.org/web/20071007211144/http://www.ziua.net/display.php?id=127475&data=2003-09-15&ziua=8af24a7eda67b819d6a13603420c799c "Beuran, ca Jean Valjean" ("Beuran, Like Jean Valjean")], in Ziua, September 15, 2003
- {{in lang|ro}} [http://www.ziua.ro/display.php?id=206316&data=2006-08-30 Nicolae Iliescu, "Nisipul timpului" ("The Sands of Time")], in Ziua, 30 August 2006
- {{in lang|ro}} Radu Ioanid, [https://archive.today/20130416123710/http://www.observatorcultural.ro/informatiiarticol.phtml?xid=8772 "Paul Goma – între Belleville şi Bucureşti" ("Paul Goma – between Belleville and Bucharest", in Observatorul Cultural]
- {{in lang|ro}} [https://web.archive.org/web/20070927010344/http://www.revista22.ro/html/index.php?art=382&nr=2003-03-10 Mircea Martin, "Cultura română între comunism si naţionalism" ("Romanian Culture between Communism and Nationalism"), Part VI)], in 22, March 2003
- {{in lang|ro}} Răsvan Popescu, [https://web.archive.org/web/20060515150635/http://www.revista22.ro/html/index.php?art=1511&nr=2005-02-18 "Apărarea lui Vadim" ("Vadim's Defense")], in 22, February 2005
- {{in lang|ro}} [https://web.archive.org/web/20071112095656/http://www.ziua.net/display.php?data=2004-01-12&id=136188 Răzvan Savaliuc, "Liderul PRM urmărit în anii '80 pentru antisemitism" ("PRM's Leader Was Surveilled for Antisemitism during the '80")], in Ziua, January 12, 2004
- {{in lang|ro}} [https://archive.today/20121222064543/http://www.observatorcultural.ro/informatiiarticol.phtml?xid=14834 Ovidiu Șimonca, "Mircea Eliade și 'căderea în lume'" ("Mircea Eliade and 'the Descent into the World'")], review of Florin Țurcanu, Mircea Eliade. Le prisonnier de l'histoire, in Observator Cultural
- {{in lang|ro}} Cristian Teodorescu, Silviu Mihai, [http://www.cotidianul.ro/index.php?id=7603&art=19332&diraut=58&cHash=5484e451b5 "Toleranța românească la impostură: cursul scurt" ("Romanian Tolerance to Imposture: the Short Course")], in Cotidianul, October 25, 2005
- Vladimir Tismăneanu, Stalinism for All Seasons: A Political History of Romanian Communism, University of California Press, Berkeley, 2003, {{ISBN|0-520-23747-1}}
External links
- {{IMDb name|id=0053870|name=Eugen Barbu}}
- {{in lang|ro}} [http://www.cdep.ro/pls/parlam/structura.mp?idm=26&cam=2&leg=1992 Eugen Barbu at the Chamber of Deputies site]
{{Herder Prize}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Barbu, Eugen}}
Category:Censorship in Romania
Category:Romanian historical novelists
Category:Greater Romania Party politicians
Category:Members of the Great National Assembly
Category:Members of the Chamber of Deputies (Romania)
Category:Writers from Bucharest
Category:Corresponding members of the Romanian Academy
Category:Romanian Communist Party politicians
Category:Romanian magazine editors
Category:Romanian nationalists
Category:Romanian newspaper editors
Category:Romanian magazine founders
Category:Romanian newspaper founders
Category:Romanian male novelists
Category:Romanian male short story writers
Category:University of Bucharest alumni
Category:20th-century Romanian novelists
Category:Romanian male screenwriters
Category:Recipients of the Order of the Star of the Romanian Socialist Republic
Category:20th-century Romanian short story writers
Category:Herder Prize recipients