Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Lucian Blaga

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Resting place
  
Lancram

Parents
  
Isidor Blaga, Ana Blaga

Children
  
Dorli Blaga


Role
  
Philosopher

Name
  
Lucian Blaga

Siblings
  
Longin Blaga

Lucian Blaga Documentar Poetul dramaturgul i filosoful Lucian Blaga


Born
  
9 May 1895 (
1895-05-09
)
Lamkerek, Feher County (now Lancram, Alba County)

Died
  
May 6, 1961, Cluj-Napoca, Romania

Books
  
Poems of light, Zalmoxis, Lauda somnului, Charon's Ferry, Hronicul si cantecul varstelor

Similar People
  
Tudor Arghezi, Mihai Eminescu, Nichita Stanescu, George Bacovia, Ion Barbu

arca lui noe de lucian blaga


Lucian Blaga ([lut͡ʃiˈan ˈblaɡa]; 9 May 1895 – 6 May 1961) was a Romanian philosopher, poet, playwright and novelist.

Contents

Lucian Blaga Lucian Blaga the mute swan that turned into a poet

eva de lucian blaga poetry reading romanian poets english sbt


Biography

Lucian Blaga Lucian Blaga LUD Literatura

Lucian Blaga was a commanding personality of the Romanian culture of the interbellum period. He was a philosopher and writer highly acclaimed for his originality, a university professor and a diplomat. He was born on 9 May 1895 in Lancrăm, near Alba Iulia, Austria-Hungary, his father being an Orthodox priest. He later described his early childhood, in an autobiographical work "The Chronicle and the Song of Ages", as "under the sign of the incredible absence of the word".

Lucian Blaga httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediahu668Luc

His elementary education was in Hungarian at Sebeș (1902–1906), after which he attended the "Andrei Șaguna" Highschool in Brașov (1906–1914), under the supervision of a relative, Iosif Blaga (Lucian's father had died when the former was 13), who happened to be the author of the first Romanian treatise on the theory of drama. At the outbreak of the First World War, he began theological studies at Sibiu, where he graduated in 1917. He published his first philosophy article on the Bergson theory of subjective time. From 1917 to 1920, he attended courses at the University of Vienna, where he studied philosophy and obtained his PhD.

Lucian Blaga Poetry in Translation LXXXI Lucian Blaga 19221985

Upon returning to Transylvania, now a part of Romania, he contributed to the Romanian press, being the editor of the magazines Culture in Cluj and The Banat in Lugoj.

In 1926, he became involved in Romanian diplomacy, occupying successive posts at Romania's legations in Warsaw, Prague, Lisbon, Bern and Vienna. His political protector was the famous poet Octavian Goga, who occupied the chair of Prime Minister, Blaga being a relative of his wife. He was elected a titular member of the Romanian Academy in 1936. His acceptance speech was entitled Elogiul satului românesc (In Praise of the Romanian Village).

In 1939, he became professor of cultural philosophy at the University of Cluj, temporarily located in Sibiu in the years following the Second Vienna Award. During his stay in Sibiu, he edited, beginning in 1943, the annual magazine Saeculum.

He was dismissed from his university professor chair in 1948 because he refused to express his support to the new Communist regime and he worked as librarian for the branch department (Cluj) of the History Institute of the Romanian Academy. He was forbidden to publish new books, and until 1960 he was allowed to publish only translations. He completed the translation of Faust, the masterpiece of Goethe, one of the German writers that influenced him most.

In 1956, he was nominated to the Nobel Prize for Literature on the proposal of Bazil Munteanu of France and Rosa del Conte of Italy, but it seems the idea was Mircea Eliade's. Still, the Romanian Communist government sent two emissaries to Sweden to protest the nomination, because Blaga was considered an idealist philosopher, and his poems were forbidden until 1962.

He was diagnosed with cancer and died on 6 May 1961. He was buried on his birthday, 9 May, in the countryside village cemetery of Lancrăm, Romania.

He was married to Cornelia (b. Brediceanu). They had a daughter, Dorli, her name being derived from "dor", a noun that can be translated, roughly, as "longing".

The University of Sibiu bears his name today.

Poetry

  • 1919 - Poems of Light ( Poemele luminii );
  • 1921 - The Prophet's Footsteps ( Pașii profetului );
  • 1924 - In the Great Passage ( În marea trecere );
  • 1929 - In Praise of Sleep ( Laudă somnului );
  • 1933 - At the Watershed ( La cumpăna apelor ) ;
  • 1938 - At the Courtyard of Yearning ( La curțile dorului ) ;
  • 1943 - Unsuspected Steps ( Nebănuitele trepte );
  • 1982 - 3 Posthumous Poems;
  • Drama

  • 1921 - Zamolxis, A Pagan Mystery
  • 1923 - Whirling Waters
  • 1925 - Daria, The Deed, Resurrection
  • 1927 - Manole the Craftsman ( Mesterul Manole )
  • 1930 - The Children's Crusade
  • 1934 - Avram Iancu
  • 1944 - Noah's Ark
  • 1964 - Anton Pann - published posthumously.
  • Philosophy

    His philosophical work is grouped in four trilogies:

  • Filosofia cunoașterii (gnoseology) (1943)
  • Filosofia culturii (culture) (1944)
  • Filosofia valorilor (values) (1946)
  • Filosofia cosmologica (cosmology) (1983 posthumously)
  • The fourth work, Cosmologica, was completed but not published at the time because of communist regime censorship. Before death, Blaga left an editorial testament on how his works are to be published posthumously

    The novel Charon's ferry is intended to be a companion to the philosophical trilogies. In it Blaga addresses some of the more problematic philosophical issues such as those pertaining to political, (para)psychological or occult phenomena, under the name of a fictive philosopher (Leonte Pătrașcu).

    Philosophical works

  • 1924 - "The Philosophy of Style"
  • 1925 - "The Original Phenomenon" and "The Facets of a Century"
  • 1931 - "The Dogmatic Aeon"
  • 1933 - "Luciferian Knowledge"
  • 1934 - "Transcendental Censorship"
  • 1936 - "Horizon and Style" and "The Mioritic Space"
  • 1937 - "The Genesis of Metaphor and the Meaning of Culture"
  • 1939 - "Art and Value"
  • 1940 - "The Divine Differentials"
  • 1942 - "Religion and Spirit" and "Science and Creation"
  • 1943 - The Trilogy of Knowledge (The Dogmatic Aeon, Luciferian Knowledge, Transcendent Censorship: in 1983 On Philosophical Cognition and Experiment and the Mathematical Spirit was added posthumously according to his will)
  • 1944 - The Trilogy of Culture (Horizon and Style, The Mioritic Space, The Genesis of Metaphor and the Meaning of Culture)
  • 1946 - The Trilogy of Values (Science and Creation, Magical Thinking and Religion, Art and Value)
  • 1959 - Historical Existence
  • 1966 - Romanian Thought in Transylvania in the 18th Century
  • 1968 - Horizons and Stages
  • 1969 - Experiment and the Mathematical Spirit
  • 1972 - Sources (essays, lectures, articles)
  • 1974 - On Philosophical Cognition
  • 1977 - Philosophical Essays
  • 1983 - The Cosmological Trilogy (The Divine Differentials, Anthropological Aspects, Historical Existence)
  • Other works

  • 1919 - Stones for My Temple, aphorisms
  • 1945 - Discoblus, aphorisms
  • 1965 - The Chronicle and Song of Ages, memoirs
  • 1977 - The Élan of the Island, aphorisms
  • 1990 - Charon's Ferry, novel
  • References

    Lucian Blaga Wikipedia