Nichita Stănescu Explained
Nichita Hristea Stănescu |
Birth Date: | 1933 3, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Ploiești, Prahova County, Romania |
Death Place: | Emergency Hospital, Bucharest, Romania |
Resting Place: | Bellu Cemetery, Bucharest, Romania |
Known For: | Poet |
Party: | Romanian Communist Party |
Education: | Ion Luca Caragiale High School (Ploiești) |
Alma Mater: | University of Bucharest |
Notable Works: | 11 elegii, Noduri si semne |
Years Active: | 1960–1982 (1960–1998; posthumous) |
Spouse: | |
Partner: | (?–before 1982) |
Awards: | Herder Prize, 1975 Golden Wreath Struga Poetry Evenings, 1982 |
Signature: | Nichita-stanescu sign.jpg |
Nichita Stănescu (in Romanian; Moldavian; Moldovan pronounced as /niˈkita stəˈnesku/; born Nichita Hristea Stănescu; 31 March 1933 – 13 December 1983) was a Romanian poet and essayist.
Biography
Stănescu's father was Nicolae Hristea Stănescu (1908–1982). His mother, Tatiana Cereaciuchin, was Russian (originally from Voronezh, she had fled Russia and married in 1931). Nichita Stănescu graduated from the Ion Luca Caragiale High School in Ploiești, then went on to study Romanian language and literature at the University of Bucharest, graduating in 1957. He made his literary debut in the Tribuna literary magazine.
Stănescu married Magdalena Petrescu in 1952, but the couple separated a year later. In 1962 he married Doina Ciurea. In 1982 he married Todorița "Dora" Tărâță.
For much of his career, Stănescu was a contributor to and editor of Gazeta Literară, România Literară, and Luceafărul.
His editorial debut was the poetry book Sensul iubirii ("The Aim of Love"), which appeared under the Luceafărul selection, in 1960. He also was the recipient of numerous awards for his verse, the most important being the Herder Prize in 1975 and a nomination for the Nobel Prize in 1980. The last volume of poetry published in his lifetime was Noduri și semne ("Knots and Signs"), published in 1982. A heavy drinker, he died of cardiopulmonary arrest.[1] He is buried in Bucharest's Bellu Cemetery.
Awards
Legacy
There is a national poetry festival and an award named Stănescu in his honor.[2]
There are high schools named after him in Ploiești[3] and in Sector 3 of Bucharest.[4] Streets in Blejoi, Cluj-Napoca, Dej, Mogoșoaia, Pipera (Voluntari), Ploiești, and Vama Veche are named in his honor.
Volumes
- 1960 – Sensul iubirii ("The Meaning of Love")
- 1964 – ("A Vision of Feelings")
- 1965 – ("The Right to Time")
- 1966 – ("11 Elegies")
- 1967 –
- ("Vertical Red"),
- ,
- ("The Egg and the Sphere")
- 1968 –
- 1969 –
- ("The Unwords"),
- ("A Land Called Romania")
- 1970 – ("In Sweet Classical Style")
- 1972 –
- ("The Re-reading Book")
- ("Five Friends in Belgrade")
- ("The Greatness of Cold")
- 1978 –
- 1979 – ("Imperfect Works")
- 1980 – Carte de citire, carte de iubire ("Book for Reading, Book for Loving")
- 1982 – ("Crying Bones")
- 1982 – ("Knots and Marks")
- 1982 – Respirări ("Breaths")
Posthumous volumes
- 1984 – Album memorial ("Memorial Album")
- 1985 – , Nichita Stănescu însoțit de Aurelian Titu Dumitrescu ("Antimetaphysics, Nichita Stănescu accompanied by Aurelian Titu Dumitrescu")
- 1985 – Nichita Stănescu – Frumos ca umbra unei idei ("Nichita Stănescu – Beautiful as the Shadow of an Idea")
- 1993 – Cântece la drumul mare, 1955–1960 ("Songs on the Open Road, 1955–1960")
- 1993 – Tânjiri spre firesc ("Longings toward the Usual")
- 1995 – Cărțile sibiline ("The Sibylline Books")
- 1998 – Fel de scriere ("A Kind of Writing")
- Noua frontieră a sufletului uman ("The New Frontier of the Human Spirit")
- Scrisori ("Letters")
Presence in English Language Anthologies
- Testament - 400 Years of Romanian Poetry - 400 de ani de poezie românească - bilingual edition - Daniel Ioniță (editor and principal translator) with Daniel Reynaud, Adriana Paul & Eva Foster - Editura Minerva, 2019 - \
- Romanian Poetry from its Origins to the Present - bilingual edition English/Romanian - Daniel Ioniță (editor and principal translator) with Daniel Reynaud, Adriana Paul and Eva Foster - Australian-Romanian Academy Publishing - 2020 - ;
Further reading
- Eugen Simion, Scriitori români de azi, vol. I, Bucharest, Editura Cartea Românească, 1978
- Ion Pop, Nichita Stănescu – spațiul și măștile poeziei, Bucharest, Editura Albatros, 1980
- Alex. Ștefănescu, Introducere în opera lui Nichita Stănescu, Bucharest, Editura Minerva, 1986
- Daniel Dimitriu, Nichita Stănescu – geneza poemului, Iași, Editura Universității Al. Ioan Cuza, 1997
- Doina Uricariu, Nichita Stănescu – lirismul paradoxal, Bucharest, Editura Du Style, 1998
- Corin Braga, Nichita Stănescu – orizontul imaginar, Cluj, Editura Dacia, 2002
- Mircea Bârsilă, Introducere în poetica lui Nichita Stănescu, Pitești, Editura Paralela 45, 2006
External links
Notes and References
- Web site: Scriitorii și alcoolul. Nichita Stănescu bea două sticle de vodcă pe zi, Marin Preda a murit după o beție cruntă. ro. Adevărul. 19 June 2011.
- Web site: Marele premiu "Nichita Stănescu" a fost câștigat de un poet maramureșean. ro. www.realitatea.net. 6 August 2014. 31 March 2008. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20131017223439/http://www.realitatea.net/marele-premiu-nichita-stanescu-a-fost-castigat-de-un-poet-maramuresean_166842.html. 17 October 2013.
- Web site: Colegiul Național "Nichita Stănescu" Municipiul Ploiești. ro. colegiul-nichita.ro. March 30, 2024.
- Web site: Liceul Theoretic Național "Nichita Stănescu" București sector 3. ro. www.liceulnichitastanescu.ro. March 30, 2024.