The Old Man and the Bureaucrats explained

The Old Man and the Bureaucrats
Author:Mircea Eliade
Title Orig:Pe strada Mântuleasa
Translator:Mary Park Stevenson
Language:Romanian
Pub Date:1967
English Pub Date:1979
Pages:127

The Old Man and the Bureaucrats is a 1967 novella by the Romanian writer Mircea Eliade. It tells the story of a man who is interrogated by Romania's communist authorities, and puzzles the interrogators when he tells stories of local lore. The book was published in English in 1979.[1] Together with two other stories by Eliade it forms the basis for the 1996 film Eu sunt Adam.[2]

Themes

Mircea Eliade wrote about his aim with the novella: "I wanted to engineer a confrontation between two mythologies: the mythology of folklore, of the people, which is still alive, still welling up in the old man, and the mythology of the modern world, of technocracy. ... These two mythologies meet head on. The police try to discover the hidden meaning of all these stories. ... But they are also blinkered, they can only look for political secrets. ... They are incapable of imagining that there can be meaning outside the political field."[3]

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Book: The Old Man and the Bureaucrats. WorldCat. 5286248. 2013-10-07.
  2. Web site: Scarlat. Cristina. 2005-01-23. Cristina Scarlat în dialog cu Nicolae Brânduş. Romanian. Nord Literar. 2014-12-25.
  3. Book: Carnis-Pope, Marcel. 2007. https://books.google.com/books?id=-0mJ7blUGtQC&pg=PA322. The Question of Folklore in Romanian Literary Culture. Carnis-Pope. Marcel. Neubauer. John. History of the Literary Cultures of East-Central Europe. Amsterdam. John Benjamins Publishing Company. 322. 9789027234551.