Ion Călugăru
Ion Călugăru (; born
Ștrul Leiba Croitoru, also known as
Buium sin Strul-Leiba Croitoru,
B. Croitoru; February 14, 1902 – May 22, 1956) was a Romanian novelist, short story writer, journalist, and critic. As a figure on Romania's
modernist scene throughout the early
interwar period, he was noted for combining a
picturesque perspective on the rural
Jewish-Romanian community, to which he belonged, with traditionalist and
avant-garde elements. His early works, including the novel ''Copilăria unui netrebnic'' ("The Childhood of a Ne'er-do-well"), bring together elements of
Social Realism,
Surrealism and
Expressionism over a conventional narrative line based on
oral tradition and the classics of
Romanian literature. Călugăru, who moved from the moderate ''
Contimporanul'' magazine to the Surrealist platform ''
unu'', was also one of the main contributors to ''Integral'', a tribune for avant-garde literature in general. Although publicly known for his
socialist convictions and his
far left inclinations, he was, through his position at ''
Cuvântul'' newspaper, present in the proximity of
fascist circles, and had an ambiguous attitude toward his employer, the
far right thinker
Nae Ionescu.
Shortly before the establishment of Romania's
communist regime, Călugăru embraced
Socialist Realism and became and made official his relationship with the ruling
Romanian Communist Party. During this final period of his career, he wrote the controversial novel ''Oțel și pîine'' ("Steel and Bread"), an epic of
industrialization, widely seen as one of the most representative samples of politicized literature to have seen print in 1950s Romania. Despite his formal affiliation to
Marxism-Leninism, Călugăru had doubts about the new political realities and commented with sarcasm on the regime's self-contradictions. These opinions were expressed in his private diaries, which became the subject of research and public scrutiny some fifty years after his death.
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