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Cultural Attitudes of Inter-war Romania in European Context

Course Code: MIR2201 • Study year: I • Academic Year: 2022-2023
Domain: History - Masters • Field of study: Regional Identities in Central Eastern Europe
Type of course: Compulsory
Language of instruction: Romanian
Erasmus Language of instruction: English
Name of lecturer: Maria Georgeta Orian
Seminar tutor: Maria Georgeta Orian
Form of education Full-time
Form of instruction: Lecture
Number of teaching hours per semester: 24
Number of teaching hours per week: 2
Semester: Summer
Form of receiving a credit for a course: Grade
Number of ECTS credits allocated 6

Course aims:

to include the most important moments of the Romanian literature and culture, in chronological evolution, in the inter-war period within European culture into a coherent structure
to practice close reading
to write a synthesis essay on the most important ways of thinking in Romanian culture in the period between the two world wars

Course Entry Requirements:

It is preferable for the student to have attended the courses of the six semesters of Romanian Literature, Culture and Civilization (Bachelor's degree)

Course contents:

This course will study the works of some important Romanian writers (such as Nae Ionescu, Mircea Eliade, Mircea Vulcănescu, Dan Botta, Eugen Ionescu, Emil Cioran; Mihail Sebastian) from the interwar period, in close relation with the work of some eEuropean intellectuals, such as Ferdinand Tonnies, Oswald Spengler, Leo Frobenius, Hermann Keyserling, Nikolai Berdiaev, Charles Maurras, Henri Massis, Jacques Maritain, Rene Guenon, Lucien Romier, Julius Evola, Ortega y Gasset. 

Teaching methods:

Cooperative Learning, Lecture, Student-Centered / Constructivist Approach

Learning outcomes:

to include the most important moments of the Romanian literature and culture, in chronological evolution, in the inter-war period wtihin European culture into a coherent structure

Learning outcomes verification and assessment criteria:

• Conversation; free exposition – 25% • Applications; essay writing; portfolio, project – 25% • Written paper, quiz; test - 50%

Recommended reading:

Stefan Baghiu, The Relative Autonomy of Literature: Romanian Literary Criticism and Theory Before World War II, Transilvania, nr. 5, Sibiu, 2020, 29-38.
Mircea Martin, Christian Moraru, and Andrei Terian (eds.), Romanian Literature as World Literature, Bloomsbury, New York:, 2018, 10-110.
Stefan Baghiu, Translations of Novels in the Romanian Culture during the Interwar Period and WWII (1918-1944): A Quantitative Perspective, Metacritic Journal for Comparative Studies and Theory, Cluj-Napoca, 2021, 28-45.