Marta Rădulescu

Marta Rădulescu
Born (1912-04-24)April 24, 1912
Pitești, Argeș County, Kingdom of Romania
Died 1959 (aged 47)
Occupation journalist, political militant
Nationality Romanian
Period 1929–1940
Genre autofiction, lyric poetry, satire, sketch story, fairy tale, reportage, travelogue, political novel

Marta D. Rădulescu (April 24, 1912 – 1959) was a Romanian poet, journalist, and novelist, made famous in the 1930s for her autofictional work. From an academic family with a penchant for radical politics, she veered into fascist politics, supporting the Iron Guard. The commitment shaped part of her work, which, from a satirical rendition of education in the provinces, becomes a document of interwar radicalization and student political battles. Scandal followed the publication of her early prose works, particularly after claims that they had been largely or entirely written by her father—or, alternatively, by her friend and putative lover N. Crevedia. Her polemic with Crevedia was consumed in the national press and in books written by both participants.

A believer in antisemitic conspiracy theories, Rădulescu put out the Iron Guard magazine Revista Mea between 1935 and 1937. By then, however, her sincerity and political literacy had been put into question by Crevedia. She faded into obscurity by 1940, when she issued her last novel, the first installment of an uncompleted cycle. Her other published works include modern fairy tales and a travelogue of her hiking trips.

Biography

Debut

Born in Pitești,[1] her father Dan Rădulescu was a chemist, and, in the 1930s, a professor at the University of Cluj.[2][3] Under the pseudonym Justus, he also penned literary works.[4] Marta's brother, Fluor, followed the same career path as their father, and ended up teaching alongside him.[3]

It was also in Cluj that Rădulescu completed her secondary education, at Regina Maria High School.[3] Her first published work, the poem Vorbind cu luna ("Talking to the Moon"), appeared in Dimineața Copiilor magazine (a supplement of Dimineața daily) in 1929.[1] Her first book, a collection of sketches called Clasa VII A ("Grade 7th A"), was published in 1931, followed the same year by Mărgele de măceș ("Dog-rose Beads")—vacation stories and verses which critics have deemed mediocre.[1][5] Marta also persevered as a poet, publishing new verse in Societatea de Mâine[6] and Hyperion.[7]

Of these writings, Clasa VII A was a best-seller, going through three successive editions at Editura Adevărul of Bucharest.[3] According to critic Pavel Dan, it was "not a good book", but "promising".[8] The stories were also at the center of a scandal involving both the young writer and her father. Since they made no effort to disguise facts from life, and satirized living people using their real names, critics readily claimed that her father had ghostwritten them: during the late 1920s, as a contributor to Cuvântul, Dan Rădulescu had campaigned for reform in public education.[3] Some found the work to be a distasteful act of revenge. Responding to such claims in Societatea de Mâine, Ion Clopoțel argued that Clasa VII A was rather a call for "betterment", "a protest against the lackadaisical nature of some classes being taught, and against some purposefully disengaged attitudes."[3] The modernist doyen Eugen Lovinescu noted the work for its "irreverent rebelliousness" which "gave harmless satisfaction to an entire generation of youth oppressed by their schooling."[9]

Sunt studentă!

By late 1932, Rădulescu was in correspondence with N. Crevedia, an admirer and like-minded humorist-writer, who visited her at her second home in Pitești. Crevedia may have also acted as her literary agent, arranging the text for print, and instructing her on how to polish her style.[10] Reportedly, Rădulescu was taking courses at the literature and philosophy faculties of Bucharest University, but did not graduate.[1][3] She began writing her self-styled "fantasy reportage pieces",[1] collectively grouped as Sunt studentă! ("I Am a Student!"). According to Pavel Dan, the pieces included here were too self-referential, even "surfeited": "[She] writes about the fact that she is now an author. Of course, this fact unsettles the entire universe. [...] Humanity itself breaks in half: on the one hand, those who appreciate her talent [...] and, on the other, those who know-nothings, such as university professors".[8] A similar verdict was provided by Lovinescu: "the writer explored the situations facing her tiny personality in two more novels [...], which failed to make her interesting anew; the genre is too much for her to handle".[9]

Mysteriously, this work was a fresco of her father's Cluj University, which Rădulescu may not have attended at all, to the backdrop of the Great Depression and political convulsions. Such details renewed speculation that Marta was signing works penned by Dan Rădulescu.[3] The student-narrator takes part in the strike of 1932, where she meets recruiters for both the Romanian Communist Party and the fascist Iron Guard (including a glimpse of the agitator Bănică Dobre).[3] The autofictional Rădulescu informs the reader that she prefers the Guard, but attends meetings of the far-left, during which communist activists imply that the difference between them and the fascists is a minor one.[3]

Mostly enthusiastic about her new prose, Crevedia took Marta with him to Bucharest. Inducted into the Romanian Writers' Society, she visited the Royal Foundations, meeting Tudor Arghezi, Panait Istrati, George Dorul Dumitrescu, and King Carol II.[11] Crevedia also introduced her to Lovinescu's literary society, Sburătorul, where he read from her drafts.[12] An excerpt of Sunt studentă! was published by Societatea de Mâine in January 1933.[13] The book finally came out later that year, again at Editura Adevărul.[3] The same press holding published the lifestyle magazine Realitatea Ilustrată, where Marta was also introduced. In summer 1933, she hiked and climbed through the Bucegi Mountains, or, as she called them, "Little Tibet". Her reportage, illustrated with her landscape photography, saw print in Realitatea Ilustrată.[14] Sunt studentă! was followed in 1934 by an autobiographical novel, Să ne logodim! ("Let's Get Engaged!") and a children's volume, Cartea celor 7 basme ("The Book of 7 Fairy Tales"), written in a pretentiously poetic style.[1][9] Rădulescu's work also appeared in Gândirea, Viața Literară, and Ideea Literară.[1]

Conflict with Crevedia

By then, the Rădulescus' relationship with the fascist Iron Guard was becoming ambiguous, then notoriously close. From initially liberal positions, which criticized the antisemitic excesses and vandalism of the Guardists, Dan slowly moved toward ideas which the authorities deemed "communistic", and then became a putative follower of the Guard. His daughter later complained that Editura Adevărul had removed antisemitic fragments from Sunt studentă!.[3] In December 1933, despite protests from the faculty, the government of Ion G. Duca arrested her father for his involvement with an outlawed subversive movement—possibly the Iron Guard or the Communist Party.[3]

Soon after, the literary relationship between Crevedia and his protegée ended, with the two alleged former lovers becoming enemies. What followed was, according to Crevedia himself, an "embarrassing amorous polemic".[4] In articles he published on the subject, he publicly suggested that himself or someone else had been the author of Rădulescu's various works. In July 1934, the regional magazine Viața Ardealului noted: "The case of Marta D. Rădulescu grips public opinion just like a novel or a change of government would"; her name, journalist Sever Stoica argued therein, "is almost as well-known as that of a Hollywood star."[15] Reportedly, Crevedia was upset that Marta had dissolved their engagement, and wished to take revenge.[12][15] He believed that Să ne logodim! was a book about their relationship.[10]

For her part, Marta claimed that the story of their engagement was a fabrication, and that the only words attesting her affection for him were plainly sarcastic. As evidence of this and other details, published Crevedia's letters to her in the same Viața Ardealului; on this basis, she threatened to sue him.[10] As Stoica noted, Crevedia had only succeeded in making her loved by the public. Stoica also rejected Crevedia's allegations about Marta's plagiarism, noting that he had made no effort to substantiate them.[15] A similar claim was stated by poet Mihai Beniuc: "Could it be that Miss Marta's books are so extraordinary that they were necessarily written by someone else?"[16] Reportedly, writer Mircea Damian confronted Crevedia at a Bucharest coffeehouse and "administered [him] a scathing public lesson in morality."[12] The claim of plagiarism from Crevedia was dismissed by his colleague Pan M. Vizirescu (who moreover claimed that Crevedia himself was a plagiarist), and then also by the literary researcher Ion Chinezu.[17]

Revista Mea and later years

From January 1935 to 1937, Marta again took up the Iron Guard cause publicly, putting out Revista Mea ("My Own Magazine") as a regional mouthpiece of the movement—with contributions from Guard affiliates such as Traian Brăileanu, Emil Cioran, and Ion Moța.[18] The latter two called for a rejuvenated Romanian literature, emancipated from "the Jewish shackles", and stripped of "kike commercialism".[19] His convictions largely defined by his children's affiliations, Dan Rădulescu was also part of the Revista Mea staff. His articles there clarified that he now viewed communism as "suicide", and the far-right as a guarantee of "[our] independent ancestral faith and ethnic countenance".[3] Fascist activists Mihail Polihroniade, Alexandru Constant and Ioan Victor Vojen were also featured, with pieces which attacked liberal democracy, supporting "organicism" and antisemitism.[20] The review published some 5,000 copies per issue, with more pages and higher quality print as time passed.[21] Although she advertised it as an independent publication for "honest reviews", from its first issue Revista Mea promoted the far-right ideology: in the editorial, Rădulescu alleged that a Jewish conspiracy at Editura Adevărul was preventing her from publishing, because of her father's politics.[2]

Himself sympathetic toward the Guard, Crevedia published his own account of the affair in the 1936 novel Buruieni de dragoste ("Love Weeds"), with himself as the protagonist Trestieru and Marta as Sanda Marinescu; Fluour is disguised as the agronomist Grâu Marinescu.[3] This work cemented earlier allegations against Dan Rădulescu (including that he had penned his daughters' work), but added that he was ideologically unreliable. Appearing as Professor Barbu Marinescu, he is a democratic-minded, "bookish" Freemason, obsessed with sociology and Fordism.[3] In love with Sanda, whom he believes to be his ideal "intellectual woman",[22] Trestieru is disappointed by her plagiarism and her overall mediocrity.[3] Praised by nationalists as an attack on the "spiritual emptiness" of the Guard's "detractors",[22] or as a "lifelike expression of today's Romanian bourgeoisie",[23] Buruieni de dragoste was panned by reviewer Romulus Demetrescu. A former schoolteacher whose students had included Fluour Rădulescu,[24] he described Crevedia's book as a megalomaniac's lampoon, "doing away with all discretion and delicacy".[25] Lovinescu sees Crevedia's book as accomplished, but "embarrassing".[26]

Also in 1936, Fluour himself became a published novelist, with a psychological novel of his adolescence, called Descătușare ("Unchaining")—the first part of an incomplete cycle.[24] Marta's final work was another novel, Streina ("The Foreigner"), which came out in 1940. This too was the first part of a planned cycle, called Ferentarii, that she did not complete.[1][3] Their father, meanwhile, reasserted his faith in the Guard by contributing, during the December 1937 election, to a collective homage in Buna Vestire.[27] According to historian Dragoș Sdrobiș, the first stages of World War II should have been a time of political prominence for the family, with the Iron Guard having set up its totalitarian government, the National Legionary State. However, they were not, and "historical silence fell" over all three Rădulescus.[3] Surviving the establishment of a Romanian communist regime, Marta died in 1959, aged 47; her father lived for another ten years.[28]

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Mariana Vartic, "Rădulescu Marta D.", in Aurel Sasu (ed.), Dicționarul biografic al literaturii române, Vol. II, p. 461. Pitești: Editura Paralela 45, 2004. ISBN 973-697-758-7
  2. 1 2 Clark, p.147
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 (Romanian) Dragoș Sdrobiș, "Stânga și dreapta la Universitatea din Cluj în anii 1930. Cazul profesorului Dan Rădulescu de la Facultatea de Științe", in Apostrof, Nr. 7 (302), 2015
  4. 1 2 (Romanian) Nicolae Scurtu, "O epistolă necunoscută a lui Nicolae Crevedia", in România Literară, Nr. 3/2012
  5. Ion Clopoțel, "Discuții și recensii. Marta D. Rădulescu, Mărgele de măceș", in Societatea de Mâine, Nr. 4–5/1932, p. 52
  6. Marta D. Rădulescu, "Anomalie. — Balconul (versuri)", in Societatea de Mâine, Nr. 1/1932, p. 6
  7. Marta D. Rădulescu, "Badinaj", in Hyperion. Revistă Literară și Artistică, Nr. 4/1932, p. 21
  8. 1 2 Pavel Dan, "Cărți. Marta D. Rădulescu, Sunt studentă", in Abecedar, Nr. 49–52/1934, pp. 15–16
  9. 1 2 3 Lovinescu, p. 243
  10. 1 2 3 Marta D. Rădulescu, "Cazul Marta D. Rădulescu", in Viața Ardealului, Nr. 6–7/1934, pp. 15–22
  11. Marta D. Rădulescu, "Săptămâna Cărții", in Realitatea Ilustrată, Nr. 333, June 1933, pp. 23–24
  12. 1 2 3 (Romanian) Vlaicu Bârna, "Un cuvânt nou în limba română", in România Literară, Nr. 42/2001
  13. Marta D. Rădulescu, "Pregătire de examen", in Societatea de Mâine, Nr. 1/1933, p. 6
  14. Marta D. Rădulescu, "Drumuri prin munți", in Realitatea Ilustrată, Nr. 347, September 1933, [n. p.]
  15. 1 2 3 "Mariajul literar între dșoara Marta D. Rădulescu și d. N. Crevedia. Convorbire cu d. Sever Stoica", in Viața Ardealului, Nr. 6–7/1934, pp. 13–15
  16. Mihai Beniuc, "Insemnări. Cazul Marta D. Rădulescu", in Pagini Literare, Nr. 2/1934, p. 128
  17. (Romanian) Nicolae Scurtu, "Un pseudonim, o epistolă și câteva tușe la un portret", in România Literară, Nr. 29/2015
  18. Clark, pp. 146–147; Ornea, pp. 422–424
  19. Ornea, pp. 422–424
  20. Săndulescu, pp. 156, 164–165, 171
  21. Săndulescu, pp. 162–163
  22. 1 2 Iosif Bâtiu, "Cărți. N. Crevedia: Buruieni de dragoste. Roman Editura Cugetarea", in Progres și Cultură, Nr. 2–3/1937, pp. 63–64
  23. Grigore Bugarin, "Cronica literară. N. Crevedia: Burueni [sic] de dragoste", in Banatul Literar, Artistic și Social, Nr. 1/1937, p. 17
  24. 1 2 Romulus Demetrescu, "Cărți", in Pagini Literare, Nr. 3–4/1936, pp. 202–203
  25. Romulus Demetrescu, "Cărți", in Pagini Literare, Nr. 1/1937, pp. 60–61
  26. Lovinescu, p. 242
  27. Ornea, p. 205
  28. Clark, pp. 146–147

References

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