1 / 52

Discovering Eminescu: The Evening Star of Romanian Poetry

Explore the life and literary work of Mihai Eminescu, the last European romantic poet. From his humble upbringing to his iconic status in Romanian culture and universal literature.

dpreston
Télécharger la présentation

Discovering Eminescu: The Evening Star of Romanian Poetry

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Welcome to Discovering Eminescu The Evening Star of the Romanian poetry by Stefaniada Voichita

  2. Agenda Slide • Mihai EminescuIntroduction to the life and literary work of the last European romantic • Discovering Eminescu • Eminescu’s Life • Literary Work • The Poet • The Storyteller • Eminescu within Romanian Culture • Eminescu within Universal Literature • Seen by others • Today - A Romanian Icon

  3. Mihai EminescuIntroduction tothe life and literary workof the last European romantic 1850-1889

  4. "Days go past and days come still All is old and all is new, What is well and what is ill, You imagine and construe; Do not hope and do not fear, Waves that leap like waves must fall; Should they praise or should they jeer, Look but coldly on it all".  Mihai Eminescu

  5. Discovering Eminescu Eminescu’s Life • on 15th of January, in Botosani, a North Eastern town of Romania, the future poet Mihai Eminescu is bornas the 7th of 11 children • his parents were small land owners

  6. Eminescu’s Life 1850-1857 • the future poet spends his childhood in Ipotesti, a village where his parents had a small estate, 8 km away from Botosani • today, here we can find Mihai Eminescu Memorial House photo from the beginning of the XX-century

  7. Memorial home

  8. Eminescu’s Life 1858-186 0 • registered to National School in Cernauti • here he attends the courses of the 3rd and 4th form, and finished 4th grade as the fifth of 82 students 186 0-1863 • he attends Gymnasium in Cernauti, courses of the 1st and 2nd form, repeating the latter Cernauti town center, at the middle of the XIX-century

  9. Eminescu’s Life 1864 • he works for a short time as a clerk to Law Court in BotosanI 1865 • comes back to Cernauti gymnasium as a private pupil • he takes up lodgings with Aron Pumnul, his gymnasium teacher, a great linguist, philologist and owner of a large library 1866 • in January, Aron Pumnul dies

  10. Eminescu’s Life 1867 • he joins as a prompter and copyist into a theatre group, with which he travels all over the country 1868 • settled in Bucharest, he meets I. L. Caragiale, the greatest Romanian playwright The make-up box used by the time of theatrical tour Ion Luca Caragiale 1852-1912

  11. Eminescu’s Life 1869-1872 • he registers at the Faculty of Philosophy, Vienna University • here he meets Veronica Micle, a poetess, whom he will have a passionate and troubled relationship with 1872-1874 • he attends Philosophy, History, Economy and Law courses of Berlin University Veronica Micle 1850-1889

  12. Eminescu’s Life 1874 • he is appointed director of the Central Library in Iasi 1875 • takes good care of the Central Library in Iasi and he is appointed a school inspector • he meets Ion Creanga, whom he advises to write the latter will become one of the greatest Romanian storyteller and his best friend Eminescu’s best friend Ion Creanga 1838-1889

  13. Eminescu’s Life 1876 • has public lectures at Junimea Society and Literary Talks periodical 1877 • continues his journalistic activity with Iasi Messenger, writes theatre chronicles and attends the meetings of Junimea society • in the second half of October, he moves to Bucharest, where he works as an editor to The Time newspaper 1878 • works at The Time newspaper The court yard of the building where the newspaper The Time used to run

  14. Eminescu’s Life 1879-1882 • his relationship with Veronica Micle is going to be deteriorated and he gives up the idea of marrying her • continues his work at The Time and at Junimea meetings he reads most of his poems 1883 • in August, he shows signs of mental disorder and he is put in a sanatorium • at the end of December, the volume “Poems” is published, the only volume published when still alive • he ceased writing 1884-1888 • continues to work, occupying himself with small jobs • his disease recourses 1889 • his health is put to serious damage and on 15th of June he dies • he is buried on 17th of June at Bellu Cemetery in Bucharest

  15. Eminescu’s Life The last photo of the poet, made in 1887

  16. Literary Work His literary work was a vast work, including several domains, from lyrical poetry to political journalism. The first evidence of Eminescu as a writer is in 1866. • that year, when teacher, Aron Pumnul, dies, his students published a pamphlet, in which appears his 1st poem signed M. Eminoviciu Eminescu’s first poem • also the periodical The Family in Pest publishes his poem “Had I” • the director of the above mentioned periodical changed his name from Eminovici into Eminescu, a name that the poet adopted for the rest of his life “At Aron Pumnul's Grave”

  17. The Poet Mihai Eminescu was only 20 when Titu Maiorescu, the top literary critic in Romania, dubbed him: “A REAL POET”

  18. The Poet

  19. The Poet Eminescu poems span a large range of themes • Nature • History • Social commentary • Existential perceptions such as:

  20. The Poet Eminescu’s poetry focuses on myths that appear and disappear, in order to reappear, in other poems, with modified connotations

  21. The Poet 1.The myth of the birth and the death of the universe related with the myth of the scholar (the wise man, the magus) who knows to read the signs from the books of the world and defends the old law, that we can find in the works such as: “Remember You Will Die” “The Twins” “The Prayer of a Dacian” “The First Letter” The device of the world is approached philosophically, starting with the moment of the genesis and ending with its disappearance

  22. The Poet Facsímile “Remember you will die”

  23. The Poet 2. The next one is the myth of history where he explains the evolution of the world highlightingthe incompatibility between the plenitude and the wisdom of the past times and the decay of the present times in works as: “The Imitators” “Emperor and Proletarian” “The Third Letter” The device of the world is approached, now, in a historic perspective and through ethical criteria

  24. The Poet 3. Eminescu’s next myth is the erotic myth where nature and love are complimentary in poems like: “O, remain” “Down Where The Lonely Poplars Grow” “The lake” “And if” “Thinking of you” “The evening star” “Longing” “Blue flower” “What is love” Suggesting the lust of falling in love, the melancholy, the incompatibility between man and woman, the nostalgia of the failure 

  25. Facsímile “The Evening Star” Image from “The Evening Star”

  26. ‘The Evening Star’s” main character By Sabin Balasa Lucifer

  27. “The Evening Star” book’s cover

  28. The Poet 4. The myth of the return to the basic elements, based on the idea of making man live again according to the laws of the cosmos. “The lake” “Drowsy birds” “Why do you wail, o forest tree” “The tale of the forest” The wood is a recurrent element in this possible security space. The landscape is not only a state of mind; it is also the place where the Romantic spirit rediscovers the rhythms of the big universe. 

  29. Image from “The lake” “Drowsy birds” book’s cover

  30. The Poet 5. The following myth is the creator’s myth, therefore, his existential philosophy too. “Ode in Ancient Meter” “The Evening Star” • are typical poems for this category, although their lyrical forms are so different This myth expresses the position of the creator and his mission in connection with all the other experiences of the spirit.

  31. The Poet • The myth of poetry that appears under two aspects: • the first one is direct, explicit: • poetry as a reflection subject in the poem • the poet is the one who covers "the sad and naked corpse with images clothes" • the second one which is indirect, essential: • poetry as an expression of a profound inner musicality, a generalized orphism, music impossible to be confounded that becomes the identity sign of Eminescu’s style The ideas, the states of mind, the visions, the myths, they all appear and disappear in an essentially musical discourse. His poetry is music incorporated in the language.

  32. Painted images from his poems “Mortua Est” by P. Marvi “The evening star” by A. Murnu ‘MIradoniz” by E. Opris “The evening star” by S. Bousa “Drowsy birds” by Balasa “IV letter” by G. Petrascu “Emperor and proletarian” by Ciucurencu “The evening star” by Ciucurencu “Poor Dionis” by M. Dima “Cezara” by V. Grigore “The ghosts” by C. Ressu “Prince charming, the Tear-begotten” by Vulcanescu “Calin” anonymous

  33. The Storyteller While his literary work encompassed every genre of poetry (love, philosophical, cosmological, historical, socio-satiric, mythological), Eminescu soaked his nib in the dramatic genre writing prose as well. “Mira” - drama “Prince charming, The Tear-Begotten” “Caesara” “Poor Dionis” “Wasted genius” – novel excerpt where we can find his self-portrait “Icons, old and new” - chronicles

  34. “Prince Charming, The Tear-Begotten” – book cover “Wasted Genius” – book cover

  35. Eminescu’s linden tree in park Copou, under which he could easily find his muse to write great poems.

  36. The Genius A poet , a prose-writer and a playwright , Mihai Eminescu marked in Romanian literature the exceptional moment of the meeting between the genius individual and genius thinking and sensibility. Time, space, life, death, love, hatred, landscapes , the real and the fantastic, myths, existential adventures, the search for one's own self, the joy of living, the possible and the impossible , the tragic and the comic, setting deeds on a cosmic orbit - are all integrated in his work within a system of obsessions and relations which confers a timbre with polyphonic nuances upon his literary approach, attitude and manner. The Father of Modern Romanian Language Eminescu gave Romanian poetry the dimensions it had not had before him. The world where Eminescu takes us is tremendously vast related to space and time. There, the thinker’s eye reaches the most hidden recesses of the human soul and rises to the highest concepts of reason. Of course, these features are brought to light by his most typical epithets. Eminescu - established the future direction of Romanian poetry of the 20th century. His work provided a framework, a real model for future essential Romanian poets such as: Lucian Blaga, George Bacovia, Tudor Arghezi, Ion Pillat, Alexandru Philippide, Emil Botta, Nichita Stanescu so forth. Eminescu within Romanian Culture

  37. Eminescu within Romanian Culture The National Poet Mihai Eminescu’s poetry has been passed down through generations to epitomize the essence of Romanian consciousness. Consequently, he is quintessential for the self-definition of Romanian national identity. Who is Mihai Eminescu? At this question all Romanians will answer: Our national poet! He represents the Romanian nation in mankind's concert. One of the greatest lyrical poets of world literature, comparable with Byron, Shelley or Lermontov, a revolutionary poet in terms of attitude, and to posterity an inestimable treasure of verse. 

  38. Eminescu within Universal Literature • Eminescu is considered the greatest of the Romantics and the Last one. • Even though he joined the romantics, he belonged to the next generation as well. Not only by poeticizing the noble past, fairy tales, legends and folklore, but because he also had a soft spot for ancient traces surrounding him. • His poems aimed to touch the very core of human soul. And although, he concentrated on the essence of being Romanian, his system of existential perceptions transferred him into a universal context.

  39. His poems were translated in many different languages, incorporating his genius into universal literature. Mihai Eminescu - Poetry

  40. These pictures illustrate Eminescu’s evolution from youth to old ages

  41. Seen by others Mihai Eminescu

  42. I. L. Caragiale <<He was handsome, indeed. He had a classical-featured face, framed by long black locks, a broad serene forehead and big eyes (watching these windows of him, you could certainly see that someone was in there). His smile was mild and deeply melancholic. He had the air of a young saint just descended from an icon; he resembled to a child predestined to suffering, whose face bore the mark of some future pains. “-Allow me to introduce myself: Mihai Eminescu.” This is how I met him. >> I L Caragiale

  43. GARABET IBRAILEANU: "Eminescu is not only the greatest Romanian writer. He is an almost inexplicable occurrence in our literature. In 1870 he simply fell in the middle of our poor national literature like a meteor from some other world. One of the greatest lyrical poets of the 19th century - so rich in poets, maybe the richest - is born by chance right here, in our country...” GEORGE CALINESCU: “… the greatest poet ever born or likely to be born on Romanian land… Below a lonely star fading in the far-off skies, rivers might run dry and a forest or a fortress might sprout over his tomb, before this land could gather up every drop of sap to make it rise again in the slender stalk of another lily, whose perfume strength could match the poet's own."

  44. Marin Sorescu, dedicated this hymn to the man who equaled the anonymity: "There was only a fine country    On the shore of a sea,    Where the waves tie white knots    In the uncombed beard of a king-    Like waters, like flowing trees    In which the moon had its round nest.    And more particularly there were some simple people      .........................................................    There were moreover deep forests    And a youth who would talk with them,    Asking them why they swayed without a breath of wind?    ...........................................................  Also there were some linden-trees,    And the young couple who knew    How to make their blossoms snow    Into a kiss.    And some birds or some clouds    Which kept floating over them,    Like long, soft-moving plains.    And since all of these    Had to have a name,    One name alone,    They were named    Eminescu.”

  45. his signature

  46. Today - A Romanian Icon Eminescu is omnipresent in Romania. His face was depicted on 1000 lei-bill issued in 1998. And on the new 500-lei bill issued in 2005 as the highest Romanian bill. Also, many schools and institutions are named after him, and his anniversaries became national celebrations.

  47. His statues are everywhere.

  48. Eminescu museum

  49. http://www.estcomp.ro/eminescu/mihai.html

More Related