Mircea Ivănescu

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Mircea Ivănescu (Romanian pronunciation: [ˈmirtʃe̯a ivəˈnesku]; March 26, 1931 – July 21, 2011) was a Romanian poet, writer and translator, and a forerunner of Romanian postmodernism, which was characteristic of the 1980s. His translations from global literature into Romanian include James Joyce, Franz Kafka, and F. Scott Fitzgerald.

Background[edit]

Prolific poet, debuting with Lines in 1968, Ivănescu has published almost every two years a new volume during four decades. His lyrics, often depicting a day-to-day I disguised as "mopete" (an anagram of "poet" and "poem" it was thought, but the poet himself denied it in an interview[1]), has rehabilitated narrativity in Romanian poetry in the seventies, echoing American post-war major poets. He won the Mihai Eminescu Poetry Prize (1998) and was proposed by Romanian Professional Writers Association for Nobel Prize in 1999.

Poetry collections[edit]

  • Versuri (EPL, 1968)
  • Poeme (Eminescu, 1970)
  • Poesii (Cartea Românească, 1970)
  • Alte versuri (Eminescu, 1972)
  • Poem (Cartea Românească, 1973)
  • Alte poeme (Albatros, 1973)
  • Amintiri (Cartea Românească, 1973)
  • Alte poesii (Dacia, 1976)
  • Poesii nouă (Dacia, 1982)
  • Poeme nouă (Cartea Românească, 1983)
  • Alte poeme nouă (Cartea Românească 1986)
  • Versuri vechi, nouă (Eminescu, 1988)
  • Poeme alese (1966–1989)
  • Poeme vechi, nouă (Cartea Românească, 1989)
  • Versuri (Eminescu, 1996)
  • Poezii (Vitruviu, 1997)
  • Poesii vechi şi nouă, antologie (Minerva, 1999)

References[edit]

External links[edit]