Paul Georgescu
Paul Georgescu (; November 7, 1923 – October 15, 1989) was a Romanian literary critic, journalist, fiction writer and
communist political figure. Remembered as both a main participant in the imposition of
Socialist Realism in its
Romanian form and a patron of dissenting
modernist and
postmodern literature, he began his career in politics during
World War II, when he sided with the
anti-fascist groups and the underground
Romanian Communist Party in opposition to the
Axis-aligned
Ion Antonescu regime. During the first twenty years of
Communist Romania, Georgescu assisted
Leonte Răutu in exercising
Stalinist control over
local literature, but also published young nonconformist authors, beginning with
Nichita Stănescu and
Matei Călinescu, in his ''
Gazeta Literară''. Sidelined over his own incompatibility with the Socialist Realist dogma, and returning to public life during the 1960s
liberalization enforced by
Nicolae Ceaușescu, he became openly adverse to Ceaușescu's variety of
national communism and clandestinely cultivated the prohibited ideology of
Trotskyism.
During the final part of his life, Paul Georgescu became especially known as an
experimental novelist, among the first postmodernists on the local scene, and, although physically impaired, one of the most prolific Romanian authors of the late 20th century. His main works of the time, including the critically acclaimed ''Vara baroc'' ("
Baroque in Summer"), deal with urban and suburban life on the
Bărăgan Plain, creatively
parodying the work of 19th and early 20th century writers. While admired for his contribution to fiction and his lifelong promotion of anti-dogmatic literature, Georgescu remains controversial for his political affiliations and his early participation in
censorship.
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