Ancient Romanian Folk Poetry and Modernity: Ilarie Voronca’s “Songs of the Dead” Cover Image

L’antica poesia popolare romena e la modernità: I “canti del morto” di Ilarie Voronca
Ancient Romanian Folk Poetry and Modernity: Ilarie Voronca’s “Songs of the Dead”

Author(s): Dan Octavian Cepraga
Subject(s): Language and Literature Studies, Customs / Folklore, Romanian Literature, Sociology of Literature
Published by: Academia Română – Centrul de Studii Transilvane
Keywords: Romanian folk poetry; Ilarie Voronca; Constantin Brãiloiu;

Summary/Abstract: This article concerns the reception of Romanian folk poetry within the European modernity of the twentieth century. The case under consideration is that of a small collection of Romanian folk songs which circulated all over Europe in the twentieth century. Their strange and enigmatic poetry, of dazzling and primordial beauty, has fascinated writers and intellectuals, marking the meeting of modernity with the most ancient and unfathomable face of traditional European culture. The songs were collected by Constantin Brãiloiu, a great scholar and theorist of popular music, in 1930, and were translated into French by Ilarie Voronca, one of the main authors of the Romanian avant-garde of the interwar period.

  • Issue Year: XXX/2021
  • Issue No: Suppl. 1
  • Page Range: 143-154
  • Page Count: 12
  • Language: Italian