From Publishers Weekly
Romanian poet, philosopher and editor Petreu shows in this dense but fresh work that many Romanian intellectuals were seduced by fascist ideology during the interwar years—and that philosopher Cioran, an "aphorist of humorous despair," was haunted by this legacy for the rest of his life. Petreu details the ultranationalist, pro-Christian ideology of the Legion of the Archangel Michael, a movement of intellectuals that gained prominence in Romania after WWI. As with many ideologies of the era, Petreu writes, anti-Semitism lay at the movement's core. Cioran's own ideology, rooted in the wish to turn Romania's "depressing present into a grandiose future," included a more complex view of Jews, outlined in his 1936
The Transfiguration of Romania. He envied what he saw as Jewish productivity in government, business and the arts. But Petreu shows how his outlook, adapted from Spengler, also necessitated hostility toward Jews and other non-Romanians. Cioran left Romania after WWII and became ashamed of his earlier fascism, but Petreu mines his life for lessons to be learned today about how good intentions can lead to extremism.
(Nov. 4) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Review
"...an enigmatic and engaging study that is of great interest in places to the Romanian specialist and in others to those with more general curiosities." -Kevin Adamson --
Europe-Asia Studies"A vivid social and political memoir." --
Diane C. Donovan, Midwest Book Review"Brilliantly thorough." --
Carlin Romano, Chronicle of Higher Education"Dense but fresh work." --
Publishers WeeklyA sure and unobtrusive guide to the fevered, alienated milieu that turned Cioran...into a passionate partisan of Hitler. --
Robert Legvold in Foreign AffairsA thorough and vivid portrait... --
Radu IoanidAn enormous contribution to our understanding not only of Romania's tormented past, but also of European intellectual history. --
Marci Shore, Indiana University, Slavic and East European JournalExcellent... Marta Petreu's biography is a well-documented account of everything shameful that Cioran ever wrote. --
Zbigniew Janowski in First Things
See all Editorial Reviews