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'''''Gândirea''''' ("The Thinking"; known during its early years as ''Gândirea literară - artistică - socială'', "The Literary - Artistic - Social Thinking") was a ]n ], established in ] by ] and ] as a ] and ]-influenced journal (], ]), initially a literary supplement for the Cluj-based '']'';<ref>Grigorescu, p.432-433; Livezeanu, p.112</ref> it moved to ] in October 1922. Beginning in 1926, ] joined the magazine's leadership; he became its director and ideological guide in 1928, gradually moving it toward a ] ] focus &mdash; itself occasionally referred to as '''''Gândirism'''''. With just two interruptions in publication (1925 and 1933-34), ''Gândirea'' became one of the most important cultural magazines of the Romanian ]. '''''Gândirea''''' ("The Thinking"; known during its early years as ''Gândirea literară - artistică - socială'', "The Literary - Artistic - Social Thinking") was a ]n ], established in ] by ] and ] as a ] and ]-influenced journal (], ]), initially a literary supplement for the Cluj-based '']'';<ref>Grigorescu, p.432-433; Livezeanu, p.112</ref> it moved to ] in October 1922. Beginning in 1926, ] joined the magazine's leadership; he became its director and ideological guide in 1928, gradually moving it toward a ] ] focus &mdash; itself occasionally referred to as '''''Gândirism'''''. With just two interruptions in publication (1925 and 1933-34), ''Gândirea'' became one of the most important cultural magazines of the Romanian ].


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In a poll of 102 Romanian literary critics conducted in 2001 by the literary magazine '']'', the novel '']'', written by Mateiu Caragiale and published in ''Gândirea'' in 1926-1927, was chosen "best Romanian novel of the twentieth century". In a poll of 102 Romanian literary critics conducted in 2001 by the literary magazine '']'', the novel '']'', written by Mateiu Caragiale and published in ''Gândirea'' in 1926-1927, was chosen "best Romanian novel of the twentieth century".

==External links==
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==Notes== ==Notes==

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Cover of Gândirea

Gândirea ("The Thinking"; known during its early years as Gândirea literară - artistică - socială, "The Literary - Artistic - Social Thinking") was a Romanian literary magazine, established in Cluj by Cezar Petrescu and D. I. Cucu as a modernist and expressionist-influenced journal (May 1, 1921), initially a literary supplement for the Cluj-based Voinţa; it moved to Bucharest in October 1922. Beginning in 1926, Nichifor Crainic joined the magazine's leadership; he became its director and ideological guide in 1928, gradually moving it toward a mystical Orthodox focus — itself occasionally referred to as Gândirism. With just two interruptions in publication (1925 and 1933-34), Gândirea became one of the most important cultural magazines of the Romanian interwar period.

A proponent of home-grown traditionalist ideas, it eventually found itself in opposition to Eugen Lovinescu's modernist Sburătorul, as well as to the Poporanist Viaţa Românească. In its later years, the routinely hosted fascist-inspired and antisemitic articles, largely reflecting Crainic's own political views.

Several circles were formed around Gândirea, bringing together a large part of the period's Romanian intellectuals: Ion Barbu, Vasile Băncilă, Lucian Blaga, Dan Botta, Alexandru Busuioceanu, Mateiu I. Caragiale, Oscar Walter Cisek, Anastase Demian, Radu Gyr, N. I. Herescu, Vintilă Horia, Gib Mihăescu, Ştefan Neniţescu, Ovidiu Papadima, Victor Papilian, Ioan Pe­tro­vici, Ion Pillat, Adrian Maniu, Tiberiu Moşoiu, V. I. Popa, Dragoş Protopopescu, Ion Marin Sadoveanu, Ion Sân-Giorgiu, Dumitru Stăniloae, Paul Sterian, Francisc Şirato, Al. O. Teodoreanu, Ionel Teodoreanu, Sandu Tudor, Tudor Vianu, Pan M. Vizirescu, Vasile Voiculescu, G. M. Zamfirescu and many others (some of whom only temporarily), including Tudor Arghezi, George Călinescu, Şerban Cioculescu, Petre Pandrea, Mircea Eliade, Emil Cioran, Marcel Janco, Ion Vinea, etc.

History

Beginnings

For much of the 1920s, the magazine was a venue for modernist criticism, and involved in theoretical debates over the influence of Expressionism on early 20th century culture. It has also been argued that, before moving to Bucharest, the magazine was also involved in promoting a unitary Romanian culture inside the newly-acquired province of Transylvania, but this appears to have remained a secondary goal.

Without producing its own an artistic program, Gândirea counted among the few Romanian publications to praise Expressionist culture, a term which its editors often extended to non-Expressionists such as Constantin Brancusi, Max Reinhardt, Alexander Archipenko, and Dmitry Merezhkovsky. This focus was especially present in the essays of Adrian Maniu and the theater chronicles of Ion Marin Sadoveanu, but was also evidenced in Ion Sân-Giorgiu's articles about the impact of "Gothic traditions" on contemporary literature. This particular trend, accompanied by Gândirea's reviews of Futurism and Dada, caused Crainic (who was only a correspondent at the time), to express his distaste.

Despite hosting a large number of essays on art criticism, and in contrast with avant-garde journals such as Contimporanul, Expressionist graphics were only occasionally published in issues of Gândirea. Notably, in 1924, the editors chose to illustrate one of its issues with a print by Edvard Munch, accompanied by Tudor Vianu's comments. Nevertheless, later in the same year, Şirato used Gândirea for his essays on Visual Arts in Romania, which announced his break with Expressionist influences and his new preoccupation for highlighting Romanian specificity in local art and folklore. In parallel, Cisek's art chronicle (published between 1923 and 1929), gave, overall, equal exposure to all existing modernist trends.

Literature produced by the first of several Gândirea circles received criticism from several traditionalist circles, for being "sick modernists". Notably, historian and politician Nicolae Iorga, one of the major cultural figures of his time, who cited fears that Romania was becoming "Germanized" and argued that, aside from Crainic's poetry it published, the magazine was "the window copy of modernist jargon muttered by Munich only to be responded through other parrotings, insane or charlatanesque, by Vienna".

The focus on Expressionism was already being fused with traditionalist messages, to the point where Gândirea was becoming, according to Blaga, "a bouquet of centrifugal tendencies". During the 1920s, it hosted polemical articles by the traditionalists and traditionalist-inspired Iorga, Crainic, Cezar Petrescu, and Pamfil Şeicaru. Writing much later, Crainic expressed his opinion that the two visions were only apparently contradictory:

"Expressionism in painting is a German fatality. But from it has migrated towards us as well. Have the poetry of Blaga and Adrian Maniu, the theater of Blaga, Maniu, lost their ethnic (and therefore traditional) specificity for having borrowed the expressionist style from wherever?"

Reviewing the emphasis of traditionalism subsequently present in Gândirea's pages, the critic Ovid Crohmălniceanu argued that it was no less an evidence of a new kind of literature. Crainic himself remained open to some modernist influences, and was noted as the translator of works by Rainer Maria Rilke into Romanian.

Eary conflicts

During the 1930s, Gândirea was at the center of virulent polemics involving, on one side, former contributors such as Arghezi and Tudor Vianu, and, on the other, those younger journalists who recognized Crainic as their mentor. Initially, this took the form of a critique of both Modernism and Poporanism: in a 1930 article for Gândirea, Crainic notably indicated his distaste for "the irremediable materialism" he believed to be professed by Viaţa Românească.

Following this, Vianu, whose political options contrasted with the new trend, chose to discontinue his contributions and joined the staff at Viaţa Românească; although Lucian Blaga shared some views with Crainic, he too decided to distance himself from the magazine as early as 1930 (writing to Vianu that he did not consider himself a "disciple of our common friend Nichifor's Orthodoxy").

In December 1931, as the magazine celebrated its first decade, Crainic summed up Gândirea's guidelines as:

"Orthodoxy, nationalism, monarchy, which identify one of our generation from a thousand others — are nothing other than absolutely necessary conditions which make possible the true spiritual life. This is what our precursors cannot comprehend, a sad generation liquidating a culture that was not theirs and through this was not even cultural."

Commenting on Crainic's political commitments at a time when Carol II replaced his son Mihai I as king, Viaţa Românească's George Călinescu accused him of being

"A person incapable of any privation, seeker of pieces of silver and wordly pleasures, great seeker of noisy shindings where pistols are being shot, a cajoler and a careerist, outrageously dedicating Gândirea today to HRM Mihai, tomorrow to HRM Carol II, the day after tomorrow to the great apostle of the nation Nicolae Iorga, at the very moment when the homage could be associated with following a personal interest."

Around 1934, Crainic reflected upon the connection his magazine had with other traditionalist cultural institutions, and concluded that his group was fulfilling the legacy of Sămănătorul:

"Over the land that we have learned to love from Sămănătorul we see arching itself the azure tarpaulin of the Orthodox Church. We see this substance of this Church blending in with the ethnic substance."

At the time, Gândirism owed inspiration to Russian émigré authors, both Orthodox traditionalists such as Nikolai Berdyaev and several advocates of Eurasianism (Nikolai Trubetzkoy, Pyotr Savitsky, Pyotr Alexeyev, and Ivan Ilyin).

In his later columns for Gândirea, Crainic focused on explaining his ideal of ethnocracy in connection with the magazine's overall goals. This involved the denunciation of "foreign elements" and "minority islands", with a specific focus on the Jewish-Romanian community ("Jews make use of an indolent hospitality in order to deprive our kin of its ancient patrimony") and its alleged connections with the political establishment ("In declarations, in speeches and in acts of government our democrats have always declared themselves on the side of intruders and the allogeneous").

Writing in 1937, Crainic celebrated Gândirea's role in making nationalism and Orthodoxy priorities in Romania's intellectual and political life:

"The term 'ethnic' with its meaning of 'ethnical specificity' imprinted in all sorts of expressions of the people, as a mark of its original properties, has been spread for 16 years by the journal Gândirea. The same thing applies to the terms of autochthonism, traditionalism, Orthodoxy, spirituality and many more which became common goods of our current nationalist language."

In parallel, around 1931, the magazine's approach to philosophy was criticized by the Personalist thinker Constantin Rădulescu-Motru, who deemed it "belletristic"; the traditionalist philosopher Mircea Vulcănescu, although not himself associated with Gândirea, defended Crainic's influence in front of the Junimist tradition arguably represented by Rădulescu-Motru inside the University of Bucharest.

1934 hiatus and recovery

A scandal erupted in 1934, when the magazine was closed down over Crainic's implication in the trial of Premier Ion G. Duca's assassins, members of the fascist Iron Guard, a movement to which Crainic was close at the time. Instigation of the killing was attributed to, among others, Crainic, who faced trial while Gândirea, like Calendarul (his other major journal), was closed down by the authorities. The editor was eventually acquitted, but Calendarul was never allowed to resume publication. Instead, Crainic focused his energy on issuing Sfarmă-Piatră.

Following its reemergence, Gândirea was again involved in a debate with Rădulescu-Motru. Among others, the latter contended that the Gândirist focus on Orthodoxy went against the traditional openness of Romanian nationalism (which he referred to as Romanianism) towards modernization, equating Crainic's thought with "xenophobia" and "nationalist patter". In response, Crainic accused Rădulescu-Motru of displaying "a Masonic aversion towards Orthodoxy", and of not having grasped the sense of spirituality (to the statement "Romanianism is a spirituality coming to justify a realist order", he replied "Any man knows that the word spirituality has a strictly religious meaning"). Later, he defined Rădulescu-Motru's thought as "militant philosophical atheism", and, in a Gândirea article of 1937, referred to him as a "a philosophic simpleton ".

As early as April 1933, Crainic wrote articles welcoming Adolf Hitler's rise to power in Germany, and began support for corporatist goals. Four years later, he authored a Gândirea article in which he praised Italian fascism as:

"a spiritual political concept manifestations, torn away from the tight circle of positivism and freed from the suffocating prison of materialism, fall into order on the ghostly marrow of history, prolonging themselves into the recess of past centuries and into the anticipations of the coming century. A man bears there, under his vast dome-like forehead, our European century: Benito Mussolini. The State created by Mussolini is the exemplary State. Fascism is no longer capitalism, no longer socialism, but an authoritarian adjustment of every factor in production, geared into a social organism where nothing is left to chance. More than any other country, Romania needs such a moral transformation in the depths of its soul the spirit of a new Rome will suggest the shape of history destined to be created by a nationalist Romania."

This coincided with friendly relations between Crainic and the Italian Comitati d'azione per l'universalità di Roma (CAUR, the "Fascist International"), first evidenced in 1933-1934, at a time when Mussolini was undecided over the local political movement which was to attract his support. CAUR was planning to advance Crainic money to start a new publication, one entirely dedicated to support for Italian cause, but the design was abandoned when Ugo Sola, the Italian ambassador to Bucharest, advised against it (having previously been refused by the Iron Guard when he had approached them with a similar project). As CAUR ended its all its relations with the Guard (who opted instead in favor of Nazi backing), it kept its contacts with Crainic and other less revolutionary-minded Romanian politicians (Mihail Manoilescu, Alexandru Averescu, Nicolae Iorga, Alexandru Vaida-Voevod, Octavian Goga and A. C. Cuza).

Writing in 1938 for his Porunca Vremii, Crainic argued:

"There exists authority based on love. The latter is Mussolini's authority over his people. It bursts out of the characteristic forces of of the creative personality, like fire caused by the bombs of explotion. Mussolini does not terrorize, for Mussolini does not kill. Mussolini attracts. All his system is based on the fervent and unanimous adherence of his people."

Late 1930s polemics

After 1935, Crainic's press engaged in a polemic with modernists of the Eugen Lovinescu school, which at times turned into accusations that he was "a petty poser" and "a falsifier of Romanian culture". Crainic and his traditionalist followers rejected Lovinescu's views on local "synchronism" with Western culture (an attitude which has drawn comparisons with Protochronist messages in Communist Romania). Although Crainic expressed his thoughts on the matter mainly in Sfarmă-Piatră, Gândirea was notably host to an article of his which likened the fight against Lovinescu's influence to "a second independence ".

After Emil Cioran published his The Transfiguration of Romania in 1937, Crainic reacted to the book's pro-totalitarian but overtly skeptic message, calling it "a bloody, merciless, massacre of today's Romania, without even of matricide and sacrilege". To Cioran's support for modernization on a model which owed inspiration to both Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union, as well as to his critical observations on Romanian traditions, Crainic replied by urging young people not to abandon "faith in our kin's arriving century".

In early 1938, Nicolae Iorga, who had by then come into open conflict with the Iron Guard, voiced criticism of Cuvântul (a paper associated with the political movement), arguing that, despite an emphasis on traditionalism and localism, its ideological guidelines took direct inspiration from the foreign models of Nazism and Italian fascism. The dispute, involving, on the other side, Nae Ionescu, drew echoes in Gândirea — also challenged by Vulcănescu's ideas that his magazine had failed to identify with Orthodoxy, Crainic polemized that Gândirism had set itself "against all internationalist currents dominating our age". At the time, publications headed by Ionescu and Crainic, despite maintaining separate visions on several core issues, showed equal support for several ideas (up to a certain point, Crainic was a direct influence on Ionescu). At the same time, Iorga and Crainic had comme to clash over Crainic's emphasis on religion (in front of Iorga's secularism), his political choices, as well as the few links with modernism maintained by Crainic.

Similar criticism of Crainic's political influence on Gândirea was voiced, in retrospect, by Pamfil Şeicaru (himself connected with the Iron Guard for part of his life), who believed that the magazine aimed to adapt the influential ideas of Roman Catholic political activism to an Orthodox environment (" Orthodoxism was meant to facilitate the establishment of a party similar to the Democatholic ones"). He also argued that

"A political-Orthodox movement crystallized inside a party is destined to be a vain attempt, no matter how much talent N. Crainic may have. And a political ambition is not enough in creating a large-scale social movement. Hence the deviation of Gândirea magazine from its initial impulse."

The magazine's articles featured accusations that Arghezi's group, together with others, was condoning "pornography", siding with Iorga's similar views on Arghezi's work. In this context, Crainic and his collaborators included antisemitic texts in Gândirea's columns. At the time, through the voice of Crainic, Gândirea hailed Nazi Germany for having "immediately thrown over the border all Judaic pornographers and even those German writers infected with Judaism", and Fascist Italy for "immediately sanctioning a scabrous short story writer".

1940s

Eventually, Crainic joined the fascist National Christian Party as it came to power, inspiring the drafting antisemitic legislation. He later became a member of Carol II's National Renaissance Front (FRN), being appointed to the leadership of the Propaganda Ministry. Despite the violent conflict between Carol and the Iron Guard, he continued to be ambivalent towards the latter, especially after the FRN was confronted with the Soviet occupation of Bessarabia and the Second Vienna Award; carrying on as minister during the World War II Iron Guard government (the National Legionary State), Crainic allowed its activists to broadcast their anthem on public radio.

In 1941, celebrating twenty years of existence, Gândirea hosted Crainic's thoughts on the "Jewish Question" and the new authoritarian and antisemitic regime of Ion Antonescu, which it had come to support:

"Throughout this time , Judaism was our most bitter enemy. Not an adversary, but an enemy . Today, Judaism is vanquished. A splendid act of justice has suppressed Adevărul, Dimineaţa and Lupta. The rest, it was only in 1940 that I could carry out when, as Minister of Propaganda, I extirpated all Jewish daily and weekly publications in Romania. The holy right of speaking in the name of Romanianism belongs now to Romanians exclusively. There shall be no more artistic and cultural ideals where Judaism could dissimulate itself."

Following the recovery of Bessarabia during Operation Barbarossa, Gândirea joined the group of magazines that were blaming its original loss on the Bessarabian Jewish community, while Crainic identified past and present Soviet policies with "Judeo-Bolshevism".

Disestablishment and legacy

The magazine ceased publication in 1944, after the Soviet Red Army entered Romania (see Soviet occupation of Romania).

In a poll of 102 Romanian literary critics conducted in 2001 by the literary magazine Observator Cultural, the novel Craii de Curtea-Veche, written by Mateiu Caragiale and published in Gândirea in 1926-1927, was chosen "best Romanian novel of the twentieth century".

Notes

  1. Grigorescu, p.432-433; Livezeanu, p.112
  2. Livezeanu, p.112
  3. Grigorescu, p.375
  4. Grigorescu, p.375, 381-382
  5. Grigorescu, p.381-382
  6. Grigorescu, p.387, 388
  7. Grigorescu, p.387
  8. Livezeanu, p.114
  9. Grigorescu, p.432
  10. Grigorescu, p.432-433
  11. Grigorescu, p.433
  12. Grigorescu, p.433-434
  13. Grigorescu, p.434-435
  14. Rendered in Livezeanu, p.111
  15. Iorga, in Grigorescu, p.376
  16. Iorga, in Grigorescu, p.377
  17. Blaga, in Grigorescu, p.380
  18. Livezeanu, p.115
  19. Crainic, in Grigorescu, p.378
  20. Crohmălniceanu, in Livezeanu, p.111
  21. Livezeanu, p.118
  22. Crainic, in Ornea, p.77
  23. Ornea, p.116-117
  24. Blaga, in Ornea, p.116; see also Vasilache
  25. Crainic, in Ornea, p.95
  26. Călinescu, in Ornea, p.264
  27. Crainic, in Ornea, p.102; in Veiga, p.169
  28. Veiga, p.169
  29. Ornea, p.100-101
  30. Crainic, in Ornea, p.100-101
  31. Crainic, in Ornea, p.101
  32. Crainic, in Caraiani, note 23
  33. Ornea, p.78-79, 180-181
  34. Ornea, p.99; Veiga, p.169, 253, 255
  35. Ornea, p.99, 230-231, 298, 300
  36. Ornea, p.244-245
  37. Ornea, p.245
  38. Rădulescu-Motru, in Ornea, p.121, 123
  39. Crainic, in Ornea, p.124
  40. Rădulescu-Motru, in Ornea, p.122
  41. Crainic, in Ornea, p.124
  42. Crainic, in Ornea, p.125
  43. Crainic, in Ornea, p.456
  44. Ornea, p.253-255, 414
  45. Ornea, p.253-255; Pop
  46. Crainic, in Ornea, p.251-252
  47. Veiga, p.252-253
  48. Veiga, p.253
  49. Veiga, p.253
  50. Veiga, p.253
  51. Crainic, in Ornea, p.253
  52. Sfarmă-Piatră, in Ornea, p.439
  53. Maier; Ornea, p.23-26, 438-441; Pop
  54. Maier
  55. Crainic, in Maier
  56. Crainic, in Ornea, p.143
  57. Crainic, in Ornea, p.143
  58. Ornea, p.98
  59. Crainic, in Ornea, p.99
  60. Vasilache
  61. Livezeanu, p.118-120
  62. Ornea, p.113
  63. Şeicaru, in Ornea, p.107, 242
  64. Şeicaru, in Ornea, p.107
  65. Ornea, p.448
  66. Ornea, p.456
  67. Ornea, p.36, 69-70, 448, 456
  68. Crainic, in Ornea, p.456
  69. Ornea, p.397
  70. Ornea, p.328, 379-380
  71. Ornea, p.328
  72. Final Report, p.92; Livezeanu, p.118
  73. Crainic, in Ornea, p.402; alternative translation in Final Report, p.92
  74. Final Report, p.96

References

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