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Contribution to Book
Writing Resistance: Lena Constante's The Silent Escape and the Journal as Genre in Romania's (Post)Communist Literary Field
Rumba Under Fire: The Arts of Survival from West Point to Delhi (2016)
  • Carla Baricz, Yale University
Abstract
This essay examines the journals of Lena Constante, a Romanian playwright, set designer, and puppeteer, who was tried and imprisoned as a political dissident in the Socialist Republic of Romania in 1953. It asks broad questions about the status of dissident literature in a repressive political regime and argues that, in certain totalitarian regimes, like Ceausescu's, the term “dissenting literature”  functions, at least in practice, as an oxymoron, since such literature did not participate in what Bordieu calls “the literary field,” even in secret or samizdat form. However, the essay also suggests that private literature – in the form of journals, diaries, notes, etc. – can offer a form of silent escape to those who make use of it, helping individuals to establish and uphold values that differ from those of a repressive system.
Keywords
  • lena constante
Publication Date
2016
Editor
Irina Dumitrescu
Publisher
Punctum Books
ISBN
978-0-692-65583-2
DOI
10.21983/P3.0134.1.00
Publisher Statement
A professor of poetry uses a deck of playing cards to measure the time until her lover returns from Afghanistan. Congolese soldiers find their loneliness reflected in the lyrics of rumba songs. Survivors of the siege of Sarajevo discuss which book they would have never burned for fuel. A Romanian political prisoner writes her memoir in her head, a book no one will ever read. These are the arts of survival in times of crisis.

Rumba Under Fire proposes we think differently about what it means for the arts and liberal arts to be “in crisis.” In prose and poetry, the contributors to Rumba Under Fire explore what it means to do art in hard times. How do people teach, create, study, and rehearse in situations of political crisis? Can art and intellectual work really function as resistance to power? What relationship do scholars, journalists, or even memoirists have to the crises they describe and explain? How do works created in crisis, especially at the extremes of human endurance, fit into our theories of knowledge and creativity?

The contributors are literary scholars, anthropologists, and poets, covering a broad geographic range — from Turkey to the United States, from Bosnia to the Congo. Rumba Under Fire includes essays, poetry and interviews by Tim Albrecht, Carla Baricz, Greg Brownderville, William Coker, Andrew Crabtree, Cara De Silva, Irina Dumitrescu, Denis Ferhatović, Susannah Hollister, Prashant Keshavmurthy, Sharon Portnoff, Anand Taneja, and Judith Verweijen.
Citation Information
Carla Baricz. "Writing Resistance: Lena Constante's The Silent Escape and the Journal as Genre in Romania's (Post)Communist Literary Field" New YorkRumba Under Fire: The Arts of Survival from West Point to Delhi (2016) p. 31 - 52
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/carla-baricz/4/
Creative Commons License
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons CC_BY-NC International License.