Emil Isac

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Emil_Isac an entity of type: Thing

Emil Isac [emil isak] (17a de majo 1886 - 25a de marto 1954) estis rumana poeto, kiu naskiĝis, mortis kaj pasigis plejparton de sia vivo en la transilvania urbo Cluj. Li naskiĝis en familio de intelektuloj kaj studis en sia naskiĝurbo kaj en la urbeto Năsăud. Li debutis en 1903 en la revuo Familia, post kio li kunlaboris kun pluraj rumanaj gazetoj. Politike li estis maldekstrema. En Esperanto aperis de li, en la traduko de Tiberio Morariu, la kolekto de proz-poemoj Sonorilo kaj kanono, Köln: Heroldo de Esperanto, 1930. rdf:langString
Emil Isac (Romanian pronunciation: [eˈmil iˈsak]; May 27, 1886 – March 25, 1954) was an Austro-Hungarian-born Romanian poet, dramatist, short story writer and critic. Noted as one of the pioneers of Symbolism and modernist literature in his native region of Transylvania, he was in tandem one of the leading young voices of the Symbolist movement in the neighboring Kingdom of Romania. Moving from prose poems with cosmopolitan traits, fusing Neo-romantic subjects with modernist free verse, he later created a lyrical discourse in the line of Social Realism. Isac was likewise known for criticizing traditionalist and nationalist trends in local literature, but, by the end of World War I, opened his own poetry to various traditionalist influences. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Emil Isac
rdf:langString Emil Isac
rdf:langString Emil Isac
rdf:langString Emil Isac
xsd:date 1954-03-25
xsd:date 1886-05-27
xsd:integer 27152577
xsd:integer 1117689972
rdf:langString Emil Isac's sig.svg
xsd:date 1886-05-27
rdf:langString Isac in 1912
xsd:date 1954-03-25
rdf:langString Austro-Hungarian, Romanian
rdf:langString poet, critic, dramatist, journalist, translator, academic, politician, diplomat, civil servant
xsd:integer 1902
rdf:langString Emil Isac [emil isak] (17a de majo 1886 - 25a de marto 1954) estis rumana poeto, kiu naskiĝis, mortis kaj pasigis plejparton de sia vivo en la transilvania urbo Cluj. Li naskiĝis en familio de intelektuloj kaj studis en sia naskiĝurbo kaj en la urbeto Năsăud. Li debutis en 1903 en la revuo Familia, post kio li kunlaboris kun pluraj rumanaj gazetoj. Politike li estis maldekstrema. En Esperanto aperis de li, en la traduko de Tiberio Morariu, la kolekto de proz-poemoj Sonorilo kaj kanono, Köln: Heroldo de Esperanto, 1930.
rdf:langString Emil Isac (Romanian pronunciation: [eˈmil iˈsak]; May 27, 1886 – March 25, 1954) was an Austro-Hungarian-born Romanian poet, dramatist, short story writer and critic. Noted as one of the pioneers of Symbolism and modernist literature in his native region of Transylvania, he was in tandem one of the leading young voices of the Symbolist movement in the neighboring Kingdom of Romania. Moving from prose poems with cosmopolitan traits, fusing Neo-romantic subjects with modernist free verse, he later created a lyrical discourse in the line of Social Realism. Isac was likewise known for criticizing traditionalist and nationalist trends in local literature, but, by the end of World War I, opened his own poetry to various traditionalist influences. Isac was a participant in civic or political causes, defending the rights of ethnic Romanians in Austria-Hungary from a socialist position, and, during the 1918 union with Romania, served as a community representative. He was however interested in preserving good relations between his ethnic group and the Hungarians. An occasional contributor to Hungarian-language reviews, he reached out over political divides, maintaining close contacts with Hungarian intellectuals such as Endre Ady, Oszkár Jászi, János Thorma, and . During the final part of his career, which was spent in Communist Romania, Emil Isac was affiliated with Steaua magazine and enjoyed political endorsement. In this context, he took the controversial decision of adapting his style to Socialist Realism, producing a number of political poems which doubled as agitprop.
rdf:langString Emisac
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 60853
xsd:gYear 1954
xsd:gYear 1902
rdf:langString Emisac

data from the linked data cloud