“Publishing Swift’s satires in 1985 (in Communist Romania, t.n.), I myself fought a lot with the censor in order to include “A Modest proposal” concerning eating Irish children, which had become ‘subversive’ here on account of meat shortage in Romania. Faced with the alternative of not publishing the book at all, or doing it without the famous text, I gave it up. The supreme level of censorship was a department of the (Communist) Party Central Committee.”
(Denisa Comànescu)
Entries Tagged as '“Jonathan Swift”'
Dictionary of Romanian Quotations: Letter “J”
November 6th, 2016 · Comments Off on Dictionary of Romanian Quotations: Letter “J” · Books, Diaspora, Education, Famous People, History, International Media, PEOPLE, POLITICAL DETENTION / DISSENT, quotations, Translations
Tags:"Constantin Roman"·"Jonathan Swift"·"Nicolae STEINHARDT"·"Paul CELAN"·"Petru DUMITRIU"·editor "Centre for Romanian Studies - London·Judges·King James II·madeleine·Madeleine Cancicov·Mihail Sebastian·prodigal·Romanian Jewish Writers Union
Comrade Jonathan Swift’s “subversive” Gulliver and the “Genius of the Carpathians”
June 3rd, 2011 · Comments Off on Comrade Jonathan Swift’s “subversive” Gulliver and the “Genius of the Carpathians” · Books, International Media, PEOPLE, quotations
“Publishing Swift’s satires in 1985, I myself fought a lot with the censor in order to include “A Modest proposal” concerning eating Irish children, which had become subversive here on account of meat shortage in Romania. Faced with the alternative of not publishing the book at all, or doing it without the famous text, I gave it up. The supreme level of censorship was a department of the (Communist) Party Central Committee.”
source of quotation:
http://www.blouseroumaine.com
Tags:"Blouse Roumaine - the Unsung Voices of Romanian Women"·"Jonathan Swift"·Ceausescu·censorship·Gulliver
Ceausescu and Jonathan SWIFT – The Seditious Captain GULLIVER
April 25th, 2010 · No Comments · Books, PEOPLE, quotations
Surely, the Reverend Jonathan Swift never expected, in his wildest dreams to be ‘excommunicated’ by communist dictator Nicolae Ceausescu: not that Ceausescu ever read Jonathan Swift! That was not necessary! Ceausescu did not read ANY books at all – he was instead famous for his semi-literacy and for professing a distinctly basic vernacular Romanian…
Yet, amazingly, in spite of such auspicious circumstances, Jonathan Swift managed posthumously to blot his copybook with the Communist dictator… Read on the problems encountered by an editor in Bucharest in the 1980s who tried to publish Swift”s Satyres:
Publishing Swift’s satires in 1985, I myself fought a lot with the censor in order to include “A Modest proposal” concerning eating Irish children, which had become subversive here on account of meat shortage in Romania. Faced with the alternative of not publishing the book at all, or doing it without the famous text, I gave it up. The supreme level of censorship was a department of the (Communist) Party Central Committee.
“Publishing Swift’s satires in 1985, I myself fought a lot with the censor in order to include “A Modest proposal” concerning eating Irish children, which had become subversive here on account of meat shortage in Romania. Faced with the alternative of not publishing the book at all, or doing it without the famous text, I gave it up. The supreme level of censorship was a department of the (Communist) Party Central Committee.”
Tags:"Jonathan Swift"·Ceausescu·censorship·Communist·Ireland·Romania