A Bridport alternative to the World Cup

NOVELIST Ioana Morpurgo is to lead a discussion of Romanian literature at Wild and Homeless Books in Bridport.

Ms Morpurgo will focus on the ‘period of transition’ that followed the revolution in Romania in 1989.

Ten years after the toppling of Ceaucescu, two young Romanian poets wrote a manifesto proclaiming that authenticity should primarily mean responsibility.

Ms Morpurgo explained: “Amongst other things, they were rightfully reacting against the hijacking of the literary scene by ‘frustration writing’ (i.e. writers unable to publish their work before 1989, now producing manuscripts detailing the awfulness of the communist past).

“The responsibility the two poets and the group that rapidly formed around them were referring to meant that whoever takes to the pen in that claustrophobic chaos of the aftermath of the revolution, must do so fully acknowledging that words should not serve the aesthetic rhetoric, not add to the public language of separation and dissipation and will not dodge the reality no matter how difficult it is.

“I shall discuss these urgent conclusions reached at the turn of the millennium in Bucharest by a group of young writers, outlining the so-called ‘period of transition’ and its reflection in poetry and prose.”

The venue will be Wild and Homeless Books, 12 South Street, Bridport, the time 7.30 for 8pm on Thursday, 24 June.

Biographical note: Ioana Morpurgo graduated in English and Romanian literature from the University of Bucharest in 2002, and was then awarded an MA in Cultural Anthropology in 2004.

She is the author of a novel – Birth Certificate (Polirom, 2004) – that explores the decomposition of the self in a post-communist, transitional society and of several pieces published in Romanian and British journals (such as Contemporary Review, the New Internationalist).

She now lives in Bridport, runs a project celebrating the hedonism of knowledge (‘Lectures on Everything’) and is currently at work on her second novel, on the subject of East European immigration to the UK.

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