Traian Herseni

Traian Herseni
Born (1907-02-18)February 18, 1907
Iași, Brassó County, Austria-Hungary
Died July 17, 1980(1980-07-17) (aged 73)
Other names Traian Hariton, Trajan Herseni
Nationality Romanian
Fields
Institutions

Traian Herseni (February 18, 1907 – July 17, 1980) was a Romanian social scientist, journalist, and political figure. First noted as a favorite disciple of Dimitrie Gusti, he helped establish the Romanian school of rural sociology in the 1920s and early '30s, and took part in interdisciplinary study groups and field trips. A prolific essayist and researcher, he studied isolated human groups across the country, trying to define relations between sociology, ethnography, and cultural anthropology, with an underlying interest in sociological epistemology. He was particularly interested in the peasant cultures and pastoral society of the Făgăraș Mountains.

Herseni was also a committed eugenicist and racial scientist, who discarded a moderate left-wing stance to embrace fascism, and parted ways with Gusti over his support for the Iron Guard. A leading functionary and ideologue of the fascist National Legionary State, and a figure of cultural and political importance under dictator Ion Antonescu, he proposed the compulsory sterilization of "inferior races", and wrote praises of Nazi racial policy. Indicted by the communist regime in 1951, he spent some 5 years in prison. He made a slow return to favors as a researcher for the Romanian Academy, participating in the resumption of sociological research, as well as experimenting in social psychology and pioneering industrial sociology.

Formally a partisan of Marxism-Leninism after 1956, Herseni was more genuinely committed to national communism. The national communist policies instituted during the late 1960s allowed him to revisit some of his controversial theses about the ancestral roots of Romanian culture. His final works dealt with ethnology, national psychology, the sociology of literature, and sociological theory in general.

Biography

Origins and schooling

Herseni was a native of Transylvania, which, for most of his childhood, was an Austro-Hungarian province. His home village was Iași (Jás), in what was then Brassó County (present-day Brașov County), where his father worked as a notary public. On his paternal side, Herseni originated from nearby Hârseni, which gave the family its name.[1] Born on February 18, 1907, Herseni went to school in Iași (1912–1915) and Făgăraș (1915–1924).[2] These years coincided with World War I and the recognition of Transylvania's union with Romania: Herseni began his secondary education in a Hungarian-speaking regimen,[3] and passed his baccalaureate examination in 1924, as a Romanian national.[2]

From 1924, Herseni was a student at the University of Bucharest Faculty of Law, studying under Gusti, Constantin Rădulescu-Motru, Nicolae Iorga, Ovid Densusianu, and Vasile Pârvan.[2][4] Passionate about Gusti's attempts to restructure Romanian social science around rural sociology and participant observation, Herseni was taken on board for Gusti's field trips to Nereju (1927) and Fundu Moldovei (1928). Another one of Gusti's students, Henri H. Stahl, first met and befriended him at Nereju, and was impressed by the encounter. Herseni, he writes, "appeared quiet, withdrawn; and yet not lonesome", "ready to take on whoever would oppose him, whether friend or rival". He grasped complex social issues with "rapidity", and "imposed himself as one one of the team leaders, obtaining for himself a rank that he would never lose".[5] Herseni was particularly involved in a project to collect data on "pastoral sociology", while Stanciu Stoian observed village schools and Xenia Costa-Foru pioneered studies in the sociology of the family.[6]

Herseni passed his final examination in 1928, having specialized in sociology, psychology, and pedagogy, and presenting a paper on social relations as observed in Fundu Moldovei.[7] This qualified him to teach sociology at the Gheorghe Lazăr National College, where he worked for the following school year.[8] In 1929, he went to Germany for more specialization. He enlisted at the Frederick William (Humboldt) University, where he heard lectures by Werner Sombart, Eduard Spranger, Richard Thurnwald, and Alfred Vierkandt.[7] He published an overview of German sociology in Gusti's Arhiva pentru Știință și Reformă Socială, praising it as a "lively and freely-moving science", and as a good model for sociology in "the less advanced countries".[9]

Herseni (seated, center, facing the viewer), with Dimitrie Gusti, Henri H. Stahl, Xenia Costa-Foru and other sociological team leaders. Drăguș, 1931

Herseni returned to Bucharest in 1930, did his obligatory service in the Romanian Land Forces, then took part in expeditions, organized by Gusti's Romanian Social Institute (ISR), to Drăguș, Runcu, and Cornova.[7] Drăguș, a center of the ethnographic region known as Țara Oltului, was selected on his insistence, being located in close proximity to his native village.[10] At Cornova, Herseni focused on the social hierarchies and segregated clans of a Bessarabian community.[11] He spent some time researching on his own at a sheepcote in the Făgăraș Mountains, publishing his results in Boabe de Grâu review.[12] He also began contributing to the Cluj magazine Societatea de Mâine, with articles that inventoried and examined the various kinds of social distance.[13]

As Gusti's aide

In 1932, Herseni married a university and ISR colleague, Paula Gusty. She was the daughter of Paul Gusty, a famous theater director[14] (the similarity in surnames makes it likely, but not certain, that she was related to Gusti himself).[15] Also that year, having lectured for a while at Sabin Manuilă's School of Social Work,[3] Herseni was appointed by Gusti's an assistant professor in the University of Bucharest department of sociology, ethics and politics. Stahl claims to have been Gusti's first choice, but to have declined the position in order to suit Herseni, who, as a married man, needed a steady flow of income.[16] As a result, Herseni was slightly better off financially than other intellectuals of his generation.[17]

Herseni also followed Stahl's political options: he sympathized with the left-wing cell within the National Peasants' Party, and, in 1933, contributed to center-left reviews such as Zaharia Stancu's Azi and Stahl's own Stânga.[18][19] He declared himself a partisan of "social democracy" and class collaboration, "not a Marxist, and not a communist, but nevertheless a man of the left".[20] An article he published in Gând Românesc in early 1933 shows him as a deist and Christian existentialist, who argued that the Übermensch where those Christians who could attain a state of grace. The rest of the populace, Herseni argued, "are forever non-human."[21] Emil Cioran, a philosopher of that generation, described Herseni as "passionate" about "Heidegger's existential philosophy", with a "metaphysical sensibility" that was the mark of "true Transylvanian intellectuals, as if to compensate for the petty bourgeois spirit of middle-of-the-road intellectuals".[22]

Herseni took his Ph.D. in 1934, with the dissertation paper Realitatea socială ("Social Reality"), an "essay in regional onthology". It earned praise from Gusti, who called Herseni "one of the most gifted and educated [youths] of today's generation", one promising to "enrich Romanian sociology and philosophy with very valuable works."[2] Stahl recalls that only Herseni could match his teacher's "surprisingly vast erudition" and "systematization" of received knowledge; he was also among the more loyal of Gusti's gifted disciples, effectively replacing Petre Andrei, who had spoken out against the ISR.[23] Herseni was an enthusiastic promoter of sociological campaigns, famous as the ISR's "polygraph" and as Gusti's most orthodox interpreter.[24] According to Stahl, Herseni intended to both popularize sociology and give it "philosophical depth", treating the two tasks as equally important.[25] Taking a neo-Kantian approach to science, Herseni believed that a sound phenomenological inquiry needed to clarify the position and limits of social constructionism, or, as Stahl puts it, to find out "whether there is a 'social' reality, as distinct from 'natural' and 'spiritual' realities."[26]

Moreover, Herseni explored the challenges of sociological epistemology and the methodology of participant observation. He believed that objectivity could only be attained with self-imposed limitations and a laborious, preferably collective and interdisciplinary, research program.[27] Largely "empirical", Herseni and Stahl's sociology took distance from the "transcendentalist" approach of social scientists such as Mircea Vulcănescu, with whom they first clashed in Fundu Moldovei.[28] By 1938, their highly localized qualitative approach was conceding ground to a quantitative "zonal" tactic, which was favored by Gusti and Anton Golopenția.[29]

Herseni adopted a tactic of publishing his work in stages, from raw studies in Societatea de Mâine to monographic series, and finally to synthetic volumes and brochures. One such work was printed at Gusti's expense, as Monografia sociologică; rostul, metoda și problemele ei ("The Sociological Monograph; Its Purpose, Method and Issues"), then reissued in 1934 as Teoria monografiei sociologice ("The Theory of Sociological Monographs"), to be used as a standard ISR manual.[30] Gusti also backed Herseni's candidature as chair of the University of Cluj sociology department, vacated after Virgil Bărbat's death. The project failed when local academics elected one of their own, Constantin Sudețeanu, and prompted a much-publicized scandal.[31]

Fascist dissent

Unlike Gusti, Herseni shied away from public speaking,[32] but was one of the ISR speakers at the 12th Congress of the International Institute of Sociology (IIS), held in Brussels in August 1935.[33] He continued to publish his sociological sketches in various magazines and newspapers. In addition to Societatea de Mâine, Gând Românesc, and the ISR's Arhiva pentru Știință și Reformă Socială and Sociologie Românească, these include Familia, Tribuna, Viața Românească, Revista Fundațiilor Regale, Independența Economică, and Semne.[32] Falling in line with the Societatea de Mâine group, and influenced by physician Iuliu Moldovan, Herseni became an visible supporter of eugenics and biopolitics, introducing eugenicist language to works he wrote alongside Gusti.[34]

This interest soon veered into scientific racism and fascism, possibly inspired to Herseni by another eugenicist, Iordache Făcăoaru;[35] like Făcăoaru, Herseni viewed antisemitism as natural and beneficent, eventually affiliating with the radically fascist Iron Guard.[36] In 1944, Herseni described his joining of the Guard as a conscious rebellion against the establishment, prompted by his losing the (supposedly rigged) competition at Cluj.[37] He was, according to cultural historian Lucian Boia, one of the more notorious Iron Guard figures among the university staff, in line with P. P. Panaitescu, Radu Meitani, Vladimir Dumitrescu, and Radu Gyr.[38]

Their extremist position was conspicuous enough that the more centrist Moldovan felt obliged to distance himself from both his disciples.[39] By 1935, Herseni had also come to sympathize with a fascist dissidence which divided the Gustian movement: although attacked by Ernest Bernea in Rânduiala magazine, which spoke for this counter-current, he parted ways with Stahl over political stances.[40] At the time, moderate left-wingers such as Stahl and Golopenția, witnessing the internecine conflicts between the Guardist supporters and the radical-left group headed by Gheorghe Vlădescu-Răcoasa, began equating Herseni's politics with an egotistic social climbing.[19] Herseni's Iron Guard affiliation also ruined his relationship with Gusti: he abandoned his editorial office at the ISR's magazine, Sociologie Românească, to be replaced by Golopenția, who was now Gusti's most treasured companion.[41]

Herseni also lost his post of assistant professor at the university,[3] moving closer to the regional sociological school of Bukovina, which was headed by Guardist Traian Brăileanu, becoming a regular contributor to Brăileanu's journal Însemnări Sociologice.[42] Together with his wife, who was acting as his secretary and unsigned co-author,[4] he returned to Țara Oltului to study the youth "posses" (cetele de feciori).[43]

His split from the Bucharest school was not definitive: in 1935, together with Gusti, he wrote the sociology textbook for high school seniors.[44] The next year, he participated in the ethnographic expedition to Șanț, alongside Gusti, Stoian, Constantin Brăiloiu, Lena Constante, Jacques Lassaigne, Jozsef Venczel, and Harry Brauner,[45] and contributed to a special homage issue of Arhiva, where he honored Gusti's "sociological, ethical and political system".[46] He and Gusti also published, at Cartea Românească, Elemente de sociologie cu aplicǎri la cunoașterea țării și a neamului nostru ("Elements of Sociology as Applied to the Study of Our Country and Our Nation"), a geopolitical tract. It was partly inspired by, and partly opposed to, the theories of Friedrich Ratzel, and was highly skeptical of both geographical and biological determinism.[47] Meanwhile, he also wrote a propaganda tract for the Iron Guard and the workers' movement, some of which were confiscated by the authorities.[48]

From 1938, democracy was suspended in Romania, and King Carol II, an enemy of the Iron Guard, took charge of political and social affairs, creating a mass quasi-fascist party, the National Renaissance Front. Gusti was co-opted into this project, and assigned to lead the Social Service, which, as Stahl notes, was a positive venue for social improvement, but also a potential "tool" for Carol's authoritarian project.[49] Despite his Guard affiliation and his approval of the death squads, for which he was denounced by Stancu in Azi,[50] Herseni was also taken on board. Drafting him into the Social Service,[51] Gusti assigned him to teach a specialized course in rural sociology at the Bucharest sociology department, making him a referent and director of research at the ISR.[52] There was also a rapprochement between Gusti and Brăileanu, which Herseni himself mediated.[53]

During July 1938, Herseni, Stahl and Vlădescu-Răcoasa where in Paris, attending the IIS 13th Congress, which voted to hold its next session in Bucharest.[54] He also directed rural sociology campaigns in Țara Oltului, publishing his findings as a series of volumes. These were set to mark the IIS congress, which was ultimately canceled by World War II.[55] He published fragments from his history of sociology courses in various installments between 1938 and 1941 as well as a manual on the drawing of sociograms.[56]

National Legionary doctrinaire

The looming threat of war and Romania's rapprochement with Nazi Germany sent the Gusti school into its final crisis: in summer 1940, Stahl was drafted and sent to work on the "futile" task of building up defenses; Herseni helped him obtain his Ph.D., intervening with the university leadership.[57] This was just before the downfall of the National Renaissance Front, brought on by the Second Vienna Award, which saw Romania ceding Northern Transylvania to Hungary. In the political chaos that followed, Gusti became a political suspect, and Carol ordered his own Social Service to be shut down by Siguranța policemen.[57] The Prime Minister of the time, Constantin Argetoianu, later referred to the Service as a "bad memory".[58]

On September 6, 1940, the Iron Guard took power in Romania, proclaiming the National Legionary State, with General Ion Antonescu as the Conducător. Herseni, emerging as a "major propagandist"[59] and "prominent legionary ideologue",[60] saluted the takeover in his articles for the Guardist paper Cuvântul. In December 1940, he paid homage to the Legionary Commandant, Horia Sima, without whom "the Movement would become an amorphous mass". In order to succeed, Sima was to be obeyed "with unbounded devotion."[61] Herseni also contributed to the personality cult surrounding Sima's assassinated predecessor, Captain Corneliu Zelea Codreanu, calling him a "national prophet" of the "imperial ways", for whose arrival "our people have been praying for two thousand years".[62] Codreanu's "spirit", Herseni claimed, "leads the nation to victory."[63] He argued that Codreanu's sacrifice guaranteed "the redemption of the Romanians", but warned that "hundreds and thousands of years have prepared his birth, other hundreds and thousands of years will be necessary for the accomplishment of his commandments".[61] Despite his radical metaphors, Herseni's ideological texts interpreted Codreanu's message to the people and the peasantry as self-help guidelines rather than a revolutionary agenda of land reform.[64]

Cuvântul also hosted Herseni's articles on the merger of eugenics and racism, for "the betterment of the human race". He declared that Romanians were, at core, part of the "Nordic race", which accounted for "the most noble Romanian cultural productions", but that "the race lost its purity".[65] Herseni suggested a "racial purification", and a formal policy of racial segregation as "a question of life and death".[66] Crediting "the genius of Adolf Hitler" as in inspiration, he proposed the compulsory sterilization of "inferior races", specifically the Jews, Romanies and Greeks, "as a tribute to beauty, to morality, and in general to perfection."[67] Historian Radu Ioanid sees these musings as samples of "a typically fascist mentality", in which "the incitement to crime clothes itself in fanciful language."[68] According to scholar Maria Bucur, the racial legislation introduced at the time suggests "some links" to Herseni and Făcăoaru's "aggressively restrictive positions";[69] Făcăoaru is known to have had a more direct involvement in this program.[70]

Herseni was chosen for high office in the new bureaucracy, serving as Secretary General of a combined Ministry of Education and Culture, seconding Minister Brăileanu.[71] He countersigned an order by Antonescu and Brăileanu for the demotion and arrest of Petre Andrei, the previous Minister of Education, who was thus shamed into committing suicide.[72] Herseni soon found himself drawn into the conflict between Sima and Antonescu, over the appointment of Guard loyalists at the Accademia di Romania (Antonescu wanted the old regime figures to be kept in place).[73]

By the close of 1940, Herseni and Făcăoaru were co-opted by Rector Panaitescu on the university review commission, whose mission was to purge academia of undesirables in general, and in particular of former National Renaissance Front dignitaries. Herseni was thus a participant in the decisions to expel or demote psychologist Mihai Ralea, historian Constantin C. Giurescu, philologist George Călinescu, and classicist Alexandru Rosetti.[74] The same commission also looked into cases of low-ranking staff members, suspect for being Jewish or associating with Jews: it expelled George Emil Palade for his "links with the Jews" and "immoral behavior", and nearly demoted Tudor Vianu, on grounds that "kikes cannot educate the Romanian youth".[75] Credited with having intervened in Vianu's favor,[76] Herseni recused himself from the case against Gusti, noting that he owed him his career in academia.[77]

The Antonescu years

In January 1941, the Guard and Antonescu went to war with each other, in what was termed the "Legionary Rebellion"; Antonescu emerged victorious. Herseni, perceived as a "moderate"[77] or "decent"[58] Guardist, was able to escape the subsequent purge, and made his peace with the new military regime. Reportedly, he resumed his contacts with Ralea, assuring him that Sima, by then disgraced and in exile, had tried to curb his own party's violence.[58] In May of that year, Revista de Studii Sociologice și Muncitorești hosted Herseni's homage piece to the economist Virgil Madgearu, who had been murdered by the Guard a year before.[78] A year later, Sociologie Românească published Herseni's posthumous tribute to Andrei, referring to his "great stature" and "untimely death".[79]

He resumed his scientific contribution with a treatise on the sociology of pastoralism (Tratat de sociologie pastorală), sponsored by the Romanian Academy,[80] which was in some part a polemical study of folkloristics. Herseni condemned folklorists for working "at random", and asserted that ethnography in general needed to submit itself to the sociological method.[81] He also contributed a chapter on Romanian sociology, including a sketch on himself, to a history of Romanian philosophy, put out in 1941 by Nicolae Bagdasar. He justified his own inclusion by noting that "our [Herseni's] sociological activity has been recorded, through not always praised, by the country's greatest sociologists and a few foreign ones".[82] Herseni also sketched there the results of his epistemological inquiries: society was an objective inner reality, "the sense of an us", leading to the emergence of a "social community" that was therefore not biological, but spiritual. On this basis, Herseni read society as both a "spiritually objective" reality and a structural-functional one, and thus as an autonomous object of science.[83]

Since June 1941, Romania had joined Nazi Germany in its invasion of the Soviet Union. From January 1942, Herseni was behind the lines on the Eastern Front, in the newly occupied Transnistria Governorate. Reportedly, his mission was to set up schools for the Romanian communities.[60][84] He was also mandated by Governor Gheorghe Alexianu to carry out a large ethnographic project, recording Romanian Transnistrian customs. The endeavor, which also involved Golopenția and Nichita Smochină, resulted in ethnographic collections by Gheorghe Pavelescu and C. A. Ionescu, with prefaces by Herseni himself.[85] Resigning from the ISR that same year, Herseni moved to Sibiu to teach "national sociology" at the University of Cluj.[86] The latter had been evacuated from its namesake city, in Northern Transylvania. As a eugenicist, Herseni also presided over a department of "sanitary sociology" at Sibiu's Hygiene and Public Health Institute.[2]

In early 1944, during the Soviet offensive in Transnistria, Herseni was spotted in Berezovca County, on an official mission to destroy records of the mass killings of Jews.[87] After the start of Soviet occupation, his ethnographic research immediately became taboo: the study he wrote with Ionescu was printed at Sibiu in December 1944, but simply as a collection of generic colinde. All detail permitting localization in Transnistria was stricken out by the censors.[88]

Imprisonment, marginalization, recovery

Expelled from his Cluj University chair in 1945,[89] Herseni managed to publish one more brochure, with Editura Clujana of Bucharest: Originile sociologiei ("The Origins of Sociology").[56] Arrested in 1951,[90] he was tried for his role in the National Legionary administration,[91] with Vianu showing up to defend him as a character witness.[92] Sentenced, he did time in Jilava and Aiud, before being released in 1956.[91] He received an interdiction to publish and was entirely marginalized in society,[93] turning to ghostwriting for more politically suitable scholars.[94]

Herseni was eventually reintegrated as a researcher for the Bucharest Anthropological Institute (1956) and made a regional director for the Romanian Academy's Anthropological Center and Institute of Psychology (both 1958).[95] Herseni was undergoing a slow rehabilitation, possibly facilitated by Communist Party activist Miron Constantinescu. A former Gustian, turned Marxist-Leninist doctrinaire, Constantinescu had assigned himself the task of selectively reconsidering "reactionary" sociology.[96] Constantinescu maintained contacts with Herseni, Stahl, Vlădescu-Răcoasa and Teodor Bugnariu, and prepared himself for the revival of the sociological school, with inputs from Marxist sociology.[97]

Organizing research trips in Hunedoara Region, at Clopotiva, Herseni published essays on family sociology and genealogy in a 1958 collection edited by Ștefan Milcu. He produced a thesis according to which Romanians of that area were "always the overwhelming majority", having effortlessly Romanianized their Hungarian neighbors since the 1600s. As noted in 2014 by ethnologist Marin Constantin, Herseni's approach to the topic evidenced a throwback to the Gusti sociological narrative, being Romanian-centered and "self-referential".[98] Historian of medicine Marius Turda writes that Romanian communist social science was folding back on racial science, a "national biology involving notions of racial differentiation, cycles of growth and decay, genetic genealogies, the interconnectedness of nurture and nature". The changing political climate allowed anthropologists "to reposition autochthonous ideas within their discipline"; Herseni, "an important Legionary sociologist", "provides an exemplary case of post-war re-adaptation, professionally and theoretically."[99] Bucur also argues that Herseni stands as a prime example of an "openly racist" eugenicist whom the communist regime was able to recover for its own propaganda purposes.[100]

Turda traces the links between the fascist ideologist and the communist anthropologist: "Although the general topic Herseni reflected on was genetic genealogies, his main argument focused on the importance of ethnic anthropology in connecting forms of the nation's micro and macro physical development over time."[101] Herseni thus intended to return to his 1940 research and find a way to republish its early results (the papers were by then stored at the Brukenthal National Museum in Sibiu).[32] In 1961, he contributed to Milcu's monograph on the rural society of Bătrâna, focusing on its peculiar inheritance and elderly care practices.[102] His work in the field also resulted in a historical anthropology essay, which rediscovered the pioneering work of Pavel Vasici-Ungureanu.[103]

His old political enemy, Ralea, who had been integrated among the post-war Marxists, co-opted Herseni for projects in social psychology. Reportedly, Ralea excused Herseni by arguing that he had only joined the Guard in hopes of being rewarded with tenure.[104] At the time, the mainline communists put on hold their project to uproot sociology as a bourgeois science: "a significant thaw occurred".[105] Together, Ralea and Herseni published a 1962 tract, Sociologia succesului ("The Sociology of Success"), for which Herseni used the pseudonym Traian Hariton.[106] This praise of collectivism and economic incentives under the socialist mode of production was reviewed with skepticism by the Romanian exile psychologist Edgar Krau, who notes that Ralea and "Hariton" had failed to even mention "the all-pervading [communist] party tuition" as a possible disturbance of data.[107]

Return to prominence

Like Ralea and Stahl, Herseni became a noted supporter of the national communist, anti-Soviet, party line, promoted officially by the old party leadership from 1964, and subsequently taken up by the new General Secretary, Nicolae Ceaușescu.[108] As Bucur notes, Herseni was now in a position where he himself generated "the new Marxist-Leninist normative discourse".[100] While gaining leverage with Ralea, Herseni had lost backing from Constantinescu, who perceived him as a personal rival and, possibly, as a superior thinker, and worked to keep him away from sociological research.[109]

After 1965, when he entered a new period of prolific writing,[110] Herseni sought to accumulate direct knowledge in the field of industrial sociology, reviving and adapting Gusti's (and his own) interwar methodology: a monographic "problem-centered" technique, and a focus on interdisciplinarity.[111] Herseni involved himself in debates about the future of sociology, defending the science against criticism, and arguing that sociologists could answer specific problems that could not be addressed by statisticians or economists.[112]

At the institute, he compiled the life histories of 550 industry workers, documenting their departure from an "axial" family and their contact with modernity.[113] Herseni's work in social psychology resulted in a definitive treatise, Psihologie socială, co-authored with Ralea and published in 1966, shortly after Ralea's death.[114] In 1967, Contemporanul hosted Herseni's essay about the old regime politician Spiru Haret, highlighting his contribution to progressive education and his conflict with "the ruling classes".[115] He returned to Familia as a columnist and sociological analyst, chronicling books by Pierre Francastel, Herbert Read, Jean Piaget, Talcott Parsons, and T. R. Fyvel, as well as reintroducing his public to works by Gusti, Virgil Bărbat, Alexandru Claudian, and Ștefan Zeletin.[116]

He later set himself a study case of industrialization in Boldești-Scăeni, where, as Stahl recounts, "a drilling rig had been set up, radically transforming the local, rural, social landscape, spurring modernizing social processes".[111] The result was a work of "concrete social psychology", the 1969 Industrializare și urbanizare,[111] which, according to sociologist Irina Tomescu-Dubrow, samples the "valuable work" produced in urban sociology under communism.[117] Additionally, the team documented decades of migration patterns, using a census, a set of questionnaires, and tools borrowed from historical demography.[118] Also in 1969, Herseni issued Psihosociologia organizării întreprinderilor industriale ("The Psycho-sociology of Organization in Industrial Units"), at Editura Academiei, and Laboratorul uzinal de psihologie, sociologie și pedagogie ("The Industrial Laboratory of Psychology, Sociology and Pedagogy"), at Editura Științifică.[119]

Also in 1969, the same company issued Herseni's companion to sociological theory, Prolegomene la teoria sociologică. Reviewing the work for Social Research, Jiří Kolaja sensed "a very skillful adaptation of certain Marxist lines of thought though [Herseni] appears not to be a Marxist." As noted by Kolaja, Prolegomene attempted to mediate between individualist, structuralist, and phenomenological sociology.[120] In 1970, Herseni spoke about his sociological and political convictions in an interview with Tribuna. He defined himself as a committed communist, and made predictions about the communist future: "in communism, people will be less wicked than we are at present, because they shall have fewer rationales for being wicked."[121] The interview was covered for Radio Free Europe by Monica Lovinescu, the anticommunist literary critic. She noted that Herseni, with his "degraded mystical" terminology, no longer distinguished between "sociology" and "ideology".[122] However, according to scholar Daniel Chirot, who visited Romania during that interval, Herseni confessed to him in private:

I used to write things praising 'The Captain' and now I write pretty much the same thing, but praising Ceaușescu. I'm not a Marxist, you understand, but I have to admit that I like what he's doing.[59]

During the late 1960s and early 1970s, Herseni diversified his contribution, with a chapter in the pastoralist sociology treatise of Franz Ronneberger and Gerhardt Teich (1971) and an essay introducing the work of psychologist Nicolae Vaschide (1975).[56] Other tracts were focused on defining and applying theories from the sociology of literature to a Romanian context. At Editura Univers,[56] he published Sociologia literaturii. Cîteva puncte de reper ("Literary Sociology. A Few Pointers", 1973), and Literatură și civilizație ("Literature and Civilization", 1976). As noted in 2008 by scholar Eugen Negrici, these works are intertwined with the official dogmas of national communism: "still haunted by his old fears, [Herseni] tried to look his best in front of the communist authorities, providing his sociological perspective—one saturated with Marxist cliches—on Romanian literature".[94]

Final years

Herseni took his pension from the Psychology Institute in 1973,[95] but carried on with his work in sociology and anthropology. His studies of industrial sociology were bound together as Psihologia colectivelor de muncă ("The Psychology of Working Collectives", Editura Academiei, 1973) and an eponymous textbook: Sociologia industrială (Editura Didactică și Pedagogică, 1974). According to Stahl, this was both a "world-level work" and a monograph of "our country's real issues", "the result of direct experiences".[111] Herseni's original drafts were "apolitical", treating industrial relations as indistinct from socialist to capitalist countries, and were revised by censors to comply with the party line.[123] Also in 1974, Herseni contributed to an Editura Științifică collection on industrial-sociological laboratories, with a study of social engineering techniques.[124] The following year, returning to his native region, he contributed to a monograph on the Făgăraș Chemical Plant.[124]

During those years, in essays he wrote for Constantinescu's Sociologia Militans archive, Herseni explained his intention of transcending rural sociology, applying its lessons to understanding (or generating) social actions in the national sphere, and, beyond, in geopolitics.[125] In 1976, he completed his "paleoethnographic" study about the "posses" of Țara Oltului, published by Editura Dacia as Forme străvechi de cultură poporană românească ("Ancient Forms of Romanian Folk Culture"). As noted by Stahl, it evidenced "an essential change in his preoccupations", bringing with it Herseni's formal inclusion in the community of Romanian folklorists.[111] The book series also signified a break with the Gustian tradition of strict sociology, turning to cultural anthropology, which the young Herseni had criticized repeatedly. Commenting on this conversion, Stahl concluded that Herseni remained "an enigma".[126]

Forme străvechi claimed to show that the posses were "a vestige of ancient Geto-Dacian beliefs and practices, which still preserve some pre-Indo-European elements."[127] Such theses were particularly controversial. According to Negrici, the book shows Herseni as a convert to Protochronism, the communist doctrine (blended with "the undigested reserves of the interwar right")[94] which supposed Romanian cultural superiority and ancient pedigree. Herseni "endorses the thesis that Romanian civilization, albeit rural and oral, is by no means inferior to the literate civilizations that were cultivated in citadels and towns."[94]

Herseni died in 1980. According to Paula Herseni, he had published 541 works of social science, of which 29 were volumes (although, Stahl cautions, their content often overlapped);[32] Achim Mihu, who republished some of Herseni's works, counts 543.[128] One of his final works was the historical study Cultura psihologică românească ("Romanian Psychological Culture"), which sought to establish a link between an ancient national psychology and the development of psychology as a modern science.[129] Additionally, Herseni contributed a chapter in Romulus Vulcănescu's introduction to ethnology, a specialized field which Herseni wanted to delimit from both anthropology and sociology as "the science of folk phenomena".[130] He also left Teoria generală a vieții sociale omenești ("The General Theory of Human Social Life"), a manuscript comprising 1,276 pages, read by Stahl as a final synthesis "of his work in the realm of sociology".[131] Its mission statement described a merger of Gustian and Marxist ideas, around the "objective laws of social development".[56]

Herseni was more fully recovered and discussed after the Romanian Revolution of 1989, which lifted the ban on most of his work.[132] Anthropologist Zoltán Rostás contacted various of Herseni's colleagues, including Paula Gusty-Herseni, publishing his interviews with them in various volumes, including the 2003 Sala luminoasă ("A Lit Room").[33] She died aged 98.[4] More controversially, Herseni's work was also reclaimed by neo-fascist publications which appeared throughout the 1990s.[133]

The Hersenis had one daughter, Ioana, a psychologist at the Oil & Gas University.[4] In 2007, she and Marian Diaconu issued his sociological overview, Istoria sociologiei românești ("History of Romanian Sociology").[4][134] Herseni's work in Transnistria was only revisited in 1994, when C. A. Ionescu's book was printed, in its complete form, in Chișinău, Moldova.[88] On Herseni's centenary in 2007, the Chișinău Academy of Economic Studies hosted a symposium in his honor.[4]

Notes

  1. Stahl (1980), pp. 698, 700; (1981), p. 118
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Stahl (1980), p. 698
  3. 1 2 3 Nastasă, p. 407
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 (Romanian) Ludmila Doroșencu, "Podurile de flori mai sunt trecătoare", in Biblio Polis, Vol. 24, Issue 4, 2007
  5. Stahl (1980), p. 700
  6. Stahl (1981), pp. 52–53
  7. 1 2 3 Stahl (1980), pp. 698, 700
  8. Nastasă, p. 407; Stahl (1980), p. 698
  9. Nastasă, pp. 199–200
  10. Stahl (1981), pp. 118, 129
  11. Iordan Datcu, "Cornova 1931", in Philologia, Vol. LVI, Issue 1–2, 2014, p. 163; Herseni, p. 585; Stahl (1981), p. 160
  12. Herseni, pp. 585–586
  13. Cornelia Rada, "Structurile latente ale distanței sociale", in Revista Calitatea Vieții, Nr. 1/2011, pp. 66–67, 81
  14. Stahl (1980), p. 701; (1981), p. 184
  15. (Romanian) Traian D. Lazăr, "Paul Gusty despre Caragiale", in Apostrof, Nr. 1/2013
  16. Stahl, p. 184
  17. Boia, p. 34
  18. Boia, pp. 41–42; Ornea (1995), p. 175
  19. 1 2 (Romanian) Zoltán Rostás, "Fermentul unei generații. Corespondența lui Anton Golopenția", in Revista 22, Nr. 1060, June 2010
  20. Ornea (1995), p. 175
  21. Crina Poenariu, "An Outline of the Ideological Premises of a Prophetical Literary Discourse in the Literary Journal Gând Românesc", in Iulian Boldea (ed.), Studies on Literature, Discourse and Multicultural Dialogue. The Proceedings of the International Conference Literature, Discourse and Multicultural Dialogue, Vol. I. Arhipelag XXI Press, Târgu-Mureș, 2013, ISBN 978-606-93590-3-7, p. 79
  22. Emil Cioran, "Recuperare publicistică (III)", in Caiete Critice, Nr. 10/2010, p. 25
  23. Stahl (1980), pp. 699–700
  24. Stahl (1980), pp. 698, 700; (1981), pp. 140–141
  25. Stahl (1980), pp. 698–699
  26. Stahl (1980), p. 699
  27. Stahl (1980), pp. 699, 701, 702
  28. Stahl (1981), pp. 101–102, 140–141, 220, 292
  29. Stahl (1981), pp. 359–361, 388, 390
  30. Stahl (1980), pp. 701, 703; (1981), p. 140. See also Bulgaru, p. 75; Herseni, p. 584
  31. Nastasă, pp. 404–406; Stahl (1980), p. 701
  32. 1 2 3 4 Stahl (1980), p. 701
  33. 1 2 Bulgaru, p. 18
  34. Bucur, p. 153
  35. Lucian T. Butaru, Rasism românesc. Componenta rasială a discursului antisemit din România, până la Al Doilea Război Mondial. EFES, Cluj-Napoca, 2010, ISBN 978-606-526-051-1, pp. 234–235
  36. Bucur, pp. 44, 89, 113
  37. Clark, p. 144
  38. Boia, pp. 103–104
  39. Bucur, p. 89
  40. Stahl (1981), pp. 219–221
  41. (Romanian) Z. Ornea, "Corespondența lui Anton Golopenția", in România Literară, Nr. 45/2000
  42. Vintilă, p. 530
  43. Rostás & Văcărescu, p. 361
  44. "Incepe școala! O nouă programă analitică, — noui manuale", in Realitatea Ilustrată, Nr. 449, August 1935, p. 24
  45. Stahl (1981), p. 335
  46. Bulgaru, p. 86. See also Herseni, p. 530
  47. Didă, pp. 43–45, 55
  48. Clark, p. 157
  49. Stahl (1981), pp. 393–395
  50. Ornea (1995), p. 186
  51. Stahl (1981), pp. 397–398
  52. Stahl (1980), p. 698. See also Boia, pp. 14, 34; Herseni, p. 574
  53. Vintilă, p. 531
  54. Bulgaru, p. XXXI
  55. Stahl (1980), pp. 701, 703; (1981), pp. 120, 199, 221. See also Bulgaru, p. XXXI
  56. 1 2 3 4 5 Stahl (1980), p. 703
  57. 1 2 Stahl (1981), p. 399
  58. 1 2 3 (Romanian) Stelian Neagoe, Constantin Argetoianu, "Din însemnările zilnice ale lui Constantin Argetoianu (41)", in Jurnalul Național, January 14, 2011
  59. 1 2 Daniel Chirot, Modern Tyrants: The Power and Prevalence of Evil in Our Age. Princeton University Press, Princeton, 1995, ISBN 0-691-02777-3, p. 239
  60. 1 2 Roland Clark, "New Models, New Questions: Historiographical Approaches to the Romanian Holocaust", in the European Review of History, Vol. 19, Issue 2, 2012, p. 310
  61. 1 2 Ioanid, p. 128
  62. Ornea (1995), pp. 383–384
  63. Ioanid, p. 134
  64. Florin Müller, "Revoluția fascistă — dimensiuni teoretice; cazul românesc", in Revista de Științe Politice și Relații Internaționale, Vol. VII, Issue 1, 2010, p. 104
  65. Ioanid, p. 122
  66. Final Report of the International Commission on the Holocaust in Romania. Polirom, Iași, 2004, ISBN 973-681-989-2, p. 50; Mihaela Gligor, "Precursori ai antisemitismului interbelic românesc", in Monica Albu, Ionuț Isac, Vasile Marian, Andrei Negru, Silviu G. Totelecan (eds.), Studii și cercetări din domeniul științelor socio-umane. Vol. 21. Editura Argonaut, Cluj-Napoca, 2011, ISBN 978-973-109-269-0, p. 131; Ioanid, pp. 122–123; Turda (2007), p. 438
  67. Ioanid, pp. 122–123. Alternative translation in Turda (2007), pp. 438–439
  68. Ioanid, p. 123
  69. Bucur, pp. 188, 211, 224
  70. Turda (2007), p. 439
  71. Boia, pp. 158–159; Vintilă, p. 532. See also Rostás & Văcărescu, p. 359
  72. Stan, p. 33
  73. Veronica Turcuș, Șerban Turcuș, "România legionară și impactul asupra instituțiilor de cultură. Studiu de caz – Accademia di Romania din Roma", in Anuarul Institutului de Istorie G. Barițiu, Vol. LII, 2013, pp. 267–269
  74. C. Popescu-Cadem, Document în replică, Mihail Sadoveanu City Library, Bucharest, 2007, ISBN 978-973-8369-21-4, pp. 312–319, 330–332, 335–336. See also Boia, pp. 173–182
  75. Boia, pp. 172–173
  76. Ioana Ieronim, Matei Călinescu, "Identitățile noastre", in Revista 22, Nr. 434, June 1998, p. 12
  77. 1 2 Boia, p. 182
  78. "Virgil Madgearu intelectualul, economistul și profesorul", in Gazeta Municipală, May 11, 1941, p. 4
  79. Silvia Bocancea, "Principiul descentralizării administrative în viziunea lui Petre Andrei", in Transilvania, Nr. 11/2011, pp. 76–77
  80. Ion Mușlea, "Le mouvement folklorique roumain de 1940 à 1946", in Schweizerisches Archiv für Volkskunde, Vol. 44, 1947, pp. 159–160
  81. Katherine Verdery, National Ideology under Socialism: Identity and Cultural Politics in Ceaușescu's Romania, University of California Press, Berkeley etc., 1995, ISBN 0-520-20358-5, p. 66
  82. Herseni, p. 583
  83. Herseni, pp. 584–585
  84. Clark, p. 246
  85. Băieșu, pp. 108–110
  86. Stahl (1980), p. 698. See also Boia, p. 203
  87. (Romanian) Andrei Șiperco, "Holocaustul evreilor din România: experimentul Transnistria", in Observator Cultural, Nr. 208, February 2004
  88. 1 2 Băieșu, p. 110
  89. Boia, p. 257
  90. Rostás & Văcărescu, p. 359
  91. 1 2 Bosomitu, p. 180
  92. (Romanian) Ion Papuc, "Ceea ce știu", in Convorbiri Literare, January 2006
  93. Bosomitu, pp. 180, 181
  94. 1 2 3 4 Eugen Negrici, Iluziile literaturii române. Cartea Românească, Bucharest, 2008, ISBN 978-973-23-1974-1, p. 267
  95. 1 2 Stahl (1980), pp. 698, 702
  96. Bosomitu, pp. 170–171, 185–187, 194–195
  97. Bosomitu, pp. 185–187
  98. Constantin, p. 99
  99. Turda (2010), pp. 6–7
  100. 1 2 Bucur, p. 44
  101. Turda (2010), p. 7
  102. Constantin, pp. 99, 105, 109
  103. Grigore Ploeșteanu, "Un iluminist român în secolul al XIX-lea — Paul Vasici", in Studii. Revistă de Istorie, Nr. 24/1971, pp. 93, 96
  104. Ornea (1995), p. 188
  105. Bosomitu, pp. 181–182
  106. Bosomitu, p. 183; Stahl (1980), p. 703
  107. Edgar Krau, Social and Economic Management in the Competitive Society. Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, 1998, ISBN 0-7923-8028-2, pp. 36–37
  108. Vladimir Tismăneanu, Stalinism pentru eternitate. Polirom, Iași, 2005, ISBN 973-681-899-3, pp. 219–220
  109. Bosomitu, p. 188
  110. Lozinsky, p. 170
  111. 1 2 3 4 5 Stahl (1980), p. 702
  112. Lozinsky, pp. 171–172
  113. Chelcea, p. 257
  114. Stahl (1980), pp. 702, 703
  115. Victoria Popovici, "Spiru Haret și răscoala din 1907", in Revista de Istorie, Nr. 2/1977, p. 222
  116. Lozinsky, passim
  117. Irina Tomescu-Dubrow, "Social Inequality and Social Problems in Romania: Old and New Patterns", in Heinrich Best, Agnieszka Wenninger (eds.), Landmark 1989: Central and Eastern European Societies Twenty Years after the System Change, LIT Verlag, Berlin, 2010, ISBN 978-3-643-10449-6, p. 177
  118. Chelcea, pp. 242–243, 249–250
  119. Stahl (1980), pp. 703, 704
  120. Jiří Kolaja, "Book Reviews. Traian Herseni, Prolegomene la teoria sociologică", in Social Research, Vol. 37, Issue 3, 1970, pp. 492–493
  121. Lovinescu, p. 403
  122. Lovinescu, pp. 403–406
  123. Ion Zainea, "Aspecte din activitatea cenzurii comuniste: controlul producției de carte social-politică. Tendinṭe și fenomene semnalate în cursul anului 1972", in Crisia, Vol. 41, Issue 1, 2011, p. 337
  124. 1 2 Stahl (1980), p. 704
  125. Didă, pp. 46, 48–50, 52–57
  126. Stahl (1981), p. 141
  127. Florin Constantiniu, "Sensibilități și mentalități în societatea românească a secolului al XVII-lea", in Revista de Istorie, Nr. 1/1980, p. 152
  128. Lozinsky, p. 171
  129. Stahl (1980), pp. 702, 704
  130. Zamfira Mihail, "Etnolingvistica în scrierile lui G. Ivănescu și în perspectivă coșeriană", in Anuarul de Lingvistică și Istorie Literară, Vol. LIII, 2013, pp. 159–160, 167
  131. Stahl (1980), pp. 702–703
  132. Rostás & Văcărescu, pp. 357–359
  133. George Voicu, "Teme antisemite în discursul public", in Sfera Politicii, Nr. 82/2000, pp. 49, 55
  134. Bulgaru, p. 79; Stan, pp. 27, 36, 37

References

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