Black & Decker HS1776 Manuel d'utilisateur Page 41

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Vue de la page 40
The collateral risks of a polemic
39
the real dimension of the journalist, only
few texts appeared, and those only came up
recently. That is why the present interven‑
tion aims to shed light over several aspects
regarding the publishing beginnings of C.
Stere and to interpret them, along with the
collateral risks that he, almost unknowingly,
has taken on. Our article is called Around a
polemic, narrowing its appliance to a num‑
ber of fifteen texts printed in the
Evenimentul literar” magazine, starting
march 1894 and ending the same year in
June. Another two articles would be added
to these, and they were published in
Adevărul” and „Naţionalul”, the latter being
signed with his own name, and both related
to the present subject.
1. Before moving on to the actual com‑
ment, we will answer the question about
who Stere was and how the journalists’ cast
was perceiving the author of those texts.
The question is justified, as except for the
profound experience that had marked his
existence, Constantin Stere had not yet
reached the notoriety conferred by the facts
following his activity and career. Moreover,
in Romania, the author had the statute of a
transfuge, that had come from the tsarist
Russia, where he was supposed to serve
part of a sentence.
Briefly, the author of the polemic texts
had „debuted” [1] only a year earlier in
Munca” (on March 28th, 1893), with the
article O sinucidere, signed as C. Minuseanu.
The author had recently arrived to Iași (in
November 1892), after having suffered
deportation in the far‑away Siberia,
between 1886 and 1892 (in Kurgan, Iamalsk,
Serghinsk, the latter being on the border
with Mongolia), and being subject to
extreme experiences. Even since his arrival,
he had integrated in the socialist movement
led by Ioan Nădejde, and welcomed as a
true martyr. „The Russian” or „The
Siberian” are two of the names that he was
often called by. As an „old” student of the
Law University, he had founded the student
society Datoria (1893) whose purpose was
„contributing to increasing the cultural
level of the people’s mass”. He was 28 years
old, and after his first published interven‑
tions, the press of those times pictured him
as a man with a long beard, sleepy eyes,
always carrying a book under his arm.
Shortly, Constantin Stere made himself
known in the public space under numerous
pseudonyms [2]. The identity of the signer
was only known to the small circles of initi‑
ates in the journalist space. The pseudonym
C. Sorțescu publishes in „Evenimentul”
(Socialiştii şi mişcarea naţională), while pleas
of a similar essence can be found in the
literary pages of „Adevărul” journal where,
under the pseudonym Observator ipocondric
(Hypochondriac observer), he had pub‑
lished the eight‑parts feuilleton Din notiţele
unui observator ipocondric. This was the „vis‑
ibility” of the author at the moment we are
referring to. However, our investigation
focuses on a series of articles and notes host‑
ed by the weekly publication „Evenimentul
literar” from Iași, carried throughout the
year 1894, before its printing had ceased.
They bear various pseudonyms and can
also be consulted in the C. Stere edition,
Publicistica, printed in Iaşi in 2010, a first
volume of established selections, also
accompanied by notes and comments by
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