Dinu Nicodin
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Dinu Nicodin Nicolae Ioanid | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1886 |
| Died | 1948 |
| Occupation | novelist, poet, businessman |
| Nationality | Romanian |
| Period | 1910-1962 |
| Genre | historical novel, prose poem, satire, short story, travel literature |
| Literary movement | modernism, Sburătorul |
Dinu Nicodin (Romanian pronunciation: [ˈdinu nikoˈdin]; pen name of Nicolae Ioanid;[1] 1886–1948) was a Romanian writer affiliated with the modernist venue Sburătorul. Having an aristocratic (boyar) background, he was an eccentric and adventurous figure who only turned to literature as a hobby, and whose scattered works were generally well received by critics during his lifetime. Nicodin was a promoter of works by his younger colleagues, and cultivated close friendships with those of his generation, being primarily noted for his presence on the interwar's social scene.
Nicodin's two novels, Lupii ("The Wolves") and Revoluţia ("The Revolution"), have earned praise for their erudition and their characteristic narrative style, but these traits have also made him hard to place in relation to 20th century currents in Romanian literature. The writer largely faded out of critical memory by 1950, although there has been a significant resurgence in interest in later decades.
The scion of an old and prosperous boyar family,[2] Nicodin lived in Bucharest, where his main residence was the Capşa Hotel.[3] He was reportedly a passionate hunter, sharing this hobby with the other surviving members of Romanian boyardom.[2][3] His other activities centered on eccentric and adventurous pursuits: a dueler and a horse rider, he was also a financial expert, and once tasked by the government with overseeing the liquidation of a bank.[2] Although discovered late in life, his literary ambition is said to have led him to consider writing not just novels, but also screenplays and studies, in several languages.[4]
Cultivating a personal relationship with literary theorist Eugen Lovinescu,[3] Nicodin became a presence among the members of Lovinescu's literary circle, Sburătorul. The two shared a book collecting hobby and a love of fine paper: Nicodin procured for his friend paper items made from Japanese silk, and financed bibliophile editions of both their works.[5] While attending the sessions of Sburătorul, Nicodin also pursued a romantic affair with female novelist Cella Serghi.[6] His own debut came late in life: the 1934 novel Lupii, which elevated him to critical attention, and the prose poem Aghan.[7]
Dinu Nicodin made his comeback to literature during World War II, when he published a volume of short stories, Pravoslavnica ocrotire (approx., "The Orthodox Protection").[2] Seeing print two years later,[2][7] Revoluţia was Nicodin's contribution to the historical novel genre. His literary confirmation came later, after the August 1944 Coup toppled the repressive Ion Antonescu regime (see Romania during World War II). In September, Nicodin was one of the writers newly admitted into the Romanian Writers' Society, and whose arrival followed the expulsion of authors considered fascists or supporters of authoritarianism.[8]
Shortly before his 1948 death, Nicodin was in correspondence with young critic Ion Negoiţescu. A disciple of Lovinescu and member of the Sibiu Literary Circle, Negoiţescu had earlier given an enthusiastic review to Revoluţia.[9] Nicodin was among those who tried to obtain Negoiţescu a scholarship to study in France, but their common project ultimately failed.[10]