Romania, Through Queen Marie`s Eyes. Identity and Self-Identification
Autor: Cristina Violeta Ungureanu
Editura: Casa Cartii de Stiinta Cluj-Napoca
Format: 15,5x23 cm
Nr. pagini: 166
Coperta: brosata
ISBN: 978-606-17-2005-7
Anul aparitiei: 2022
My genuine love and passion for the Queen has been materialized in two volumes, one published in 2021, entitled „Taina si sens in Povestea vietii mele, capodopera MARIEI, Regina Romaniei. Analiza narativ-discursiva”, by Curtea Veche, Bucuresti and the one you start flipping through its pages right now, both representing genuine approaches with direct reference to Marie’s writing talent. And this is so, since many do not know that MARIE, the Queen of Romania, one of the most polarizing royals of her time, wrote and published massively during her life, over thirty books, many of them being translated into different languages.
Her first writings were children’s stories, followed by novels, articles, memoirs, journals and autobiographies that absorbed the reader through the candid and full of characterization humour of the royal life.
Her poetic talents are on display at every sentence, constantly fascinating the reader. As an observer but also a direct participant in certain social, national and international political events, she transposes everything into an objective approach, succeeding in a remarkable way to impact the reader, especially as it intertwines with the subjective in transposing the emotional experience. She manages to captivate the reader by creating an obsession with shared emotions, as if the reader were also part of the evoked phenomena.
After having touched upon the questions of narrative structures, style and expressiveness, discourse analysis and other important features of literary texts in my previous work, I have chosen to present in this study the notions of identity and the construction of self-identification. The goal is to deconstruct and construct the Queen’s identity step by step. It is about declared and assumed identity. Ultimately... who is Marie? What is her identity? Is it British (by the origin of her father, Alfred, son of Queen Victoria and her childhood spent in the most important palaces, or by her education at the highest level on British territory)? Russian (by the strong roots of her mother, Maria Alexandrovna Romanova Grand Duchess of Russia, the single daughter of Tsar Alexander the second of Russia who succeeded in leaving a strong spiritual imprint on Marie’s life)? German (through the marriage with Ferdinand who became Crown Prince of the Kingdom of Romania) or Romanian (for having lived here, accepted, loved the Romanian people and fought for them to the blood price? In fact, she was the ONE to fulfill the national dream of her adopted country that was for decades: the Great Union.
Starting from the theories of identity, my intention is to capture the identity in which she finds herself at her best according to her writings. I will emphasize as well the huge discrepancy in terms of feelings, culture, impressions, mood, maturity, between her arrival on Romanian land and the climax she reached at the end of her days.
CONTENTS
A Preface to the Reader 9
CHAPTER 1. WHO IS MARIE? 13
A. Marie - The Queen 13
B. Marie - The Writer 17
C. Marie - The Artist 26
D. Marie - The Heroine 30
E. Marie - The Mother 33
F. Instead of Conclusions: Top 10 Lessons and Teachings (picked up from „My Country” and „The country that I love”) 35
References 38
CHAPTER 2. IDENTITY AND CONSTRUCTION OF SELF-IDENTIFICATION 40
The Russian context 44
The British context 46
The German context 47
The Romanian context 48
The functionality of personal pronouns in constructions of attached identity 50
Religion and Identity 66
Identity and foreign rulers in Romania 69
Conclusions 82
References 84
CHAPTER 3. ROMANIA: FROM AUTENTICITY TO SPLENDOUR. PORTRAIT OF A COUNTRY. CULTURAL IDENTITY 87
3.1. Cultural Identity 87
3.2. Lexicometric analysis. The portrait of a country 92
1. Nature 99
2. Places 103
3. Churches 107
4. Romanian Peasant 110
3.3. Romania - past, present and future . The perception of a Queen 113
3.4. Other great writers describing genuine Romania 128
References 134
CHAPTER 4. THE QUEEN`S TECHNIQUES TO CREATE PICTURES IN WORDS 136
Literary Description. Features and Devices 136
Functions of description 138
a. Aesthetic (or Ornamental Function) 138
b. Expressive function 139
c. Symbolic function 140
d. Narrative function 141
Descriptive writing 142
1. Using descriptive words 142
2. Uses of figures of speech 143
Using anaphora 148
Using metonymy 149
Using Synecdoche 149
4. Descriptions that delight the five senses with sensory words 150
4. Uses of descriptive detail 151
5. Uses of symbolic objects to suggest ideas or emotions 153
Conclusion 154
References 155
CONCLUSIONS 157
BIBLIOGRAPHY 163