Duda, Virgil

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DUDA, VIRGIL

DUDA, VIRGIL (Rubin Leibovici ; 1939– ), Romanian writer. A lawyer by profession, Duda chose a literary career in the mid-1960s, working also as a producer at the Bucharest Film Studio. After a first volume of short stories, he published several novels demonstrating his remarkable talent for psychological analysis: Catedrala ("The Cathedral," 1969), Anchetatorul apatic ("The Apathetic Interrogator," 1971), and M??tile ("The Masks," 1979). The following novels, published during the 1980s, made his reputation as one of the more important Romanian prose writers: R?zboiul amintirilor ("The War of Remembrances," 1981), which received the prize of the Writers Association); H?r?uiala ("The Harassment," 1984); and Oglinda salvat? ("The Saved Mirror," 1986). Autobiographical elements going back to his life as a teenager in the Moldavian town of Bârlad became more obvious in these works. Settling in Israel in 1988, he continued his literary activity, publishing (in Romania) novels with a preponderance of Jewish themes, including the impact of the Holocaust and the Communist period: România, sfâr?it de decembrie ("Romania, End of December," 1991), Alvis ?i destinul ("Alvis and the Destiny," 1993), A tr?i în p?cat ("To Live in Sin," 1996), Via?? cu efect întârziat ("Life with Belated Effect," 1998), and ?ase femei ("Six Women," 2002). A volume of essays, Evreul ca simbol ("The Jew as a Symbol," 2004) includes many subtle reflections on Jewish intellectuals and writers (Franz Kafka, Isaac Babel, Benjamin Fondane, Mihail Sebastian). Duda's brother, Lucian Raicu, is a well-known Romanian literary critic.

bibliography:

A. Mirodan, Dic?ionar neconven?ional al scriitorilor evrei de limb? român?ii (1997), 180–89; Dic?ionarul general al literaturii române, 2 (2004), 768–70.

[Leon Volovici (2nd ed.)]

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