Ţepeneag, Dumitru, 1937-

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Information for Authority record
Name (Latin)
Ţepeneag, Dumitru, 1937-
Other forms of name
Tsepeneag, Dumitru, 1937-
Tsepeneag, D. (Dumitru), 1937-
Pastenague, Ed, 1937-
Date of birth
1937
Associated Language
fre
Gender
male
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
VIAF: 2453999
Wikidata: Q2743703
Library of congress: n 85068750
Sources of Information
  • His Nunţile necesare, 1992:t.p. (Dumitru Țepeneag)
  • His Le mot sablier, c1984:t.p. (Dumitru Tsepeneag)
  • His Exercises d'attente, 1972:t.p. (Dumitru Tsepeneag) p. 4 of cover (b. 14 Feb. 1937, resides in Romania)
  • Pavel, L. Dumitru Țepeneag şi canonul literaturii alternative, 2007:t.p. (Dumitru Țepeneag) p. 157 (wrote work Pigeon vole in French under pseud. Ed Pastenague)
  • D. Tsepeneag et le régime des mots, 2009.
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Wikipedia description:

Dumitru Țepeneag (also known under the pen names Ed Pastenague and Dumitru Tsepeneag; b. February 14, 1937) is a contemporary Romanian novelist, essayist, short story writer and translator, who currently resides in France. He was one of the founding members of the Oniric group, and a theoretician of the Onirist trend in Romanian literature, while becoming noted for his activities as a dissident. In 1975, the Communist regime stripped him of his citizenship. He settled down in Paris, where he was a leading figure of the Romanian exile. In addition to his literary work, he is known for his independent left-wing views, which were influenced by libertarian socialism and anarchism. Țepeneag is one of the most important Romanian translators of French literature, and has rendered into Romanian the works by New Left, avant-garde and Neo-Marxist authors such as Alain Robbe-Grillet, Robert Pinget, Albert Béguin, Jacques Derrida, and Alexandre Kojève. The founder of the magazine Cahiers de l'Est, he has also translated texts by Romanian poets into French — examples include Leonid Dimov, Daniel Turcea, Ion Mureșan, Marta Petreu, Emil Brumaru, Mircea Ivănescu. His wife, Mona Țepeneag, is herself a translator and essayist.

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