Diary for my daughter 30.10.2024 - Henri H. Stahl
Hello, my beautiful daughter!
Tata here!
Hope you're well!
Tata is fine today! I am outside now at the bench, sitting with some neighbours to chat as tomorrow I will leave for Italy. But with a stop to Arad and the next day, I will start driving to Italy. I started to prepare the luggage, and I still had to prepare the clothes, some Romanian food and I already took some Zacusca and another food at cans. I will get ready slowly for leaving. It is a nice day outside today, another 25 degrees. So.. let's go to your today story...
Henri H. Stahl
Henri H. Stahl (also known as Henry H. Stahl or H. H. Stahl; 1901 – 9 September 1991) was a Romanian Marxist cultural anthropologist, ethnographer, sociologist, and social historian.
Biography
Born in Bucharest to a family of Alsatian and French-Swiss ancestry, he was the son of Henri Stahl (a promoter of stenography), as well as the younger brother of the sociologist and Social Democratic Party activist Șerban Voinea [no], and of the novelist Henriette Yvonne Stahl. He was married to Margareta, a known painter.
After attending a local high school, he completed law studies and was awarded a doctorate. Stahl became interested in the work of Dimitrie Gusti, and was consequently one of his most prominent collaborators. Joining the staff of the Department of Sociology, Ethics, Politics, and Aesthetics at the University of Bucharest's Faculty of Letters and Philosophy (where he later became a professor emeritus), Stahl first assisted Gusti and Gheorghe Vlădescu-Răcoasa in the vast interdisciplinary enterprise of creating monographs dedicated to Romanian villages. In 1936, Gusti and Stahl, together with Victor Ion Popa, established the Bucharest Village Museum.
A member of the Criterion society, he made himself known for supporting Austromarxist positions, and, around 1932, was involved in a polemic with the Leninist Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu. In 1934, alongside Alexandru Cristian Tell, Mircea Eliade, Mircea Vulcănescu, and Petru Comarnescu, he sat on the board of Criterion magazine (which claimed not to be linked with the former society). He contributed to Dreapta, a nationalist magazine, but left it after the latter attacked Nicolae Iorga, and cited a conflict in political opinions. By 1938, contrary to the prevalent choices of his generation, Stahl declared himself an anti-fascist.
After World War II and the onset of the communist regime, Stahl was involved in projects to revive the sociology field; he was successful only after 1960, when he began working on Miron Constantinescu's staff at the Romanian Academy's Bibliotheca Historica Romaniae.
In 1990, he was elected a member of the Romanian Academy.
Works
Tehnica monografiei sociologice (1934)
Nerej, un village d'une région archaïque, 3 vols. (1939)
Sociologia satului devălmaș românesc (1946)
Contribuţii la studiul satelor devălmașe românești, 3 vols. (1950-1965)
Les anciennes communautés villageoises roumaines; asservissement et pénétration capitaliste (1966)
Sociologia "concretă" și istorie, in Teorie şi metodă în științele sociale, Vol. VII: Filozofia istoriei. Studii, Editura Politică, Bucarest (1969)
Teoria și practica investigărilor sociale, 2 vols. (1975)
Traditional Romanian Village Communities: The Transition from the Communal to the Capitalist Mode of Production in the Danube Region, Cambridge University Press, 1979
Teorii și ipoteze privind sociologia orânduirii tributale, 1980
Amintiri şi gânduri din vechea şcoală a monografiilor sociologice, 1981
Eseuri critice. Despre cultura populară românească, 1983
Dimitrie Gusti. Studii critice, 1986
Probleme confuze în istoria socială a României, 1992
Zoltán Rostás, Monografia ca utopie. Interviuri cu Henri H. Stahl (interviews), 2000
And that was your today story. Tomorrow, we will learn about Constantin Rădulescu-Motru.
Until tomorrow...
Be nice!
I'm so sorry that another day passed and I didn't hug. Please forgive me!
I miss you the most!
I love you infinite!
Comentarii
Trimiteți un comentariu