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| - Virgil Nemoianu (Romanian pronunciation: [virˈd͡ʒil nemoˈjanu], born March 12, 1940) is a Romanian-American essayist, literary critic, and philosopher of culture. He is generally described as a specialist in "comparative literature" but this is a somewhat limiting label, only partially covering the wider range of his activities and accomplishments. His thinking places him at the intersection of neo-Platonism and neo-Kantianism, which he turned into an instrument meant to qualify, channel, and tame the asperities, as well as what he regarded the impatient accelerations and even absurdities of modernity and post-modernity. He chose early on to write within the intellectual horizons outlined by Goethe and Leibniz and has continued to do so throughout his life. (en)
- Virgil Nemoianu (Bucarest, 12 de marzo de 1940) es un autor, crítico y ensayista estadounidense de origen rumano, profesor de la Universidad Católica de América. Ha escrito obras como Structuralismul (1967), Calmul valorilor (1971), Utilul şi plăcutul (1973); The Taming of Romanticism. European Literature in the Age of Biedermeier (Harvard University Press, 1984); A Theory of the Secondary: Literature, Progress and Reaction (The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1989); Romania si liberalismele ei. Atractii si impotriviri (Editura Fundatiei Culturale Romane, 2000); The Triumph of Imperfection: The Silver Age of Sociocultural Moderation in Europe, 1815-1848 (University of South Carolina Press, 2006); o Postmodernism and Cultural Identities: Conflicts and Coexistence (Catholic Unive (es)
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