Dimitrie Gusti

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Gusti in 1938
Gusti on a 2018 stamp sheet of Romania

Dimitrie Gusti (Romanian pronunciation: [diˈmitri.e ˈɡusti]; 13 February 1880 – 30 October 1955) was a Romanian sociologist, ethnologist, historian, and voluntarist philosopher; a professor at the University of Iaşi and the University of Bucharest, he served as Romania's Minister of Education in 1932–1933. Gusti was elected a member of the Romanian Academy in 1919, and was its president between 1944 and 1946. He was the main contributor to the creation of a new Romanian school of sociology.

He was a prominent member of the Peasants' Party, and later of the National Peasants' Party into which the former had merged.

Biography[]

Born in Iași, he began studying Letters at the University of Iași before moving on to the Universität unter den Linden and the University of Leipzig, where he studied and completed a doctorate in Philosophy (1904). In 1905, he began the study of Sociology, Law, and Political economy at the Universität unter den Linden.

Gusti was appointed to the Department of Ancient History, Ethics and Sociology of the University of Iași in 1910, and was one of the main contributors to the creation of a new Romanian school of sociology. He moved to Bucharest in 1920, and began work as a professor at the University of Bucharest, in the Department of Sociology, Ethics, Politics, and Aesthetics of the latter's Faculty of Letters and Philosophy. His lectures became a center of interest inside the academic community, and he attracted students with diverse backgrounds and political convictions (the far right Mircea Vulcănescu, the communist Miron Constantinescu, the Austromarxist Henri H. Stahl, and the left-wing artist Lena Constante).

Creator of the Bucharest School of Sociology and several Institutes, he also led, between 1925 and 1948, the intense research of Romanian villages and the publishing of its results as detailed monographs (a work in which he was notably assisted by Gheorghe Vlădescu-Răcoasa and Stahl). In 1936, together with Stahl and Victor Ion Popa, Gusti created the Village Museum in Bucharest.

He left the National Peasants' Party after 1938, disagreeing with its decision to oppose the authoritarian regime of King Carol II, and collaborated with the newly created National Renaissance Front.[1] Consequently, he was threatened by the rise of the fascist Iron Guard (with the late 1940 establishment of the National Legionary State); following the Legionary Rebellion and the Guard's defeat, he sent a congratulatory telegram to Conducător Ion Antonescu.[2]

After the end of World War II, Gusti was approached by the new Communist government with offers of collaboration. He was invited to attend official ceremonies inside the Soviet Union, and was a member of the .[3][4]

He died in Bucharest in 1955, and was buried at Eternitatea Cemetery in Iași.[5]

Theory[]

Gusti defined his view on society as dependent on a set of principles:

  • Society is composed of "", as groups of humans linked by a voluntary organizing activity and interconnected spiritually.
  • The essence of life is "social will".
  • "Social will" is expressed in economics and spirituality, both of which are regulated by law and politics.
  • "Social will" is conditioned by factors which are included in four fundamental and parallel categories: cosmical, biological, psychological, and historical.
  • The changes engineered by the factors are known as "".
  • The premises of development one can observe in present society, and thus can predict with some accuracy, are known as "social trends".

A creator of the sociological monographic method (as still used by his Bucharest School), Gusti favored and theoretised first-hand intensive observation of social units and phenomena, as well as interdisciplinarity, with the research work being carried out through intensive collaboration within the field of social sciences, but also with doctors, agronomists, schoolteachers, etc.

Main works[]

  • Egoismus und Altruismus, 1904
  • Die soziologischen Betrehungen in der neuen Ethik, 1908
  • Cosmologia elenă, 1929
  • Sociologia militans, (vol. 1, 1935; vols. 2–3, 1946)
  • Enciclopedia României, vols. I-IV, Bucharest, 1938, 1943
  • Cunoaştere şi acţiune în serviciul naţiunii, (2 vols., 1939)
  • Problema sociologiei, 1940
  • La science de la réalité sociale, 1941

See also[]

Notes[]

  1. ^ Bozgan, p. 333
  2. ^ Scurtu, p. 11
  3. ^ Bozgan, p. 329
  4. ^ Cioroianu, p. 24
  5. ^ "Cimitirul Eternitatea". www.spiasi.ro (in Romanian). Servicii Publice Iași. Retrieved 19 January 2021.

Cited sources[]

  • Lucian Boia, ed. (1998) Miturile comunismului românesc (The Myths of Romanian Communism), , Bucharest.
    • Ovidiu Bozgan, "Traiectorii universitare: de la stânga interbelică la comunism" ("University Trajectories: from Interwar Left to Communism"), pp. 309–335
    • Adrian Cioroianu, "Lumina vine de la Răsărit. «Noua imagine» a Uniunii Sovietice în România postbelică, 1944–1947" ("The Light Arises in the East. The Soviet Union's «New Image» of Postwar Romania, 1944–1947"), p. 21–68
  • (in Romanian) Mircea Vulcănescu, Şcoala sociologică a lui Dimitrie Gusti ("Dimitrie Gusti's Sociological School")
  • Ioan Scurtu, "PNL și PNȚ: Rezerve, nemulțumiri, proteste. Partidele istorice sub guvernarea antonesciano-legionară" ("PNL and PNȚ: Reserves, Dissatisfactions, Protests, Historical Parties under the Antonescu-Legionary Government"), in Dosarele Istoriei, 9/2000

External links[]

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