Virgil Nemoianu is William J. Byron Distinguished Professor of Literature and Ordinary Professor of Philosophy at CUA, where he has taught since 1979. He has also taught at the Universities of Bucharest, California (Berkeley), Cincinnati, London, Cambridge, and Amsterdam. He has held leading positions in the International Comparative Literature Association, the Modern Language Association and the Association of Literary Critics and Scholars; he is a member of the European Academy of Arts and Sciences (Vienna). Nemoianu has written, edited, or translated 16 books, written over 600 articles and reviews, and given more than 65 lectures in Europe, America, Africa, and Asia.
Nonfiction
Winter 1981
Symptoms
Dreams and Resentments Cello and bassoon. Why do I not like the cello? I can even say I hate it. It is a respectable instrument, sensitive, dignified, profound, manly, grave. […]
Weekend Reads
Symptoms
From The Kenyon Review, New Series, Winter 1981, Vol. III, No.1 Dreams and Resentments Cello and bassoon. Why do I not like the cello? I can even say I hate […]
