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... that Profira Sadoveanu(pictured), who affiliated with interwar Romanian traditionalism, published prose with an "extremely low-key" feminist message? Source: Bianca Burța-Cernat, Fotografie de grup cu scriitoare uitate: proza feminină interbelică, p. 45. Bucharest: Cartea Românească, 2011. ISBN978-973-23-2946-7: Autoscopia, voința de emancipare, ambiția autoafirmării nu sunt mize pentru sobrele scriitoare din familia Vieții românești, nici m\car pentru acelea care, ca Otilia Cazimir ori ca Profira Sadoveanu, au anumite simpatii feministe. Subversivitatea "feministă" a prozei lor este extrem de scăzută. De altfel, nici climatul patriarhal de la Viața românească nu încurajează elanurile emancipatoare. În cercul ieșean prezențele feminine sunt discrete și timorate. Translation: "Introspection, the will to emancipate, the ambition of self-affirmation are not goals for the sober female writers of the Viața Românească family, not even for those who, like Otilia Cazimir or Profira Sadoveanu, display certain feminist sympathies. The 'feminist' subversiveness of their prose is extremely low-key. Moreover, the patriarchal climate of Viața Românească does not encourage impulses toward emancipation. In this circle of Iași, female presences are discreet and timid."
ALT1: ... that writer Profira Sadoveanu(pictured) and her novelist father Mihail once had to take turns defending their home against attacks by the Iron Guard? Source: Mihail Șerban, "Întîlniri cu Sadoveanu", in Gazeta Literară, Vol. XIII, Issue 44, October 1965, p. 10.