Dimitar Kalev
Dimitar Kalev | |
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Born | Omurtag, Bulgaria | October 17, 1953
Occupation | |
Education | Medical University of Varna |
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Subject | oncology, cytology, pneumology, epistemology, esotericism |
Notable works |
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Dimitar Nikolaev Kalev is a Bulgarian physician, poet and humanities scholar.
Biography
[edit]Dimitar Kalev was born on October 17, 1953, in the town of Omurtag. In 1971, he graduated from a technical high school, obtained his medical degree in 1979, and holds specialties in internal medicine, pulmonology, phthisiology, and medical oncology. He has worked with the prominent Bulgarian pulmonologist Prof. Dr. Zlatan Zlatanov and one of the founders of Bulgarian clinical cytology – Assoc. Prof. Dr. Asen Zahariev. He holds a Ph degree and the academic title of associate professor.
Medical career
[edit]This section needs additional citations for verification. (January 2025) |
Since 1986 until 2016, he taught pulmonology and clinical oncology at Medical University – Varna. In 1994 he published a mathematical model for cytological diagnosis of benign and malignant pleural effusions. In co-authorship with prof. Dr. Kosta Kostov published the monograph Plevra (2006)[1] and is a co-founder of the pulmonology journal InSpiro.
In 2010, he initiated the national project MORÈ (multidisciplinary oncology conversations and extracts), which annually establishes national expert boards in oncology and publishes evidence-based clinical guidelines. His initiative was to introduce the GRADE approach into Bulgarian oncology science as a system for assessing the quality of evidence and grading recommendations. The foundation MORE-Darzalas he created has been operating since 2015 and conducts various forms of expert creative activity and continuing medical education in oncology.
On his initiative, since 2013, the annual Wreath of Courage award has been awarded - for contribution to Bulgarian clinical oncology.
In March 2022, he founded the Bulgarian Joint Cancer Network (BJCN)[2] cluster and was elected as the first chairman of its board.
Literary work
[edit]In 1971, he received the award from the magazine Rodna Rech for the best poem (Cauldron). He was influenced by Yavorov, Lyubomir Levchev, Osip Mandelstam, Joseph Brodsky and Robert Frost. He published his first lyric collection, "The Suffering of Light," in 1993. Next: To Water Me Beyond (1996),[3] Triada (2001),[4] In Between (2006), Ether (2011), You Who Kill the Prophets (2020) and Euterposophia (2022).
His publishers and editors are the writers Georgi Markovski, Vladimir Zarev, Angel G. Angelov, Elka Nyagolova and the literary critics Panko Anchev, Sava Vassilev and Ivan Granitski. Mikhail Nedelchev includes his poem The Alps in the anthology Europa.[5] He received the Varna 2007 literary award for the poetry collection In Between, in which with the cycle Hexameters he revives the ancient verse structure (hexameter) in Bulgarian lyric poetry. He is the author of the libretto of the ballet performance Anna Karenina, laureate of the Varna 2009 award (together with Konstantin Iliev and Ekaterina Cheshmedzhieva). Since 2005 he has been on the editorial board of the literary magazine Prostori (published since 1961). He gravitates towards the literary circle Poslednite ognari (The House with the Machine), together with Krasimir Simeonov, Angel G. Angelov, Temenuga Marinova, Hristo Leondiev, Yuri Luchev and others.
In 2024, he published a philosophical essay outlining the concept Literary emergentism[6] as a direction in Literary theory.[7]
Humanities studies
[edit]As a humanities scholar he was influenced by Hegel, Rudolf Steiner and Paul Ricoeur. In 1999 published The Master in Varna[8] – a documentary chronicle of the work of Petar Deunov, The Master, in Varna.
One of the initiators of the national conferences Petar Deunov, The Master, in culture the space of Bulgaria. Together with Dimitar Mangurov, Preslav Pavlov and Filip Filipov, he launched several original concepts for the work of Deunov as a cultural and religious phenomenon, including as a Bulgarian Reformation[9] and The Being Bodhisattva in the 20th century.[10] First proposes the morphology Self – Christ – The Other for structuralist reconstruction of the sermons and lectures of Deunov as text.[11] Introduces different epistemological models for the speech of Deunov as oral public speech: formative judgments (ideal objectivity),[12] moral breathing,[13] emergentism (emergent perception),[14] mental detachment and attachment,[15] The Second Coming of Christ in the Etheric World,[10] intesoctualism (neologism derived from intellectualism and esotericism),[16] etc. In his monograph Petar Deunov, The Master (2022, from the series Duty and Honor) he tries to summarize all contemporary humanitarian interpretations of the problem.
Since 2014, in lectures and publications,[17] he has presented the empirical social utopia for a four-part organization of society, in which four communities autonomously function and co-govern: economic, legislative, scientific-educational, and spiritual. He is an initiator and one of the editors of the electronic newspaper "Synarchy."
Recognition
[edit]According to Nikola Ivanov, Dimitar Kalev's lyrics contain a symbolic discourse with distant similarities to Ivan Tsanev and Boris Hristov.[18] Yordan Eftimov defines it as poetry, philosophy and poetry science of the Pre-Socratics, and places Kalev himself in the category of "invisible poet".[19] He is the recipient of the special award of the publishing house "Zahariy Stoyanov" for 2023.
Sources
[edit]- ^ Kosta Kostov, Dimitar Kalev (2006). ""Plevra"" (PDF). Sofia: In Spiro.
- ^ Dimitar Kalev (2022). ""Bulgarian Joint Cancer Network"". Varna.
- ^ Dimitar Kalev (November 19, 2002). ""To Water Me Beyond"". Liternet.
- ^ Dimitar Kalev (December 26, 2001). ""Triada"". Liternet.
- ^ Nedelchev, Mikhail (2018). Europa. Sofia: New Bulgarian University. ISBN 9786192330323.
- ^ Kalev D. Literary emergentism. Available at: https://www.academia.edu/121134447/LITERARY_EMERGENTISM
- ^ Kalev, Dimitar (April 2024). "Literary Emergentism". Savremennik. 1/2024: 287–295 – via Trud.
- ^ Dimitar Kalev. ""The Master in Varna"" (PDF).
- ^ Dimitar Kalev (2010). ""Epistolarni dialogo"". Dialogo na reformatsiya bulgarska, tom 1.
- ^ a b Filip Filipov, Preslav Pavlov, Dimitar Kalev (2007). ""Bodhisatvas v XX vek"".
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ ""The Reasonable Heart"". Words for Master Beinsa Douno (Peter Deunov). Archived from the original on 2021-03-31. Retrieved 2021-04-04.
- ^ Kalev, Dimitar (2015). "The opposition scientism-esotericism and the teachings of Petar Deunov, The Master". First National Scientific Conference: Petar Deunov, The Master, in the Cultural Space of Bulgaria. Collection of Papers. Varna.
- ^ Kalev, Dimitar (2016). "The Word of Petar Deunov, the Master, as a mysterious practice". Second National Scientific Conference: Petar Deunov, The Master, in the Cultural Space of Bulgaria. Collection of Papers.
- ^ Kalev, Dimitar (2018). "The Now, or the Acoustics of Consciousness". Fourth National Scientific Conference: Petar Deunov, The Master, in the Cultural Space of Bulgaria. Collection of Papers.
- ^ Kalev, Dimitar (2012). "Mental Detachment and Attachment". "The Method of Colored Rays of Light". Texts from the Anniversary Scientific Conference, Arbanassi 2012".
- ^ Kalev, Dimitar (2017). "Intesoctualists in the era of culturological neologisms". Third National Scientific Conference: Deunov, The Master, in the Cultural Space of Bulgaria. Collection of Papers.
- ^ Dimitar Kalev (August 4, 2020). "The Four Wills of Our Society. Protest Manifesto". Fakel.bg.
- ^ Nikola Ivanov (February 6, 2007). "Between the Mortal and the Immortal Spirit". LiterNet electronic magazine, No. 2 (87).
- ^ Eftimov, Yordan (2020). "Forward to the Poetry of Secret Knowledge" (PDF). Almanach “More”.
External links
[edit]- From and for Dimitar Kalev in the NALIS Union Catalog - national catalog of academic libraries in Bulgaria
- Dimitar Kalev, “You, who kill the prophets” (poems), Fakel.bg, July 25, 2020
- Angel G. Angelov, “The liquid of “In Between” is a cosmic substance”, LiterNet electronic magazine, December 29, 2006, No. 12 (85)
- Maurice Fadel, “The Poet, the Child”, Fakel.bg, October 11, 2020
- Yordan Eftimov, Forward to the poetry of secret knowledge, almanac "More", 2020
- Krasimir Simeonov, "The House with the Machine", electronic magazine LiterNet, September 11, 2007, No. 9 (94)