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George Orwell and Communist Poland: Émigré, Official and Clandestine Receptions: Routledge Studies in Twentieth-Century Literature

Autor Krystyna Wieszczek
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 18 noi 2024
George Orwell and Communist Poland is the first major account of George Orwell’s Polish reception during the Second World War and the Cold War era. It shows how Orwell, the epitome of a censored writer in the Soviet bloc, enjoyed a fulsome reception both outside and within communist Poland. It does so by developing a tripartite framework to study reception in conditions of state-imposed censorship, where three channels are likely to develop: émigré, official and clandestine.
The book thus brings to light Orwell’s overlooked relationships with Polish exiles who informed his work and looked upon him not only as a writer but also a personal friend and political ally. They eagerly translated his works and sought multinational promotion, even behind the Iron Curtain. The volume argues that Orwell also experienced official reception. References and eventually his work were smuggled into state-controlled culture in officially accepted ways. Additionally, communist censorship files reflect his reception within the state apparatus. Finally, the book examines passionate clandestine responses to Orwell's writing and myth in diaries and letters from as early as Stalinism and explores Orwell’s popularity among underground presses, where his works became bestsellers.
The book draws on sources in foreign languages and previously unseen material, including Orwell’s ‘lost’ letters to Teresa Jeleńska, the Polish translator of Animal Farm. The volume significantly broadens our understanding of Orwell’s life, work and legacy. It also contributes to discussions in English literature and comparative literature, literary exchanges, translation, reception and censorship and East European studies.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781032409535
ISBN-10: 1032409533
Pagini: 354
Ilustrații: 48
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Seria Routledge Studies in Twentieth-Century Literature

Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Public țintă

Postgraduate and Undergraduate Advanced

Recenzii

"A fascinating, powerful book: exhaustively researched, timely, important, and surprising at every turn. Opening up the terrain of Orwell’s posthumous reception in Poland and charting how Orwell interacted with Polish writers and activists, Wieszczek constructs a radically new angle on the man and his work."
--Nathan Waddell, Associate Professor in Twentieth-Century Literature, University of Birmingham, UK
"A fascinating and meticulously researched account of Orwell's reception by an audience for whom his two great novels, Animal Farm and Nineteen Eighty-Four, might have been expressly written."
--D.J. Taylor, author of Orwell: The New Life
"The untold history of George Orwell's reception in Poland is recounted here in fascinating detail. Despite official censorship of this ‘quasi-official enemy’ of the Soviet bloc, his works did circulate in a ‘nuanced presence’ thanks to clandestine publications and the work of Polish émigrés."
--Christopher Rundle, Associate Professor in Translation Studies, University of Bologna, Italy
"Krystyna Wieszczek’s text is a fascinating, highly original and meticulously researched examination of the reception and censorship in Poland of the work of George Orwell. Including a study of Orwell’s ‘lost’ letters to Teresa Jeleńska, the Polish translator of Animal Farm, it amounts to an important addition to the ever-growing field of Orwell Studies."
--Professor Richard Lance Keeble, University of Lincoln, UK
"Krystyna Wieszczek de Oliveira's book is a pioneering attempt to present the Polish post-war reception of George Orwell's works in three complementary approaches: official reception, i.e. subjected to supervision by institutional censorship, emigration reception and illegal reception (samizdat). Both among Polish émigré circles and in communist Poland, Orwell's works were very popular, and the subversive novels: Animal Farm or Nineteen Eighty-Four were read strictly according to an anti-communist key.
As a researcher of communist censorship, I would like to emphasize that the work George Orwell and Communist Poland: Émigré, Official and Clandestine Receptions is very good, reliable and revealing. Moreover, it opens a new current of comparative research: on the history of editing, translation and censorship of literature of the most outstanding works of world literature, including English-language literature, in Poland of 1944 -1989."
--Kamila Budrowska, Professor in Literature, University of Bałystok, Poland

Cuprins

Introduction    
Chapter 1        Émigré Reception – Orwell a Friend and Political Ally
The Rare British Friend Speaks up for the Polish Cause  
    Orwell a Friend and Political Ally         
    Poland in Orwell’s Writing       
        Censorship Troubles     
        Orwell’s ‘Omissions’   
        Polish Friends Reciprocate        
Polish Friends Speak up for Orwell       
    Polish Émigré Media and Orwell Good for All   
    How Appropriate for Us: Animal Farm in Polish
    Animal Farm to Save the World with a Little Help from Polish Friends   
    Not Only Animal Farm: An Overlooked Would-Be Essay Collection in Polish  
    The Most Poignant Book of Our Times: Echoes of Nineteen Eighty-Four
Dead but Much Alive: Orwell’s Afterlife among the Polish Diaspora      
    Polish Exiles Mourn the Author’s Death
    Another Paris-London Collaboration: Nineteen Eighty-Four in Polish     
    A Weapon in Unorthodox Cold War Offensives 
    Orwell Defies Détente  
    The Orwell Year 1984 Commemorated 
Chapter 2        Official Reception – Orwell an Enemy
Orwell and the Communist Censorship System  
Banned Yet Present – Smuggled, Disguised, Misread
    Innocent and Anonymous
    Socialist Realism Versus a Shadowy Enemy of Humankind
    The 1956 Thaw Attempts to Tame the Foe         
    The Nemesis Frozen for Decades
        But Lurking in Libraries
        But Evoked in Official Culture 
    The 1980s and Orwell Back in Sight     
        Reinscribed Books       
        Back in the Fourth Estate under Censor’s Keeping         
        The Orwell Year Relief of Alliance Transmutations       
        Affable Anonymous Aspidistra for the Relentless Crisis 
        Aspidistra Is Not the Orwell; or, a Death Foretold
Chapter 3        Clandestine Reception – Orwell a Liberator   
Orwell Ammunition     
Before the Paper Revolution     
    Orwell in Diaries, Letters and Other Writing      
    A Homo Sovieticus Antidote     
After the Paper Revolution
    Top of the Charts         
    Orwell Published Underground 
    The Solidarity Carnival
    Big Brother’s Return: Martial Law        
    The Orwell Year Looming        
    Life after 1984 
4 Orwell Good for All    
 
Appendix A: Orwell’s Response to Wiadomości’s Survey on Joseph Conrad (1949)
Appendix B: List of Orwell’s Polish Clandestine Book Editions (1976–1989)
Appendix C: List of Selected Polish Translations of Orwell’s Essays and Shorter Pieces by the Chronology of Their First Appearance
Selected Thematic Bibliography         
Letters, Diaries and Memoirs
    Letters: Orwell–Jeleńska; Giedroyc–Mieroszewski; Giedroyc–Świderska; and Giedroyc–Weintraub
    Other Letters, Diaries and Memoirs       
Polish Communist Records       
    Unpublished
    Published
Polish Émigré and British Records        
Interviews       
Other Communication 
Broadcasts       
Artefacts and Transformations  
Publications of Orwell’s Works
    Émigré
    Official
    Clandestine     
    Non-Polish and Polish Post-1989          
Polish Publications Concerning Orwell from the Period  
    Émigré
    Official
    Clandestine
Secondary Sources
    Orwell Criticism and References           
    Translation and Reception        
    Censorship      
    Émigrés and Diaspora
    Official Culture in Poland         
    Clandestine Printing and Second Circulation
    Reference Works
    Literature
    Major Sources Available Online        
Archives Consulted

Notă biografică

Krystyna Wieszczek is a Marie Skłodowska-Curie Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Verona, Italy, and Columbia University, New York. She specialises in twentieth-century English literature and literary translation, reception and censorship. Her current work investigates empirical reception and the potential impact of literature on empowerment. Previously, she taught at the University of Bologna and the Ignatianum Academy in Krakow, and was a Visiting Scholar at the University of Milan. She holds a PhD in English from the University of Southampton, UK.

Descriere

George Orwell and Communist Poland is the first major account of George Orwell’s Polish reception during WWII and the cold war.