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Malvina, or the Heart’s Intuition

Autor Maria Wirtemberska Traducere de Ursula Phillips
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 14 mai 2012
First published in Warsaw in 1816, Malvina, or the Heart’s Intuition has been largely—and unjustly—ignored by the Polish literary canon. Ingeniously structured and vividly related by a Tristram Shandy-esque narrator, Maria Wirtemberska’s psychologically complex work is often considered Poland’s first modern novel.This splendid translation by Ursula Phillips should restore Wirtemberska to her rightful place in the literary pantheon while providing fertile new ground for the study of the international development of the novel.
The romantic story of the young widow Malvina and her mysterious lover Ludomir, Malvina combines several literary styles and influences—from the epistolary to the Gothic. Nobel laureate Czeslaw Milosz argues that Malvina is quintessentially a sentimental novel—a model of the genre whose chief aspiration is to promote a change in sensibility and inspire new forces of feeling and imagination. For this reason Wirtemberska may be compared to her English contemporary, Jane Austen.
A work of genuine artistic daring and sophistication, Malvina, or the Heart’s Intuition has been overlooked by critics for too long, and readers have been denied the pleasure of reading one of literature’s major landmarks—until now.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780875804507
ISBN-10: 0875804500
Pagini: 244
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.34 kg
Editura: Northern Illinois University Press
Colecția Northern Illinois University Press

Notă biografică

Maria Wirtemberska (1768–1854) was a Polish noblewoman and philanthropist in addition to being a writer. Ursula Phillips is a writer on Polish literature, mainly in the field of women’s writing, gender and feminism, and also a translator of literary and academic works, including The Palace by contemporary novelist Wiesław Myśliwski, historian Antoni Mączak’s Travel in Early Modern Europe, Grażyna Borkowska’s Alienated Women: A Study on Polish Women’s Fiction 1845-1916 and the recent research project Humanism in Polish Culture. She is Honorary Research Associate of the University College London School of Slavonic and East European Studies. 

Cuprins

Preface
Introduction

Malvina, or the Heart's Intuition
To My Brother
Volume One
1. Thunder and Lighting
2. Ludomir's Letter to Telimena
3. In which the Reader Learns more Clearly who Malvina was
4. Wanda's Letter to her Aunt
5. Aunty
6. The Name-Day Celebration
7. Declaration of Love
8. Ludomir's Second Letter to Telimena
9. Departure
10. A Very Brief Chapter
11. Warsaw
12. The Continuation of Malvina's Stay in Warsaw
13. Evening at Princess W***'s
14. Charity Collecting
Volume Two
15. Taida
16. In Brief
17. Alfred's Letter to Major Lissowski
18. The Return of Prince Melsztynski
19. The Tournament
20. The Apparition
21. A Rather Miserable Chapter
22. Departure from Warsaw
23. The Battle of Mohilew
24. In which Certain Unexpected Changes Take Place
25. The Monk
26. The Heart, however, Rarely Makes a Mistake
27. The Bench under the Chestnut on the Dike
28. The End


Recenzii

“The novel’s freshness and verve are faithfully rendered in Ursula Phillips’s excellent, seamless translation. Here the vocabulary of feeling hits its mark and helps make Malvina a contribution to a renewed forging of Polish identity.”

"Wirtemberska [is] one of the first figures in a now rich tradition of Polish literature written by women. Indeed, Wirtemberska's book remains interesting to this day. . . . Phillips's exceptionally careful translation . . . is original and as graceful as any alternative that comes to mind. . . . [Anyone] with an interest in the novel taking root as a genre or in the early nineteenth-century novel will appreciate this book."