Polish Literature as World Literature: Literatures as World Literature
Editat de Dr. Piotr Florczyk, Dr. K. A. Wisniewskien Limba Engleză Paperback – 24 iul 2024
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781501387142
ISBN-10: 1501387146
Pagini: 256
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.35 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria Literatures as World Literature
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1501387146
Pagini: 256
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.35 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria Literatures as World Literature
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Caracteristici
Offers the latest critical perspectives and approaches on Polish literature, history, and culture from Polish and international scholars
Notă biografică
Piotr Florczyk is Assistant Professor of Global Literary Studies at the University of Washington, USA, and an award-winning poet and translator. K. A. Wisniewski is Director of Book History and Digital Initiatives at the American Antiquarian Society, USA, and the Founding Editor of the open access journal Textshop Experiments.
Cuprins
AcknowledgmentsIntroductionPiotr Florczyk, University of Southern California, USA, and K. A. Wisniewski, American Antiquarian Society, USA1. Polish Neurosis and the World LiteratureMichal Pawel Markowski, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA2. Jan Potocki, the Greatest Author of the Polish Enlightenment as a French WriterEmiliano Ranocchi, Urbino University, Italy3. Adam Mickiewicz: A Very Short Manual for Non-Polish UsersGrzegorz Marzec, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland4. The Global Rise of the Novel: Poland and World LiteratureKatarzyna Bartoszynska, Ithaca College, USA5. Eliza Orzeszkowa and Edith Wharton, or Worldly Rhythms of Polish Women's WritingLena Magnone, University of Warsaw, Poland6. Suitors with Their Stomachs Full of Lovers: Cannibalistic Tropes in the Texts of Polish FuturistAgnieszka Jezyk, University of Toronto, Canada7. Polish Literature and/or World Literature: Bruno Schulz in EnglishZofia Ziemann, Jagiellonian University, Poland8. Polishness Revisited: Witold Gombrowicz and the Question of IdentityJacek Gutorow, University of Opole, Poland9. Beyond Identity: John Ashbery's and Frank O'Hara's Impact on Polish PoetryKacper Bartczak, University of Lódz, Poland10. The Collective Constipation of the Polish/Israeli Subject: Lipski, Levin, WarlikowskiAndrzej Brylak, University of Southern California, USA11. Swimming Queer: Moving with Contemporary Polish Queer LiteraturesEla Przybylo, Illinois State University, USA12. Between the Mythical and the Modern: Polishness in the Work of Olga Tokarczuk and Dorota MaslowskaMarta Koronkiewicz and Pawel Kaczmarski, University of Wroclaw, Poland13. Liberature as World LiteratureKatarzyna Bazarnik, Jagiellonian University, PolandBibliographyNotes on ContributorsIndex
Recenzii
The book is full of new insights into the major authors and phenomena of modern and contemporary Polish literature and is a valuable source of inspiration for scholars of world literature and for scholars of Polish literature: for the former it provides synecdochs, for the latter metonyms; for the former a quantitative contribution, shedding light on a part of the world literature scene left so far in penumbra; for the latter qualitative insights, thinning out the national literature scene or reinterpreting authors and phenomena in a new key. The question for the former is: can a literature with five Nobel Prizes be considered 'minor'? The question for the latter: how can the neurotic relationship between national and universal be overcome? This volume relates the Polish literary microcosm and the world literary macrocosm, suggesting that 'the world' is after all a naive word, to paraphrase the title of a poem by Nobel laureate Czeslaw Milosz, one of the most global of Polish writers.
In this very competently edited and thoroughly researched volume, Florczyk and Wisniewski have managed to pull together an impressive range of high-quality essays that explore the connection (and the tension) between the global and the local in Polish literary production and criticism. Admirably, the book's primary aim is not so much to firmly establish the position of Polish literature in the global public consciousness - as part and parcel of world literature - but rather to show how the seemingly unresolvable conflict between particularity and universality (or parochialism and cosmopolitanism) has been at the heart of Polish literary and intellectual debates of the past few centuries. While some authors investigate previously overlooked transnational perspectives (with a particular focus on the circulation, translation, reception and branding of Polish literature beyond Polish borders), other contributors introduce refreshingly new and challenging comparative constellations. A highly welcome and timely addition to the growing body of English-language books on Polish literature and culture, this collection will serve as an invaluable guide for any scholar and student interested in the transnational and global dynamics of Polish literature, from the early modern age up to the present moment, at the intersection of textual, contextual and comparative approaches.
One reason to study world literature is to escape the limitations of one's national literature, the more so if it is eternally preoccupied with its own role and character. Polish Literature as World Literature discloses the potential of Polish writing for the international reader and sheds light on the complex processes and phenomena responsible for the 'worlding' or 'nationalizing' of the Polish literary field.
In this very competently edited and thoroughly researched volume, Florczyk and Wisniewski have managed to pull together an impressive range of high-quality essays that explore the connection (and the tension) between the global and the local in Polish literary production and criticism. Admirably, the book's primary aim is not so much to firmly establish the position of Polish literature in the global public consciousness - as part and parcel of world literature - but rather to show how the seemingly unresolvable conflict between particularity and universality (or parochialism and cosmopolitanism) has been at the heart of Polish literary and intellectual debates of the past few centuries. While some authors investigate previously overlooked transnational perspectives (with a particular focus on the circulation, translation, reception and branding of Polish literature beyond Polish borders), other contributors introduce refreshingly new and challenging comparative constellations. A highly welcome and timely addition to the growing body of English-language books on Polish literature and culture, this collection will serve as an invaluable guide for any scholar and student interested in the transnational and global dynamics of Polish literature, from the early modern age up to the present moment, at the intersection of textual, contextual and comparative approaches.
One reason to study world literature is to escape the limitations of one's national literature, the more so if it is eternally preoccupied with its own role and character. Polish Literature as World Literature discloses the potential of Polish writing for the international reader and sheds light on the complex processes and phenomena responsible for the 'worlding' or 'nationalizing' of the Polish literary field.