Polish Literature as World Literature
Polish Literature as World Literature
Wisniewski, Dr. K. A.; Florczyk, Dr. Piotr
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
07/2024
262
Mole
Inglês
9781501387142
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Acknowledgments
Introduction
Piotr Florczyk, University of Southern California, USA, and K. A. Wisniewski, American Antiquarian Society, USA
1. Polish Neurosis and the World Literature
Michal Pawel Markowski, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA
2. Jan Potocki, the Greatest Author of the Polish Enlightenment as a French Writer
Emiliano Ranocchi, Urbino University, Italy
3. Adam Mickiewicz: A Very Short Manual for Non-Polish Users
Grzegorz Marzec, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland
4. The Global Rise of the Novel: Poland and World Literature
Katarzyna Bartoszynska, Ithaca College, USA
5. Eliza Orzeszkowa and Edith Wharton, or Worldly Rhythms of Polish Women's Writing
Lena Magnone, University of Warsaw, Poland
6. Suitors with Their Stomachs Full of Lovers: Cannibalistic Tropes in the Texts of Polish Futurist
Agnieszka Jezyk, University of Toronto, Canada
7. Polish Literature and/or World Literature: Bruno Schulz in English
Zofia Ziemann, Jagiellonian University, Poland
8. Polishness Revisited: Witold Gombrowicz and the Question of Identity
Jacek Gutorow, University of Opole, Poland
9. Beyond Identity: John Ashbery's and Frank O'Hara's Impact on Polish Poetry
Kacper Bartczak, University of Lodz, Poland
10. The Collective Constipation of the Polish/Israeli Subject: Lipski, Levin, Warlikowski
Andrzej Brylak, University of Southern California, USA
11. Swimming Queer: Moving with Contemporary Polish Queer Literatures
Ela Przybylo, Illinois State University, USA
12. Between the Mythical and the Modern: Polishness in the Work of Olga Tokarczuk and Dorota Maslowska
Marta Koronkiewicz and Pawel Kaczmarski, University of Wroclaw, Poland
13. Liberature as World Literature
Katarzyna Bazarnik, Jagiellonian University, Poland
Bibliography
Notes on Contributors
Index
Introduction
Piotr Florczyk, University of Southern California, USA, and K. A. Wisniewski, American Antiquarian Society, USA
1. Polish Neurosis and the World Literature
Michal Pawel Markowski, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA
2. Jan Potocki, the Greatest Author of the Polish Enlightenment as a French Writer
Emiliano Ranocchi, Urbino University, Italy
3. Adam Mickiewicz: A Very Short Manual for Non-Polish Users
Grzegorz Marzec, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland
4. The Global Rise of the Novel: Poland and World Literature
Katarzyna Bartoszynska, Ithaca College, USA
5. Eliza Orzeszkowa and Edith Wharton, or Worldly Rhythms of Polish Women's Writing
Lena Magnone, University of Warsaw, Poland
6. Suitors with Their Stomachs Full of Lovers: Cannibalistic Tropes in the Texts of Polish Futurist
Agnieszka Jezyk, University of Toronto, Canada
7. Polish Literature and/or World Literature: Bruno Schulz in English
Zofia Ziemann, Jagiellonian University, Poland
8. Polishness Revisited: Witold Gombrowicz and the Question of Identity
Jacek Gutorow, University of Opole, Poland
9. Beyond Identity: John Ashbery's and Frank O'Hara's Impact on Polish Poetry
Kacper Bartczak, University of Lodz, Poland
10. The Collective Constipation of the Polish/Israeli Subject: Lipski, Levin, Warlikowski
Andrzej Brylak, University of Southern California, USA
11. Swimming Queer: Moving with Contemporary Polish Queer Literatures
Ela Przybylo, Illinois State University, USA
12. Between the Mythical and the Modern: Polishness in the Work of Olga Tokarczuk and Dorota Maslowska
Marta Koronkiewicz and Pawel Kaczmarski, University of Wroclaw, Poland
13. Liberature as World Literature
Katarzyna Bazarnik, Jagiellonian University, Poland
Bibliography
Notes on Contributors
Index
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
comp lit; Poland; production; circulation; translation; global lit; Nobel Prize; cultural history; canon; globalization; national identity; adaptation; intertextuality; material culture; archive
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Piotr Florczyk, University of Southern California, USA, and K. A. Wisniewski, American Antiquarian Society, USA
1. Polish Neurosis and the World Literature
Michal Pawel Markowski, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA
2. Jan Potocki, the Greatest Author of the Polish Enlightenment as a French Writer
Emiliano Ranocchi, Urbino University, Italy
3. Adam Mickiewicz: A Very Short Manual for Non-Polish Users
Grzegorz Marzec, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland
4. The Global Rise of the Novel: Poland and World Literature
Katarzyna Bartoszynska, Ithaca College, USA
5. Eliza Orzeszkowa and Edith Wharton, or Worldly Rhythms of Polish Women's Writing
Lena Magnone, University of Warsaw, Poland
6. Suitors with Their Stomachs Full of Lovers: Cannibalistic Tropes in the Texts of Polish Futurist
Agnieszka Jezyk, University of Toronto, Canada
7. Polish Literature and/or World Literature: Bruno Schulz in English
Zofia Ziemann, Jagiellonian University, Poland
8. Polishness Revisited: Witold Gombrowicz and the Question of Identity
Jacek Gutorow, University of Opole, Poland
9. Beyond Identity: John Ashbery's and Frank O'Hara's Impact on Polish Poetry
Kacper Bartczak, University of Lodz, Poland
10. The Collective Constipation of the Polish/Israeli Subject: Lipski, Levin, Warlikowski
Andrzej Brylak, University of Southern California, USA
11. Swimming Queer: Moving with Contemporary Polish Queer Literatures
Ela Przybylo, Illinois State University, USA
12. Between the Mythical and the Modern: Polishness in the Work of Olga Tokarczuk and Dorota Maslowska
Marta Koronkiewicz and Pawel Kaczmarski, University of Wroclaw, Poland
13. Liberature as World Literature
Katarzyna Bazarnik, Jagiellonian University, Poland
Bibliography
Notes on Contributors
Index
Introduction
Piotr Florczyk, University of Southern California, USA, and K. A. Wisniewski, American Antiquarian Society, USA
1. Polish Neurosis and the World Literature
Michal Pawel Markowski, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA
2. Jan Potocki, the Greatest Author of the Polish Enlightenment as a French Writer
Emiliano Ranocchi, Urbino University, Italy
3. Adam Mickiewicz: A Very Short Manual for Non-Polish Users
Grzegorz Marzec, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland
4. The Global Rise of the Novel: Poland and World Literature
Katarzyna Bartoszynska, Ithaca College, USA
5. Eliza Orzeszkowa and Edith Wharton, or Worldly Rhythms of Polish Women's Writing
Lena Magnone, University of Warsaw, Poland
6. Suitors with Their Stomachs Full of Lovers: Cannibalistic Tropes in the Texts of Polish Futurist
Agnieszka Jezyk, University of Toronto, Canada
7. Polish Literature and/or World Literature: Bruno Schulz in English
Zofia Ziemann, Jagiellonian University, Poland
8. Polishness Revisited: Witold Gombrowicz and the Question of Identity
Jacek Gutorow, University of Opole, Poland
9. Beyond Identity: John Ashbery's and Frank O'Hara's Impact on Polish Poetry
Kacper Bartczak, University of Lodz, Poland
10. The Collective Constipation of the Polish/Israeli Subject: Lipski, Levin, Warlikowski
Andrzej Brylak, University of Southern California, USA
11. Swimming Queer: Moving with Contemporary Polish Queer Literatures
Ela Przybylo, Illinois State University, USA
12. Between the Mythical and the Modern: Polishness in the Work of Olga Tokarczuk and Dorota Maslowska
Marta Koronkiewicz and Pawel Kaczmarski, University of Wroclaw, Poland
13. Liberature as World Literature
Katarzyna Bazarnik, Jagiellonian University, Poland
Bibliography
Notes on Contributors
Index
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.