Uwalnianie się od prymatu pamięci albo oswajanie obcości. Tożsamościowe transformacje w Hamlecie gliwickim Piotra (Petera) Lachmanna
Oglądaj/ Otwórz
Autor:
Chojnowski, Przemysław
Źródło: Annales Universitatis Paedagogicae Cracoviensis. 354, Studia Historicolitteraria 22 (2022), s. [305]-331
Język: pl
Słowa kluczowe:
Peter (Piotr) Lachmannliminalność
pamięć
bilingwizm
palimpsest
obcość
tożsamość
Peter (Piotr) Lachmann
liminality
memory
bilingualism
palimpsest
alienation/strangeness
identity
Data: 2022
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This paper is an analysis of Hamlet gliwicki [eng. Gliwice Hamlet] (Messel 2008) by the Polish-German writer Peter
Lachmann (b. 1935). The article presents the genesis of the drama inspired by the fate of a Wehrmacht soldier lost
during the Battle of Stalingrad in January 1942. This is the writer’s father Ewald Lachmann. In addition to the
parodic means used in the play, the intertextual links between Gliwice Hamlet and William Shakespeare’s Hamletare
discussed, as well as the topoi of Shakespearean tragedy interwoven with episodes from Lachmann’s biography and
events from the history of Gliwice. The figure of Hamlet takes on the role of a mask and functions as a universal
archetype behind which the play’s creator himself hides. The bilingualism of Peter – the play’s protagonist – and
the overlapping of two identities, Polish and German, are examined in terms of a palimpsest. The analysis shows
that Lachmann’s drama is characterised by the lack of a linear course of events and their anchoring in a fluid,
liminal space-time. The protagonist’s identity transformations are accompanied by the transformation of his
immediate environment, as the German city of Gleiwitz turns into the Polish city of Gliwice.