Obraz polskiej tożsamości w literaturze najmłodszej po 1989 roku (próba opisu z perspektywy postkolonialnej)
Oglądaj/ Otwórz
Autor:
Chruściel, Marcin
Źródło: Annales Universitatis Paedagogicae Cracoviensis. 115, Studia Linguistica 7 (2012), Dialog z tradycją, cz. 2, s. [27]-33
Język: pl
Data: 2012
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The starting point of the article is the assumption that the interpretation of the postcolonial
theory in post-1989 Poland is exceptional, very different from the one dominant in the West.
The specificity of “the Polish postcolonial model” consists in that it combines both a sense
of superiority towards our Eastern neighbours and a sense of inferiority towards Western
cultures. This duality offers an interesting framework for the interpretation of works by
writers who made their debut in post-communist Poland. The novel Lubiewo by Michał
Witkowski potrays the gay culture in the Polish People’s Republic (PRL), idealizing it and using
clichés taken from adventure novels. In Piotr Czerski’s Ojciec odchodzi (Father Is Leaving) we
find a description of the state of Polish Catholicism which is superficial and offers nothing to
counterbalance the Western ideology. Dominika Ożarowska’s debut Nie uderzy żaden piorun
(No Thunder Will Strike) presents a generation growing in the Polish People’s Republic (PRL),
who, coming of age, declare the lack of ideological values and refuse to engage in anything.
In the works by Witkowski and Czerski the world is shown from the post-1989 perspective,
while Ożarowska’s book is an interesting attempt to go beyond time limitations.