Annales Universitatis Paedagogicae Cracoviensis. 175. Studia Anglica 4
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Author:
Kuropatnicki, Andrzej K.
Michalski, Przemysław
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-editor:
Kuropatnicki, Andrzej K.
Michalski, Przemysław
Publisher:
Wydawnictwo Naukowe Uniwersytetu Pedagogicznego, Kraków
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-issn: 2299-2111
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-iso: en
Date: 2014
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Dokument cyfrowy wytworzony, opracowany, opublikowany oraz finansowany w ramach programu "Społeczna Odpowiedzialność Nauki" - modułu "Wsparcie dla bibliotek naukowych" przez Ministerstwo Nauki i Szkolnictwa Wyższego w projekcie nr rej. SONB/SP/465103/2020 pt. "Organizacja kolekcji czasopism naukowych w Repozytorium UP wraz z wykonaniem rekordów analitycznych".Abstract
Many texts jostle for attention in this collection of articles focused around literary
and cultural studies. Ewa Panecka endeavours to establish the significance of the
mood of “loss made good” in the poetry of two “poets of nature,” namely John
Clare and Edward Thomas. Małgorzata Hołda analyses two pieces of gothic fiction:
Washington Irving’s The Adventure of the German Student and Edgar Allan Poe’s
The Black Cat, both of which “execute numerous transgressions in meaning and
shackle the text’s seeming coherence in different ways.” Małgorzata Kowalcze, in
‘A Knight of Faith’ Looking into the Face of the Other, presents opinion that William
Golding’s The Spire combines two dissimilar viewpoints of Søren Kierkegaard
and Jean Paul Sartre by showing a story of a man, “who undergoes an existential
transformation from Kierkegaard’s ‘knight’ through Sartre’s ‘being’ arriving at
Levinas’s ‘self’ by means of intricate relationships with other people and a process
of painful himself-discovery.” Marek Kucharski analyses religious motifs in artistic
work of Andy Warhol with special interest in his travesty of Leonardo da Vinci’s
Last Supper. Monika Mazurek focuses on Victorian period and deals with the issue
of the legitimacy of the Church of England, using examples from William Sewell’s
Hawkstone, Elizabeth Missing Sewell’s Margaret Percival and John H. Shorthouse’s
John Inglesant. Paweł Hamera examines the ways Ireland and the Irish were
portrayed in The Times at the time of Great Irish Famine. Finally, poetry re-emerges
in the essay by Przemysław Michalski’s, who investigates the kenotic potential of
ekphrastic poetry by investigating three poems, written by Ezra Pound, Gary Snyder
and Czesław Miłosz, respectively.