Buch, Englisch, 194 Seiten, Format (B × H): 157 mm x 235 mm, Gewicht: 443 g
From Romanticism to the Present
Buch, Englisch, 194 Seiten, Format (B × H): 157 mm x 235 mm, Gewicht: 443 g
Reihe: Routledge Studies in Romanticism
ISBN: 978-1-032-36562-6
Verlag: Routledge
Dante and Polish Writers: From Romanticism to the Present explores the phenomenon of Polish Danteism from a hermeneutic perspective. The chapters shed light on a series of “encounters” of eminent Polish writers with Dante and the Divine Comedy, resulting in original interpretations, creative reworkings, and a wealth of intertextual references testifying to a dialogue that has always been – and still is – alive, not excluding antagonism and bitter controversy. The contributors are all scholars of Polish literature with comparative expertise, teaching in Italian and Polish universities, which ensures a consistently focused point of view on the receptive context and the ways in which it is affected by the confrontation with Dante. The hermeneutic horizon ranges from the Inferno-like reading of the inhuman lands with which history abounds, to the metaphysical yearning underlying Dante’s “poetics of transhumanizing,” to recent perspectives related to the posthuman and storytelling.
Zielgruppe
Postgraduate
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
Notes on Contributors
Acknowledgments
Inhuman, transhuman, posthuman: An introduction to Polish Danteism over the centuries
Andrea Ceccherelli
1. Dante and Mickiewicz. The story of a common journey
Tomasz Jedrzejewski
2. Slowacki’s Poem of Piast Dantyszek, or the macabre despair of a father-land
Krystyna Jaworska
3. Reason and will: Dante and Krasinski, a comparison
Marina Ciccarini
4. Dante in Norwid’s Prayer Book
Francesco Cabras
5. Echoes of Inferno V in Kraszewski’s narrative and lyrical work
Andrea F. De Carlo
6. “Better to fall with Alighieri than to triumph with Nogaret”: Klaczko’s personal Dante
Luca Bernardini
7. The Dante of Stanislaw Vincenz
Lorenzo Costantino
8. Teodor Parnicki encounters Dante. Only Beatrice and not only
Marcin Wyrembelski
9. From parody to polemical pamphlet: Gombrowiczian deformations of Dante
Andrea Ceccherelli
10. On Czeslaw Milosz’s debt to Dante
Luigi Marinelli
11. What Dante owes to Stanislaw Baranczak
Marcello Piacentini
12. Dante in twenty-first-century Poland: The case of Jaroslaw Mikolajewski
Leonardo Masi
Index