Compared to other Polish emigrant cohorts, the broadly understood Solidarity emigration
to the USA and Canada of the early 1980s occupies a distinctive place. Their literary
output produced for the most part in English came quickly and entered the mainstream
book market already at the turn of the century. Even though their fiction deployed fairly
typical themes of dislocation, emigrant experience and construction of immigrant identity
in the receiving country, its uniqueness rests in the two-fold vision of two very closely
related generations: the first generation emigrants who left Poland as adults, as well as their
children, classified as the generation 1.5, who experienced growing up in two countries. In
their semi autobiographical fiction, writers representing the older generation such as Eva
Stachniak and Czesław Karkowski, devote much of their work to justifying the decision
to emigrate and attempt to position their successful characters within the narrative of the
American dream. In contrast, younger generation authors such as Karolina Waclawiak
and Dagmara Dominczyk, construct a much darker vision of the fragmented immigrant
identity that leaves their fictional characters psychologically fragile. In their struggle, they
identify the cause of this suffering in their parents’ choice to leave the home country.
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