- Tytuł:
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„Dante gleich – durchschritt ich die Hölle zu Lebzeiten“.1 Zygmunt Krasiński (1812–1859) – der polnische Dante
“Dante alike – I passed through hell during my lifetime”. Zygmunt Krasinski – The Polish Dante - Autorzy:
- Trepte, Hans-Christian
- Powiązania:
- https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/52931642.pdf
- Data publikacji:
- 2021-09-02
- Wydawca:
- Oficyna Wydawnicza ATUT – Wrocławskie Wydawnictwo Oświatowe
- Tematy:
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Dante Alighieri
comedy
Polish history
culture
literature
language
theatre
migration
romanticism
messianism
“Dantism”
“Dantology”
mythology
heaven
descent into hell
reception and perception
Polska
Italy
writers
artists
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth
Komödie
Geschichte
„Dantismus“
Romantik
Hölle
Kulturtransfer
(E)Migration
Rezeption
Wahrnehmung
Literatur
Kultur
Theater
Mythologie
Slawen
Polnisch-Litauische Adelsrepublik (Rzeczpospolita Obojga Narodów)
Schriftsteller - Opis:
- Dante Alighieri plays an important role in Polish literature and generally speaking in the collective and individual memory and imagination of the Poles, too. That’s why we are dealing with a special kind of cultural, literary, artistic and linguistic expression with a strong impact on Polish affairs, called “Dantism”, comprising “Dantomania” as well as “Dantophobia”. Especially since the time of Romanticism Polish literature as well as culture and art were deeply influenced by Alighieri’s narrative drama The Divine Comedy (1308–1320), treated as a drama of “its own”. The Polish “Dantism” is also essential for the understanding of the philosophical and literary phenomenon of Polish messianism mainly within a threefold system: Heaven (God), Church, Evil which became a favorite theme of famous writers, poets, artists and painters up to the Polish theatre art in Poland. It was the descent into the netherworld of the last act of the Divine Comedy which fascinated a multitude of different literary works dealing not only with human beings involved in the eternal battle between God and Evil but also referring to the atrocities of two world wars, the holocaust, the two experienced totalitarian systems in the 20th century. That’s why many outstanding texts of Polish literature, art and theatre refer, cursorily, indirectly and directly so often to Dante and his Divine Comedy. In everyday Polish, the phrase “Dantesques scenes” (sceny dantejskie) became equivalent to “terrifying scenes”, “scary visions”, often combined with eternal topics like loneliness, tragedy of human existence, impossible love, human fears and nightmares. After a rather short stagnation due to stalinism in Poland with its hostile attitude towards “religious things”, also in literature and culture, we may speak of an outstanding and continuous presence of Dante in Poland in the shape of a widespread benevolent, critical and ultra-Catholic “Dantology” in a clear disproportion to the obvious presence of traditional “Dantism”.
- Źródło:
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Orbis Linguarum; 2021, 55; 599-608
1426-7241
2657-4845 - Pojawia się w:
- Orbis Linguarum
- Dostawca treści:
- Biblioteka Nauki