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Wyszukujesz frazę "Stefania Laudyn-Chrzanowska" wg kryterium: Wszystkie pola


Wyświetlanie 1-2 z 2
Tytuł:
Życie i pisanie (dla) wspólnoty: Käthe Schirmacher i Stefania Laudyn-Chrzanowska między feminizmem a nacjonalizmem
The self, community, and writing: Käthe Schirmacher and Stefania Laudyn-Chrzanowska between feminism and nationalism
Autorzy:
Bednarczuk, Monika
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/690338.pdf
Data publikacji:
2017
Wydawca:
Łódzkie Towarzystwo Naukowe
Tematy:
subjectivity and community
narration
early feminism
German and Polish nationalism in 20th century
political solstice
Stefania Laudyn-Chrzanowska
Käthe Schirmacher
jednostka i wspólnota
narracja
wczesny feminizm
nacjonalizm polski i niemiecki w XX wieku
polityczne przesilenie
Opis:
Two controversial women, a German and a Pole, are presented in this comparative study. Käthe Schirmacher and Stefania Laudyn-Chrzanowska were radical women’s rights advocates who became passionate nationalists. The article is an attempt at interpreting their lives and writings as a kind of self-narration and at the same time a narration of community (identity). As Carolyn Heilbrun puts it, a woman can write her life by telling it in an autobiography, she can write it as a fictional narrative or write it “in advance by living it”. Therefore, the paper focuses on both texts and (real) lives. Moreover, individual identity continuously intersects with group identity in the biographies and narrations displayed here. For Schirmacher and Laudyn narrating the self often means narrating community: either narrating the imagined women’s community or narrating the nation. Hence both authors challenge the model of an autonomous individual narrating a single life. A further point of departure is the relationship between identity and interaction with other languages or national groups. It is not entirely coincidental that Schirmacher and Laudyn developed strongly nationalistic and anti-Semitic attitudes after having lived abroad for a long period of time. The first few years were marked by a deep belief in supra- -national women’s organizations and women’s solidarity. Then a kind of “political solstice” took place (Schirmacher). Obviously, the radical change of views was due to a number of factors but the everyday confrontation with “the other” intensified the awareness of cultural boundaries and resulted in the sacralization of their own respective nations. The paper offers thus a double portrait of both activists as feminists and nationalists, and also, more or less deliberately, chronists of two different, though intertwined, ‘imagined communities’.
Źródło:
Prace Polonistyczne; 2017, LXXII; 139-161
0079-4791
Pojawia się w:
Prace Polonistyczne
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Славянские возвышенные идеи свободы, общности и братства в письмах разных лиц к Л.Н. Толстому и его ответ Стефании Ляудын-Хшановской Польcкой женщине („Одной из многих”)
Slavonic glorious ideals of freedom, union and brotherhood in letters to Count Leo Tolstoy and the writer’s reply to Stefania Laudyn-Chrzanowska - „To a Polish Woman (One of Many)
Autorzy:
Białokozowicz, Bazyli
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/481739.pdf
Data publikacji:
2008-12-01
Wydawca:
Uniwersytet Warmińsko-Mazurski w Olsztynie
Tematy:
Leo Tolstoy
Russian literature
Slavonic ideals
Opis:
The author’s of Resurrection letters to different addressees, as well as about 60 thousand letters to the Russian writer from all over the world are kept in the Department of Manuscript Works of the National Museum of Count Leo Tolstoy in Moscow. Indeed, it is a real mine of knowledge of the writer’s contemporary Russia and the world of those days. The author of this publication pays particular attention to the letters of correspondents in Slavonic countries who subjected Slavonic glorious ideals of freedom, union and brotherhood to a penetrating analysis in view of a peaceful community of people of different nationalities, races and cultures. Such were the letters to Count Leo Tolstoy of 6th July 1909 by All-Slavonic Association „Slavia”, as well as the letters of 11th June 1910 by a revived Polish Fellowship Association — reverting to noble as well as tragic Arian history in the Poland of Reformation, signed by Marian Tadeusz Lubecki, Jozef Ostka, Stefan Baraniecki, Stanisław Parczyński, Kazimierz Piątka, Amelia Poznańska and many others. The Russian writer was applied to with many various requests (e.g. Osip Vysoky of Czech in the matter of rendering; Andża Mita Petrovic of Belgrade in the concern of Bosnia-Herzegovina annexation by Austria; Marian Zdziechowski of Cracow in the issue of tolstoizm as a religious-ethical doctrine; Jan Niecisław Ignacy Baudouin and Jan Styka in the question of death penalty). Tolstoy’s confidant in European and Slavonic matters was a Slovakian doctor and philosopher, Dusan Makovicky, living in Yasna Polyana, the author of a masterpiece — The Yasna Polyana Record (1904—1910). Count Leo Tolstoy would consequently answer the rankling the Slavonic society questions in harmony with his rationalistic doctrine, called tolstoizm. According to the writer’s sound belief God is love and through Jesus Christ shares with His love with people. A full union with God — it is the union in the truth, love and peace. A man who chooses love is soaked through with endless kind-heartedness. The main feature of Tolstoy was a grave concern for the world’s doom. A Christian should be totally deprived of hate and the feeling of revenge; love, forgiveness, compassion, fight against evil through spreading kindliness and noble feelings should be the trails of the religion based on the life and teachings of Christ, in agreement with the principle: who lives with God, chooses love. The love of fellow being was seen and felt by the writer as a significant value which ought to be learnt and contributed to incessantly. The writer as an architect and director of purified of Christianity alien layers and a moral philosopher constantly supported kindliness and condemned evil, spreading out the space of hope and love through his obedience to peace and evangelical source of Christianity, which was perspicaciously expressed in the letter to Stefania Laudyn-Chrzanowska, in a form of a voluminous article — A Reply to a Polish Woman (One of Many).
Źródło:
Acta Polono-Ruthenica; 2008, 1, XIII; 277-286
1427-549X
Pojawia się w:
Acta Polono-Ruthenica
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
    Wyświetlanie 1-2 z 2

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