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Wyszukujesz frazę "sacred poetry" wg kryterium: Temat


Tytuł:
„Poezja Religijna i Sakralna”, nr 2
Religious and Sacred Poetry, No. 2
Autorzy:
Tytko, Marek Mariusz
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/440945.pdf
Data publikacji:
2013
Wydawca:
Fundacja Naukowa Katolików Eschaton
Tematy:
poezja religijna
poezja sakralna
literatura
kultura
wychowanie
czasopismo naukowe
religijna kultura literacka
filologia słowiańska
kultura chrześcijańska
religious poetry
sacred poetry
literature
culture
education
scholarly periodical
religious literary culture
Slavic philology
Christian culture
Religious and sacred poetry
Opis:
Z wielką przyjemnością oddaję w Państwa ręce drugi numer naszego czasopisma „Religious and Sacred Poetry”. W obecnym tomie jako wprowadzenie prezentujemy niżej tekst w siedmiu językach (angielskim, rosyjskim, polskim, czeskim, słowackim, ukraińskim i białoruskim) pochodzący z naszej strony internetowej (www.religious-and-sacred-poetry.info), przygotowanej przez międzynarodową redakcję. Tekst ten przedstawia program kwartalnika, jego zakres tematyczny, cele i zadania. W części pierwszej Rozprawy i artykuły czytelnik znajdzie sześć oryginalnych tekstów. Beata Maria Gaj z Opola wprowadza w zagadnienie kultury greckiej, prezentując motyw kobiety w poezji pisanej po grecku na Śląsku w XVII w. (Greek Culture and Language in the History of the Central and Eastern Europe (Germany, Poland, Silesia). Woman in the Greek Poetry Written by the Silesian in the 17th Century). Irena Avsenik Nabergoj z Ljubljany przybliża problematykę wątków miłości i religii w słoweńskim dziele narodowym romantycznego poety France’a Prešerena (Poetics of Love and Devotion in Prešeren’ Poem The Baptism on the Savica). Olga Bigun z Kijowa skupia się na praraleli pomiędzy Jerozolimą i Kijowem w dziele Tarasa Szewczenki (The Symbolic and Allegorical Parallel „Kiev – Jerusalem”in Taras Shevchenko Writing). Charles S. Kraszewski z Dallas w Pensylwanii koncentruje się na wybranej problematyce poezji polskiej grupy emigracyjnej „Kontynenty” (British Natures, Polish Poets: the Continents Group as an Example of Ethnic British Literature). Marek Mariusz Tytko z Krakowa przedstawia analizę ważnego dla sztuki dokumentu papieskiego, ukazując problem artysty u Jana Pawła II (Artysta w koncepcji Jana Pawła II w Liście do artystów). Ewa Kopeć ze Stalowej Woli analizuje kwestię scholi w ramach wychowania religijnego (Wychowanie chrześcijańskie dzieci i młodzieży poprzez edukacyjny wymiar scholi). Natomiast w części drugiej naszego czasopisma, zatytułowanej Recenzje książek, publikujemy kilka wybranych recenzji. Marianna Macásková z Prešova pisze krytycznie o dziele słowackiego poety Rudolfa Jurolka (Putovanie Jakuba z Rána a jeho druhov a ich titanský boj s dvanásťhlavým svetom o Boha, lieskové oriešky a iné obyčajné veci v štrnástich spevoch). Aleksandra Słyszewska oraz Roksana Zgierska omawiają książkę poświęconą katolicyzmowi w literaturze brytyjskiej XIX i XX w., autorstwa Richarda Griffitha (The Pen and the Cross: Catholicism and English Literature, 1850-2000). W części trzeciej, poświęconej obrazowi sakralnemu, Anna Marta Żukowska pisze na temat pasyjnego obrazu Chrystusa św. Brata Alberta, zamieszczonego na okładce obecnego numeru naszego czasopisma (Obraz Ecce Homo (1879-1881) Adama Chmielowskiego). Część czwarta została przeznaczona dla autorów (Informacje dla autorów). Zamieszczono w niej wzór formularza recenzyjnego w języku angielskim, rosyjskim i polskim oraz dodano alfabetyczny wykaz wszystkich autorów tekstów zamieszczonych w obecnym numerze. Czytelników zapraszamy do lektury. Autorów tekstów zachęcamy do współpracy z naszym czasopismem. Prosimy o uprzedni kontakt i nadsyłanie tekstów (na adres: marek.mariusz.tytko[at]uj.edu.pl). Dla bezpieczeństwa stosujemy zapis [at] zamiast @ w adresach e-mail.
Źródło:
Religious and Sacred Poetry: An International Quarterly of Religion, Culture and Education; 2013, 2(2); 11-12
2299-9922
Pojawia się w:
Religious and Sacred Poetry: An International Quarterly of Religion, Culture and Education
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
“Thou who hast sewn together this canvas.” Adam Zagajewski’s Search for the Absolute
„Ty, który zszyłeś to płótno…”. Adama Zagajewskiego poszukiwanie Absolutu
Autorzy:
Bodzioch-Bryła, Bogusława
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1597282.pdf
Data publikacji:
2021-05-17
Wydawca:
Akademia Ignatianum w Krakowie
Tematy:
Adam Zagajewski
współczesna poezja polska
sacrum w literaturze
interpretacja
krytyka literacka
contemporary Polish poetry
sacred in literature
interpretation
literary criticism
Opis:
Adam Zagajewski’s poetry proves how complex man’s relationship with the sacred can be. Despite the poet’s testimony of complete independence from established formations, including denominational ones, in his early work, when he described himself as “an atheist of both churches, non-partisan among party members, an unbeliever among believers, uncertain among the convinced” (Mogę mówić tylko za siebie [I can only speak for myself]; Oda do wielości [Ode to multiplicity], Zagajewski 1983), literary criticism has long emphasized the presence of a broadly conceived sphere of the sacred in his poetry. When reading Zagajewski’s poems, one has the impression that the sacred is permanently present, and that the poet is constantly brushing against the figure of the Absolute, while not being able (or sometimes not wanting) to fully see it. The reader even gets the impression that perhaps this may be a purposeful impossibility. For Zagajewski, an extremely important theme is circular movement, constant circling around the same issue, and a need for constant questioning. This article discusses these complex relations, proving that Zagajewski consistently reflects in on the figure of the Absolute, that the subject of his poems seeks the sacred, and that the question of the Absolute seems to be more than a poetic strategy for the author, but also a very personal dilemma. The poet died on March 21, 2021.
Poezja Adama Zagajewskiego dowodzi, jak wysoce skomplikowana bywa relacja człowieka z sacrum. Mimo świadectwa całkowitej niezależności od ustanowionych formacji, także wyznaniowych, jakie poeta dał w początkowej fazie twórczości, kiedy to określił się mianem „ateisty obydwu kościołów, / bezpartyjnego wśród partyjnych, / niewierzącego wśród wiernych, / niepewnego pośród przekonanych” (Mogę mówić tylko za siebie; List. Oda do wielości, Zagajewski 1983), w krytyce literackiej od dawna podkreślana bywa obecność w jego poezji szeroko pojmowanej sfery sacrum. Podczas lektury wierszy Zagajewskiego odbiorca ma wrażenie, że sacrum jest w nich permanentnie obecne, że poeta co rusz ociera się o figurę Absolutu, jednocześnie nie mogąc (nie potrafiąc, czasem nie chcąc) jej w pełni dojrzeć. Czytelnik odnosi nawet wrażenie, że być może jest to niemożność programowa, bowiem dla Zagajewskiego nadzwyczaj istotne znaczenie ma ruch kolisty, nieustanne krążenie wokół tej samej kwestii, konieczność ciągłego podawania w wątpliwość. Niniejszy artykuł przybliża te złożone relacje, dowodząc, że Zagajewski konsekwentnie prowadzi w swych wierszach refleksję nad figurą Absolutu, że podmiot jego wierszy poszukuje sacrum, a pytanie o Absolut zdaje się mieć dla twórcy charakter nie tylko strategii poezjotwórczej, lecz także dylematu bardzo osobistego. Poeta zmarł 21 marca 2021 r.
Źródło:
Perspektywy Kultury; 2021, 32, 1; 99-134
2081-1446
2719-8014
Pojawia się w:
Perspektywy Kultury
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
[Rev.:] Evropská dimenze česke a polské literatury. Europejski wymiar literatury czeskiej i polskiej. Sborník příspěvků z literárněvědné konference konané v Opavé ve dnech 10.-11.11.2010, edtor Libor Martinek, Slezská Univerzita v Opavé, Filozoficko-Přírodovědecká Fakulta, Ústav Bohemistiky a Knihovnictví, Kabinet Literárněvědné Komparatistiky, Opava 2011, 336, [2] s.
The European Dimension of Czech and Polish Literature. Proceedings of the Literary Conference held in Opava on 10-11.11.2010
Autorzy:
Tytko, Marek Mariusz
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/440951.pdf
Data publikacji:
2013
Wydawca:
Fundacja Naukowa Katolików Eschaton
Tematy:
Polish literature
Czech literature
the Bible
religion
Religious and sacred poetry
religious literary culture
European literature
Opis:
The review contains a short descriptions of the content of a book entitled European dimension of Czech and Polish literature, edited by Libor Martinek from the Silesian University in Opava (Czech Republic). A reviewer shows problems (problematique) of this international book, that concern olad and contemporary literatures of these two nations.There are twenty eights papers written by different authors from Poland and Czech Republic. Some of them involve motifs of old Czech and Polish religious poetry or old religious literary culture, eg. Maciej Kazimierz Sarbiewski), Tomaš Halik and the Bible of Brześć.
Źródło:
Religious and Sacred Poetry: An International Quarterly of Religion, Culture and Education; 2013, 1(1); 133-136
2299-9922
Pojawia się w:
Religious and Sacred Poetry: An International Quarterly of Religion, Culture and Education
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
[Rev.:] Zofia Zarębianka, Czytanie sacrum, Stowarzyszenie Pisarzy Polskich, Instytut Wydawniczy „Maximum”, Kraków-Rzym 2008, 18 s., seria: Myśli ocalone. Seria Filozoficzno-Humanistyczna, pod redakcją Tadeusza Sławka, tom V.
The Reading “the Sacred”
Autorzy:
Tytko, Marek Mariusz
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/441002.pdf
Data publikacji:
2013
Wydawca:
Fundacja Naukowa Katolików Eschaton
Tematy:
sacred and literature
poetry
prose
letters
Paul Auster
Stanisław Barańczak
Georges Bernanos
Josif Brodski
Teresa Ferenc
Konstanty Ildefons Gałczyński
Julia Hartwig
Zbigniew Herbert
Hermann Hesse
Zbigniew Jankowski
Wojciech Kudyba
Maria Kuncewiczowa
Thomas Merton
Czesław Miłosz
Joanna Pollakówna
Rainer Maria Rilke
Tadeusz Różewicz
Wisława Szymborska
Marcin Świetlicki
Jan Twardowski
Karol Wojtyła
Adam Zagajewski
hermeneutics
comparatistics
literary methodology
Opis:
An author is a Polish professor of literature at the Jagiellonian Unversity in Cracow. The author shows in her book entitled The Reading "Sacred" some essays on literature and "sacred", especially she describes some Polish poetry and prose and literary letters from 20th century. She focuses on the problem hermeneutics of a text, comparatistics of literature and methodology of literature. There are many chapters on theme Polish poetry or prose, e.g. about such authors as Stanisław Barańczak, Teresa Ferenc, Konstanty Ildefons Gałczyński, Julia Hartwig, Zbigniew Herbert, Zbigniew Jankowski, Wojciech Kudyba, Maria Kuncewiczowa, Czesław Miłosz, Joanna Pollakówna, Tadeusz Różewicz, Wisława Szymborska, Marcin Świetlicki, Jan Twardowski, Karol Wojtyła, Adam Zagajewski. There are some essays about foreign (e.g. French, German, Russian) authors of literature in the context of ‘sacred’: Paul Auster, Georges Bernanos, Josif Brodski, Hermann Hesse, Thomas Merton, Rainer Maria Rilke.
Źródło:
Religious and Sacred Poetry: An International Quarterly of Religion, Culture and Education; 2013, 1(1); 141-144
2299-9922
Pojawia się w:
Religious and Sacred Poetry: An International Quarterly of Religion, Culture and Education
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
APPROACHES TO RELIGIOUS POETRY IN POLISH AND ANGLOPHONE SCHOLARSHIP. A COMPARATIVE OVERVIEW
Polskie i anglojęzyczne badania nad poezją religijną. Przegląd porównawczy
Autorzy:
Matyjaszczyk, Joanna
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1036031.pdf
Data publikacji:
2020-11-26
Wydawca:
Łódzkie Towarzystwo Naukowe
Tematy:
religious literature; religious poetry; literary criticism; the sacred in literature
literatura religijna; poezja religijna; teoria literatury; sacrum w literaturze
Opis:
The article compares Polish and Anglophone literary-theoretical approaches to religious poetry. It demonstrates that some common tendencies to be found in Polish studies and in English scholarship include drawing on a single religious tradition (Christian, official), focusing on the author and their religious experience, and narrow and/or prescriptive approaches that are sometimes more theological than literary-theoretical in nature. The survey suggests that the most prominent difference is that Polish criticism has produced a long-standing tradition of literary-theoretical studies that develop on or polemicize with each other in an attempt to describe and systematize the field of the intersections of poetry and religion and propose literary methodologies for studying religious poetry, while Anglophone studies do not enter into this kind of dialogue. The Polish studies, if popularized, could help reduce the theoretical and methodological deficit in Anglophone scholarship on the subject.
Źródło:
Prace Polonistyczne; 2020, 75; 43-64
0079-4791
Pojawia się w:
Prace Polonistyczne
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Henryk Mikołaj Górecki i jego muzyka
Autorzy:
Siedlik, Włodzimierz
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/669039.pdf
Data publikacji:
2012
Wydawca:
Uniwersytet Papieski Jana Pawła II w Krakowie
Tematy:
choral music
poetry
sacred music
religious concentration and meditation
musical composition
simplicity
logic RT
Opis:
Henryk Mikołaj Górecki, one of the most renowned Polish composers, died on 12 November 2009. Athough he is no longer present among us, his music lives on. Sadly, many of contemporary musicians did not or did not want to notice the music composed by Professor Górecki. Some listeners got shocked, others were astonished by it. The music, aesthetic and philosophical values of his III Symphony were only discerned after 17 years. The triumphal return to Poland of the III Symphony’s scores arouse the great, unprecedented worldwide, interest in H. M. Górecki’s compositions. This unbelievably modest artist, both in life and in art, remained uncompromising until the end.Henryk Mikołaj Górecki created his compositions while being deeply rooted in the Polish tradition, particularly folk and religious, which was his source of inspiration. Before developing his own style he went a long artistic way. Always openly declared his origin that can be heard in his compositions and in his views of which he was never ashamed. He lived an austere life among his highlanders, disregarding his fame, solemn banquets and presents.During the last 20 years I have been privileged to perform Professor Górecki’s choral music with ten choirs, including 4 professional ones at the distinguished concerts, competitions and festivals. The choral music has been recorded on 12 CD records featuring various performers. With the assistance of the Choir of Polish Radio and as requested by the composer, I delivered several first performances of his works.I am a great debtor to the Professor for his teaching me humbleness towards music, humbleness towards every artist, co-performer and myself.
Henryk Mikołaj Górecki, one of the most renowned Polish composers, died on 12 November 2009. Athough he is no longer present among us, his music lives on. Sadly, many of contemporary musicians did not or did not want to notice the music composed by Professor Górecki. Some listeners got shocked, others were astonished by it. The music, aesthetic and philosophical values of his III Symphony were only discerned after 17 years. The triumphal return to Poland of the III Symphony’s scores arouse the great, unprecedented worldwide, interest in H. M. Górecki’s compositions. This unbelievably modest artist, both in life and in art, remained uncompromising until the end.Henryk Mikołaj Górecki created his compositions while being deeply rooted in the Polish tradition, particularly folk and religious, which was his source of inspiration. Before developing his own style he went a long artistic way. Always openly declared his origin that can be heard in his compositions and in his views of which he was never ashamed. He lived an austere life among his highlanders, disregarding his fame, solemn banquets and presents.During the last 20 years I have been privileged to perform Professor Górecki’s choral music with ten choirs, including 4 professional ones at the distinguished concerts, competitions and festivals. The choral music has been recorded on 12 CD records featuring various performers. With the assistance of the Choir of Polish Radio and as requested by the composer, I delivered several first performances of his works.I am a great debtor to the Professor for his teaching me humbleness towards music, humbleness towards every artist, co-performer and myself.
Źródło:
Pro Musica Sacra; 2012, 10
2083-4039
Pojawia się w:
Pro Musica Sacra
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Kołczan miłości, czyli o metamorfozach starej alegorii
The quiver of love or on transformations of an old allegory
Autorzy:
Buszewicz, Elwira
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/2012657.pdf
Data publikacji:
2016-06-01
Wydawca:
Uniwersytet Warszawski. Wydawnictwa Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego
Tematy:
miłość świecka i święta
alegorie miłości
Jan Kochanowski
Elizeusz od św. Maryi
poezja religijna
secular and sacred love
allegories of love
Elisaeus a Sancta Maria
religious poetry
Opis:
The aim of this paper is to show how the allegory of an arrow piercing the heart, as an element of erotic discourse, functioned in early-modern Polish poetry (both secular and religious). The author analyses two poems: a vernacular poem by Jan Kochanowski, from his collection of Songs (I 4), published in 1585 in Krakow, and its Latin paraphrase written in 17th century by Elisaeus a Sancta Maria OCD, who was the author of a verse collection De vita, gestis ac miraculis sanctae matris nostrae Theresiae a Iesu, Seraphicae virginis Lyricorum libri IV, epodon liber unus duoque epigrammatum, published in 1650 in Krakow as well. Elisaeus calls his paraphrase a “palinody” because of its polemic tendencies. The analysis of Kochanowski’s song focuses on finding the dominant elements of each stanza for the purpose of demonstrating that the Carmelite poet saved their order, but presented them in a completely different dimension, in a new ideological context, opening a metaphysical perspective.
Źródło:
Prace Filologiczne. Literaturoznawstwo; 2016, 6(9); 211-222
2084-6045
2658-2503
Pojawia się w:
Prace Filologiczne. Literaturoznawstwo
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Mała litania uroczysta Karola Szymanowskiego
Karol Szymanowski’s Little Solemn Litany
Autorzy:
Boniecki, Edward
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/2179081.pdf
Data publikacji:
2023-03-21
Wydawca:
Związek Kompozytorów Polskich
Tematy:
Karol Szymanowski
muzyka religijna
Jerzy Liebert
poezja religijna
franciszkanizm
Litania do Marii Panny op. 59
sacred music
religious poetry
Franciscanism
Litany to the Virgin Mary Op. 59
Opis:
„Litania do Marii Panny. Dwa fragmenty” op. 59 (1930–1933) była ostatnim utworem wokalnym w twórczości Karola Szymanowskiego. Na niej zakończył trwającą przez wszystkie lata jego działalności kompozytorskiej przygodę ze słowem poetyckim. Skomponowana do fragmentów wiersza Jerzego Lieberta pod tym samym tytułem, z tomu „Gusła ”(1930), była zarazem hołdem złożonym przedwcześnie zmarłemu na gruźlicę w 1931 roku młodemu poecie przez przejętego jego losem Szymanowskiego. Dla kompozytora spotkanie z Liebertem stało się jednym z najważniejszych duchowych wydarzeń w ostatnim okresie życia. Na płaszczyźnie twórczej zbliżył ich do siebie franciszkanizm, jako dążenie do prostoty w sztuce oraz stosunek do rzemiosła artystycznego, do „métier”. Przeżywający żarliwie nawrócenie religijne Liebert, który do polskiej poezji religijnej wprowadził nowy ton, potrącił religijną strunę duszy Szymanowskiego i pomógł mu wydobyć jeszcze muzykę z wyczerpanych już zdaniem autora „Stabat Mater” pokładów jego religijności. Tym samym przyczynił się do ożywienia życia duchowego kompozytora i sprowokował go do swego rodzaju „rachunku sumienia”, którego owocem była właśnie „Litania”. Małe arcydzieło liryki wokalnej ukazujące nowe perspektywy w twórczości Szymanowskiego, a jednocześnie modlitwa kompozytora, jak „Mała msza uroczysta” Gioacchina Rossiniego.
“Litany to the Virgin Mary. Two fragments” op. 59 (1930–33) was the last vocal work in Karol Szymanowski’s oeuvre. Its writing marked the end of Szymanowski’s adventure with poetry, which had lasted throughout his activity as a composer. Composed to fragments of Jerzy Liebert’s poem with the same title, from the collection “Gusła” (1930), it was also a tribute to the young poet–who died prematurely of tuberculosis in 1931–paid by Szymanowski, who was moved by Liebert’s fate. Meeting Liebert became one of the most important spiritual experiences for the composer in the last few years of his life. What brought the two men close on the creative level was Franciscanism as striving for simplicity in art and their attitude to artistic craftsmanship, to the “métier”. Liebert, who experienced a fervent religious conversion and who introduced a new tone into Polish religious poetry, touched a religious chord in Szymanowski’s soul and helped him to extract more music from the reserves of his religiosity, apparently already exhausted in the opinion of the author of “Stabat Mater”. In doing so, he contributed to a revitalisation of the composer’s spiritual life and provoked him into carrying out an “examination of conscience”, as it were, which ultimately led to the writing of the “Litany”. A small masterpiece of vocal lyricism showing new perspectives in Szymanowski’s oeuvre and at the same time a prayer, like Gioacchino Rossini’s “Petite messe solennelle”.
Źródło:
Polski Rocznik Muzykologiczny; 2022, 20; 262-298
1733-9871
2719-7891
Pojawia się w:
Polski Rocznik Muzykologiczny
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Metafizyczna potęga bieli
The Metaphysical Power of White
Autorzy:
Ruszar, Józef Maria
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/2130724.pdf
Data publikacji:
2022-09-29
Wydawca:
Akademia Ignatianum w Krakowie
Tematy:
Jan Polkowski
Ryszard Krynicki
Bruno Jasieński
Sołówki
Wyspy Sołowieckie
GUŁag
komunistyczne zbrodnie
świętość w literaturze/sacrum w literaturze
współczesna poezja religijna
Solovki
Solovetsky Islands
GULAG
communist crimes
sanctity in literature/sacred in literature
contemporary religious poetry
Opis:
Interpretacja wiersza Jana Polkowskiego Morze białe analizuje fenomen istnienia współczesnej poezji religijnej niekoniecznie tematycznie zajmującej się Bogiem. Istotą takiej poezji jest wizja świata, z gruntu religijna, zakładająca ufność i zawierzenie bez względu na świecką materię wiersza, który może opisywać najgorsze zbrodnie. Autor ukazuje, że w przypadku najlepszej poezji religijnej zasada anima naturaliter christiana oznacza, że fundamentalna dobroć Boga istnieje w wierszach bezwiednie, właśnie naturalnie, a nie jako coś dodanego czy wykoncypowanego.
The interpretation of Jan Polkowski’s poem Morze białe [White Sea] analyzes the phenomenon of contemporary religious poetry that does not necessarily thematically deal with God. The essence of such poetry is a vision of the world, fundamentally religious, assuming trust and entrustment regardless of the secular matter of the poem, which can describe the worst of crimes. The author shows that in the case of the best religious poetry, the principle of anima naturaliter christiana implies that the fundamental goodness of God exists in the poems involuntarily, simply naturally, and not as something added or crafted.
Źródło:
Perspektywy Kultury; 2022, 38, 3; 501-512
2081-1446
2719-8014
Pojawia się w:
Perspektywy Kultury
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
O „Poezji Religijnej i Sakralnej” (6)
On “Religious and Sacred Poetry”, No. 6
Autorzy:
Tytko, Marek Mariusz
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/440924.pdf
Data publikacji:
2014
Wydawca:
Fundacja Naukowa Katolików Eschaton
Tematy:
poezja religijna
poezja sakralna
literatura
kultura
wychowanie
czasopismo naukowe
religijna kultura literacka
filologia słowiańska
kultura chrześcijańska
religious poetry
sacred poetry
literature
culture
education
scholarly periodical
religious literary culture
Slavic philology
Christian culture
Opis:
Wprowadzenie do “Religious and Sacred Poetry: An International Quarterly of Religion, Culture and Education” dotyczy głównie the zawartości czasopisma i jego struktury. Redaktor naczelny (Marek Mariusz Tytko) opisuje cele kwartalnika, jego program i plany redakcyjne. Wyjaśnia definicję „poezji religijnej” autorstwa Marii Jasińskiej-Wojtkowskiej (1957) i uzupełnia jej tezę poprzez opis szczegółowych obszarów badawczych w każdej chrześcijańskiej kulturze religijnej Kościoła Zachodniego i Kościoła Wschodniego. Chrześcijańska kultura, religijna kultura literacka, chrześcijańska poezja religijna i sakralna (poezja metafizyczna i duchowa) są głównym polem badawczym dla autorów tego kwartalnika.
The introduction to Religious and Sacred Poetry: An International Quarterly of Religion, Culture and Education concerns mainly the content of the journal and its structure. The editor-in-chief (Marek Mariusz Tytko) describes the aims of this quarterly, its program and editorial plans. He explains the definition of “religious poetry” by Maria Jasińska-Wojtkowska (1957) and completes her thesis through the description of the special resarch areas in each Christian religious culture of the West Church and the East Church. Christian culture, religious literary culture, Christian religious poetry and sacred poetry (metaphysical and gospel / spiritual poetry) are the main research area for authors of this quarterly.
Źródło:
Religious and Sacred Poetry: An International Quarterly of Religion, Culture and Education; 2014, 2(6); 19-42
2299-9922
Pojawia się w:
Religious and Sacred Poetry: An International Quarterly of Religion, Culture and Education
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Oparta na etymologii metoda rekonstrukcji fragmentów tekstów sakralnych pogańskich Słowian. Ustnie przekazywana poezja wczesnego średniowiecza
The etymology-based method of reconstructing sacral texts of heathen slavs. The oral tradition of early medieval poetry
Autorzy:
Doschek, Jolanta
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/2048511.pdf
Data publikacji:
2021-10-27
Wydawca:
Łódzkie Towarzystwo Naukowe
Tematy:
etymology
reconstruction
folklore
folklore texts
sacred poetry
phraseology
etymologia
rekonstrukcja
folklor
teksty folklorystyczne
poezja sakralna
frazeologia
Opis:
In their etymology-based reconstruction of the Proto-Slavic myth of the god Grom and the Serpent god, Vyacheslav Vsevolodich Ivanov and Vladimir Nikolayevich Toporov showed that Slavic folk literature features fragments of Proto-Slavic sacred poetry, which survived in local folklore thanks to oral tradition. The reconstruction method discovered by the Russian scholars helps determine how many elements of ancient phraseology have survived even to this day, mainly thanks to folklore. Radoslav Katičić continues this work and mainly focuses on the folk texts of the Southern Slavs and the Ruthenian folklore, as well as the folklore of other Slavic countries. He searches for traces of another Proto-Slavic myth – that of the Proto-Slavic god of harvest.
Źródło:
Prace Polonistyczne; 2021, 76; 367-378
0079-4791
Pojawia się w:
Prace Polonistyczne
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Poezja religijna i sakralna
Religious and Sacred Poetry
Autorzy:
Żurakowski, Bogusław
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/441087.pdf
Data publikacji:
2013
Wydawca:
Fundacja Naukowa Katolików Eschaton
Tematy:
poezja
poezja religijna
poezja sakralna
Religious and sacred poetry
Opis:
Poezja religijna (i sakralna) jest współcześnie uprawiana równie często jak niegdyś, choć nierzadko występuje w nowych kontekstach. Dostrzegalne są tu odniesienia uniwersalne w różnorodnych sytuacjach historycznych, estetycznych, wychowawczych. Max Scheler twierdzi, że „akt poznania religijnego znacznie bardziej upodabnia się do artystycznego poznania świata aniżeli do poznania właściwego nauce i metafizyce” . Jakże akt poetycki bliski jest aktowi religijnemu. Międzynarodowe czasopismo „Religious and Sacred Poetry” („Poezja Religijna i Sakralna”) umożliwia we właściwym sobie zakresie zgłębianie wspólnego obszaru literatury pięknej i religii. Z radością oddajemy pierwszy numer czasopisma Czytelnikowi.
Źródło:
Religious and Sacred Poetry: An International Quarterly of Religion, Culture and Education; 2013, 1(1); 13
2299-9922
Pojawia się w:
Religious and Sacred Poetry: An International Quarterly of Religion, Culture and Education
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Powrót poezji mistycznej na przełomie XIX i XX wieku
Autorzy:
Arent, van Nieukerken,
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/897205.pdf
Data publikacji:
2018-05-25
Wydawca:
Uniwersytet Warszawski. Wydawnictwa Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego
Tematy:
Mystical Poetry
the sacred
sacrifice
alienation
poet-priest
poetic word
Opis:
The article discusses the issue of the return of the forgotten poets as a function of the literary paradigm subjected to changes at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries. In the light of such a view, the crisis in the development of poetry would be one of the factors letting the forgotten poets’ voice be heard. Another one seems to be the alienation of late 19th-century authors seeking or involuntarily finding partners for a dialogue in tradition, not in contemporary times. The text raises the subject of the sacredness of the poetic word, referring it both to the socio-literary realities of the turn of the centuries and to the broadly defined tradition. In the paper, the author focuses on Cyprian Norwid (and his reader, Zenon Przesmycki) and Stefan George (for whom Stephane Mallarmé turns out to be an important poetic reference).
Źródło:
Przegląd Humanistyczny; 2017, 61(4 (459)); 9-17
0033-2194
Pojawia się w:
Przegląd Humanistyczny
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Religious and Sacred Poetry
Autorzy:
Żurakowski, Bogusław
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/440903.pdf
Data publikacji:
2013
Wydawca:
Fundacja Naukowa Katolików Eschaton
Tematy:
poetry
religious poetry
sacred poetry
Religious and sacred poetry
Opis:
Religious poetry (and sacred poetry) is written nowadays as often as in the past, but it frequently appears in new contexts. Metaphysical references may be found in various historical, aesthetic and educational settings. Max Sheller argues that “an act of religious cognition is more similar to artistic experience of the world than to the cognition typical for science and metaphysics” . How close, then, poetry and religion are in this respect! The journal Religious and Sacred Poetry (Poezja Religijna i Sakralna) offers the possibility of exploring the common ground of religion and poetry. We are very happy to present the first issue of the journal to our readers.
Źródło:
Religious and Sacred Poetry: An International Quarterly of Religion, Culture and Education; 2013, 1(1); 14
2299-9922
Pojawia się w:
Religious and Sacred Poetry: An International Quarterly of Religion, Culture and Education
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
The Introduction to Religious and Sacred Poetry (2)
Autorzy:
Tytko, Marek Mariusz
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/440892.pdf
Data publikacji:
2013
Wydawca:
Fundacja Naukowa Katolików Eschaton
Tematy:
religious poetry
sacred poetry
literature
culture
education
scholarly periodical
religious literary culture
Slavic philology
Christian culture
Religious and Sacred Poetry
Opis:
Welcome to the internet portal of the international scholarly periodical Religious and Sacred Poetry: An International Quarterly of Religion, Culture and Education (Poezja Religijna i Sakralna: Międzynarodowy Kwartalnik Religii, Kultury i Wychowania). This is an interdisciplinary scholarly periodical (intended as a quarterly) focused on Christian religious and sacred poetry considered from various angles: theological, philosophical, literary, linguistic, cultural, pedagogical, psychological and historiographical. The multidimensional, cultural and educational focus of this periodical allows for formulating scholarly theory and reflection about biblical poetry, sacred (liturgical) poetry, and religious poetry present in the Christian tradition of many nations, from Antiquity through the Middle Ages up to modern times. Catholic (Roman Catholic, Greek Catholic and others), Orthodox and Protestant traditions in religious poetry are part of the complementary heritage of Christian poetry of European countries, with which we would like to enrich one another. Christian poetry, approached by various avenues of study, is the subject of research in many countries. All these approaches follow the principle of discovering the truth in the classical sense – the relationship between cognition and reality. Truth, goodness, beauty, and holiness in religious poetry and matters of this kind constitute the subject of our studies. The range and scope of subject matter published in our periodical include teachings in relation to man (a person as creator and a person as recipient of religious poetry) and man’s creation in the form of religious poetry. We present the results of this research on the phenomenon of religious and sacred poetry to the representatives of many scholarly disciplines. In particular, with regard to religious and sacred poetry we are interested in the following subjects, arranged by the following disciplines and sub disciplines: 1) Theology, particularly biblical theology (in reference to Psalms, hymns, Lamentations, and poetic aspects in the Bible) and liturgy (liturgical theology, theology of worship), 2) Philosophy, primarily the philosophy of the beauty of religious poetry, esthetics of literature, axiology of literature, philosophy of poetry, as well as the philosophy of culture, philosophy of pedagogy and theory of communication, 3) Literary science, in particular the history and theory of literature and comparative literary sciences of all European literature (religious and sacred poetry in Europe, particularly Central Europe) 4) Linguistics, especially of the Slavic nations (the language of religious and sacred poetry), 5) Slavic philology, mostly in reference to the Christian poetry of Slavic countries, including: 6) Polish philology (Polish religious and sacred poetry, also in the regional dialects), 7) Bohemian philology (Czech and Moravian religious and sacred poetry), 8) Slovakian philology (Slovakian religious and sacred poetry), 9) Ukrainian philology (Russian, Rusian and Ukrainian religious and sacred poetry), 10) Bielorussian philology (Bielorussian religious and sacred poetry), 11) Other Slavic philologies (religious and sacred poetry of other Slavic nations), 12) Cultural sciences (religious literary and artistic culture), 13) Pedagogy, especially pedagogy of culture, including pedagogy of art and literature, pedagogy of artistic culture, religious culture, education of religious poetry, the poetry of Christian education, fine literature in religious education, and didactic poetry, 14) Psychology, including the psychology of creativity, psychology of religion, psychology of religious artistic and literary creativity, 15) Historiography of culture, particularly the historiography of religious literature (history of Christian poetry, history of literary culture in connection with religious poetry, and history of Christian religious poets). We will focus on both the subject (a piece of religious poetry) and on the object (a religious poet or artist producing religious works), and see these activities and products of the religious poet or artist as a broad matter of research, open for description, analysis, and examination of its various aspects. As the subject of studies we also include the recipient or receiver of these religious works: the reader of the Bible (e.g. Psalms, hymns, Lamentations and poetic fragments of the Holy Scrip-ture), who is the receiver of the message contained in religious poetry (in accordance with the principles of communication theory). We also focus our attention on the learning process through religious poetry and education through Christian literature and biblical pedagogy. The high professional standards of this periodical will be established by the presence of eminent specialists and scholars on our international scholarly board who represent university centers from many countries in Europe and America. Our aim is to meet the high standards of national and international scores for published scholarly papers. We offer our academic and scholarly peer reviewed periodical to the scholars of various humanistic branches from all countries. We invite authors to publish original papers that include the results of their own research. We also invite authors to publish reviews of scholarly books devoted to Christian religious poetry, Christian literary culture, education through poetry and other religious, cultural and educational matters of this kind. The periodical is open to scholars, academics and experienced pedagogues, clergy and laypeople who are acquainted with the Christian culture, and have deep conceptual interests and a creative mentality. The language of preference for the majority of scholarly papers published by “Religious and Sacred Poetry: An International Quarterly of Religion, Culture and Education” is English as it is an international language, but we will also publish selected texts in the following Slavic languages: Polish, Czech, Russian and Slovakian. We would like to bridge the East with the West to reach a wide and diversified range of international recipients. We encourage you to publish in the next volume of our periodical and wait for your papers as we are currently accepting new submissions for our periodical: http://www.religious-and-sacred-poetry.info Dear Readers, welcome to the complete resource for the current and most recent volume of our periodical. Each volume of the “Religious and Sacred Poetry: An International Quarterly of Religion, Culture and Education” contains two basic parts: 1) Dissertations, Papers, Studies and Research Reports, which comprises the primary content of our periodical; 2) Reviews and Resources, comprised of book reviews and other materials (e.g. sources, bibliography). “Religious and Sacred Poetry” is a periodical with free access to its contents, which results from the rule Open Access (unlimited access to complete versions of the published papers). This makes it easier for authors to share their scholarly results with academic centers all over the world. Our authors appreciate this principle and willingly publish with us. We invite you to cooperate with us. Materials which satisfy the scholarly criteria but received after the closing of the current volume are published in the next volume. Authors and scholars may send their papers to be published at any time. Papers sent to the editor undergo a process of academic review and when published they are protected by authorship law. The periodical “Religious and Sacred Poetry: An International Quarterly of Religion, Culture and Education” (“Poezja Religijna i Sakralna: Międzynarodowy Kwartalnik Religii, Kultury i Wychowania”) is a new periodical founded in 2012, well rooted in Latin-Greek civilization and Christian tradition, owing to its scope and the choice of its members a consciousness of the Christian foundation of the European cultures. The aim of the periodical is to spread and raise awareness to the results of scholarly research, led in various university centers (primarily European), upon Christian religious poetry in the religious (theological), cultural, pedagogical, literary, artistic, linguistic, psychological and philosophical (anthropological, ethical, and esthetic) contexts. The international character of the periodical “Religious and Sacred Poetry. Religion, Culture and Education” is guaranteed not only by the international scholarly board, but also by the authors, who represent many nations and impart genuine and important scholarly insights through their precious texts. Our periodical is open for cooperation and collaboration with many universities. We care about the high level of competence and form of our periodical content, pay precise attention to the observance of scholarly procedures, and promote an interdisciplinary approach to the subjects considered. We also make attempts to diversify the contents of the periodical despite an apparently narrow specialization of subject. This is according to the spirit of international openness, and at the same time with respect to the idea of a Europe of sovereign countries, the Europe of complementary, unrepeated national cultures, the Europe of Latin and Greek civilizations, the Europe of Christian roots, from which we rise as national and cultural communities thanks to the Gospel transmitted for two thousand years, and thanks to the Tradition and rich heritage of the Church breathing with two lungs: eastern and western. Our periodical in general is a permanent, international and interdisciplinary communal, a social European and independent research project devoted to religious and sacred poetry. The values presented in „Religious and Sacred Poetry” express the realized mission of the authors and editors. The mission of our common international enterprise, elaborated by many scholars and academic centers, is giving its readers a periodical which will introduce scholarly discoveries concerning Christian religious and sacred poetry into European and world circulation. There hasn’t existed a scholarly periodical of this nature and scope so far (at least there are no such periodicals existing in the international European syllabuses). The editorial team together with the authors will address this shortcoming by filling this research niche in the humanistic sciences. The periodical appears primarily in electronic form, available on the internet (open access), and is also available secondarily in paper form. We aim at achieving a high ranking for this periodical not only within the Polish evaluation system of the Ministry of Science and Higher Education, but also at reaching a position on the list of the Euro-pean Reference Index for Humanities (ERIH). The initiative for creating a scholarly periodical which would combine the studies of literature, culture, theology and pedagogy as well as the other related humanistic branches, began in 2010 by the founder of the periodical Dr Mark Mariusz Tytko, a pedagogue and a historian of art from Jagiellonian University. The idea had the support of a retired professor of the University, Bogusław Żurakowski, a pedagogue and specialist of literature and cultural sciences, who has become the head of the international scholarly board. The periodical “Religious and Sacred Poetry: An International Quarterly of Religion, Culture and Education” first came into existence on May 3rd 2012 in Cracow. On the first edito-rial board, apart from these two scholars just mentioned, there are the following members: from Poland prof. UKSW Dr hab. Wojciech Feliks Kudyba (literature studies), prof. UJ Dr hab. Maciej Jan Urbanowski (literature studies), prof. KUL Dr hab. Piotr Juliusz Jaroszyński (philosophy of culture, a representative of the Lublin Philosophical School), prof. UMCS Dr hab. Anna Marta Żukowska (a pedagogue and a specialist in the history of artistic education), prof. UŚ Dr hab. Urszula Jolanta Szuścik (a psychologist of creativity), sr prof. UPJPII Dr hab. Adelajda Sielepin CHR (liturgical theology), rev. p. Dr hab. Roman Bogacz (biblical theology), prof. AGH Dr hab. Adam Michał Nodzeński (statistics), Dr Barbara Krystyna Niemiec (linguistics and pedagogy), from the Czech Republic doc. Dr hab. Libor Martinek (a translator, literary studies), from Slovakia doc. Dr Marián Andričík (a translator, literary studies), Dr Ivica Hajdučeková (literary studies), from Ukraine prof. Dr hab. Svitlana Ivanivna Krawchenko (literary studies), from Belorussia doc. Dr Eugeniusz Arkadejowicz Pańków (literary studies) and doc. Dr Olga Eugenijewna Pańkowa (literary studies). We are open for additional scholarly cooperation on the editorial team and it may grow as needed with new specialists (the list of the editors is not closed). The founding of the periodical has been an answer by international scholars to the contemporary crisis in humanistic writing. The founding principles of the periodical say that this periodical is meant to be an international scholarly quarterly having its contents coherent with the Magisterium of the Roman-Catholic Church. From the very beginning of the periodical its focus is typically interdisciplinary, keeping balance between philology, pedagogy, psychology, cultural studies, theology and philosophy. The post of editor in chief has been filled by Dr Mark Marius Tytko in May 2012. The periodical, though it has risen from the university in Cracow, is not exclusively connected with one university but has embraced from the beginning various academic communities from many countries in Europe, and in this sense it is an international work by numerous scholars for presenting the results of research done mainly in the middle European academic centers (Middle / Central Europe) in several humanistic areas. The subject range expressed in the title indicates the profile of the periodical. Since the birth of the periodical we have established a professional internet portal in several languages: Polish, English, Russian, Bielorussian, Czech, Slovakian and Ukrainian (other languages are not excluded, we are open for cooperation in the future). The professional electronic version of the periodical is edited in a way such that the national (language specific) web pages on our internet portal refer to the same contents of the periodical, which can be found in PDF, available anywhere in the world: http://www.religious-and-sacred-poetry.info
Źródło:
Religious and Sacred Poetry: An International Quarterly of Religion, Culture and Education; 2013, 2(2); 13-18
2299-9922
Pojawia się w:
Religious and Sacred Poetry: An International Quarterly of Religion, Culture and Education
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł

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