The article focuses on literary images of Poland as a Jewish homeland presented in postwar Yiddish poetry written under Communism (1945-1968) by Polish Jews rescued from the Holocaust. The author put the emphasis on changes visible in the poetry depending on the social and political situation of Jewish writers and intellectuals. There are four main phases when the poets under discussion define their homeland differently: • 1939-1945 - years of the Holocaust; • 1945-1948 – years of both strong anti-Semitic atmosphere in Poland and of hope for rebuilding of Jewish culture in the Socialist Poland; • 1949-1955 – years of Socialist Realism in literature (which was used mainly for propaganda purposes); • 1956-1968 – years of anti-Semitic mood...
“Each poet is a Jew with a yellow patch”. Two voices about Woroszylski’s vision of Baczyński ...
The Polish-language Jewish press is an important test case for the development of Polish-Jewish rela...
The article examines the fate of the Jews in Poland in the Soviet and German occupation zones. Nazi ...
The extermination of more than 90% of the pre-war Jewish population, the destruction of their materi...
The article examines Yiddish-Polish writers’ response to the Holocaust in their poetry written in th...
After World War II, the Communist regime took over power directly after the liberation of Poland in ...
The literary output of the Polish-Yiddish writers who survived WWII in the Soviet Union is mostly a ...
Yiddish Cinema in the Prewar Polish Lands: The Socio-political and Cultural ContextsThe article is a...
The article presents selected translations of Yiddish literature into English, focusing on the influ...
The article discusses select literary images and presentations of March 1968, which are treated as a...
Magdalena Ruta discuses literary responses of Polish-Yiddish writers to the pogrom in Kielce on 4 Ju...
The Polish-Jewish relations are often described by the stereotypes. The one of them is the view on t...
Tuwim’s approach to the “Jewish question” has already been analyzed by Polish and foreign scholars....
The article is an attempt to analyse relations between Polish Jews, the country of their first inhab...
Mit der Schoah wurde die Anzahl der Sprecher des Jiddischen brutal reduziert; damit wurde zugleich d...
“Each poet is a Jew with a yellow patch”. Two voices about Woroszylski’s vision of Baczyński ...
The Polish-language Jewish press is an important test case for the development of Polish-Jewish rela...
The article examines the fate of the Jews in Poland in the Soviet and German occupation zones. Nazi ...
The extermination of more than 90% of the pre-war Jewish population, the destruction of their materi...
The article examines Yiddish-Polish writers’ response to the Holocaust in their poetry written in th...
After World War II, the Communist regime took over power directly after the liberation of Poland in ...
The literary output of the Polish-Yiddish writers who survived WWII in the Soviet Union is mostly a ...
Yiddish Cinema in the Prewar Polish Lands: The Socio-political and Cultural ContextsThe article is a...
The article presents selected translations of Yiddish literature into English, focusing on the influ...
The article discusses select literary images and presentations of March 1968, which are treated as a...
Magdalena Ruta discuses literary responses of Polish-Yiddish writers to the pogrom in Kielce on 4 Ju...
The Polish-Jewish relations are often described by the stereotypes. The one of them is the view on t...
Tuwim’s approach to the “Jewish question” has already been analyzed by Polish and foreign scholars....
The article is an attempt to analyse relations between Polish Jews, the country of their first inhab...
Mit der Schoah wurde die Anzahl der Sprecher des Jiddischen brutal reduziert; damit wurde zugleich d...
“Each poet is a Jew with a yellow patch”. Two voices about Woroszylski’s vision of Baczyński ...
The Polish-language Jewish press is an important test case for the development of Polish-Jewish rela...
The article examines the fate of the Jews in Poland in the Soviet and German occupation zones. Nazi ...