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Number of results: 26
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Abstract

This work deals with the effectiveness of a multi-body approach for the study of the dynamic behavior of a fixed landing gear, especially the research project concerns the drop tests of the AP.68 TP-300 aircraft. First, the Digital Mock-up of the of landing gear system in a C.A.D. software has been created, then the experimental structural stiffness of the leaf spring has been validated using the FEM tools MSC.Patran/Nastran. Finally, the entire model has been imported in MSC.ADAMS environment and, according to the certifying regulations, several multi-body simulations have been performed varying the heights of fall and the weights of the system. The results have shown a good correlation between numerical and experimental tests, thus demonstrating the potential of a multi-body approach. Future development of the present activity will probably be an application of the methodology, herein validated, to other cases for a more extensive validation of its predictive power and development of virtual certification procedures.

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Authors and Affiliations

Romeo Di Leo
Angelo De Fenza
Marco Barile
Leonardo Lecce
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Abstract

Identification plays an important role in relation to control objects and processes as it enables the control system to be properly tuned. The identification methods described in this paper use the Stochastic Gradient Descent algorithms, which have so far been successfully presented in machine learning. The article presents the results of the Adam and AMSGrad algorithms for online estimation of the Dielectric Electroactive Polymer actuator (DEAP) parameters. This work also aims to validate the learning by batch methodology, which allows to obtain faster convergence and more reliable parameter estimation. This approach is innovative in the field of identification of control systems. The researchwas supplemented with the analysis of the variable amplitude of the input signal. The dynamics of the DEAP parameter convergence depending on the normalization process was presented. Our research has shown how to effectively identify parameters with the use of innovative optimization methods. The results presented graphically confirm that this approach can be successfully applied in the field of control systems.
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Authors and Affiliations

Jakub Bernat
1
ORCID: ORCID
Jakub Kołota
1
ORCID: ORCID

  1. Institute of Automatic Control and Robotics, Poznan University of Technology, Poznan, Poland
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Abstract

Adam Mickiewicz’s Pan Tadeusz (in English: Sir Thaddeus, or the Last Lithuanian Foray), the national epic poem, was first published in June 1834. It was perceived as a idyllic work, full of happiness and very ideal heroes. However, one of the most problem of this poem is treason! It is very important to put a question: what is treason in the strict sense of the word? There are a lot of kinds of treason or only one? Is it possible to betray own country on account of favouriting strange fashion, customs or painting? In Pan Tadeusz Mickiewicz intended to stand up for the Polish tradition. He had a high opinion of loyalty, steadiness and the selfless sense of duty.

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Authors and Affiliations

Jan Tomkowski
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Abstract

In his lecture the author explains the role played by the problem of memory in Ballady i romanse ( Ballads and romances). In his reading of the ballads he concentrates mainly on the subject of romantic memory and on the places of memory, indicating memory-forming experience of death. The author presents the hypothesis about two culminanting points of the development of memory problems – in Ballady i romanse and the consecutive parts of Dziady ( Forefathers’ Eve).
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Authors and Affiliations

Krzysztof Trybuś
1

  1. Instytut Filologii Polskiej Uniwersytetu im. Adama Mickiewicza, Zakład Literatury Romantyzmu
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Abstract

Adam Mickiewicz’s Pan Tadeusz (in English: Sir Thaddeus, or The Last Lithuanian Foray ), the national epic poem, was first published in June 1834. It was perceived as a patriotic work, full of very ideal heroes. However, one of the most problem of this poem is love! Pan Tadeusz is the poem about love. There are many kinds of love: erotic love and maritial love, also familiar love (between parents and their children), love for country and others. My article applies not just to love affairs, but the very essence of love. What is love in Mickiewicz’s poem – is it “love that moves the sun and other stars” (Dante)?

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Authors and Affiliations

Jan Tomkowski
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Abstract

A translation into Greek and Latin of four poems by Adam Mickiewicz, three from his Lausanne Cycle, composed in 1839–1840, and one slightly earlier (“Gęby za lud krzyczące…”).
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Authors and Affiliations

Jerzy Danielewicz
1
ORCID: ORCID

  1. Instytut Filologii Klasycznej, Uniwersytet im. Adama Mickiewicza w Poznaniu
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Abstract

I have been asked to give a thought on the University. It is arranged in a sequence of “past – yesterday – today”, to which I will occasionally refer. It will not, however, constitute a rigid scheme governing this talk. The inspiration for these thoughts was specified by the question “what perception of the University I imbibed in my family home, how I later confronted this with my own practice or «experience» of the University, how I look at it from the perspective of the experience I have had and from observing the changes taking place.”
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Authors and Affiliations

Tomasz Schramm
1
ORCID: ORCID

  1. Uniwersytet Adama Mickiewicza w Poznaniu
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Abstract

This paper focused on a study concerned with the motion of platforms at loading stations during truck changing in Trucklift slope hoisting system built in Jaeryong open-pit iron mine, DPR of Korea. The motion of platform in Trucklift slope hoisting system produces undesirable effect on truck changing. To analyze the motion of platform during truck changing, we built the dynamic model in ADAMS environment and control system in MATLAB/Simulink. Simulation results indicate that the normal truck changing can be realized without arresters at loading stations by a reasonable structural design of platforms and loading stations.
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Bibliography

[1] A.A. Kuleshov, RU Patent, 2168630 C1, filed June 10 (2001).
[2] W . Peter, WO, 2008/138055 A1, filed Nov. 20 (2008).
[3] J.D. Tarasov, RU Patent, 2284958 C1, filed Oct. 10 (2006).
[4] http://www.siemagtecberg.com/infocentre/technical-information/ti_27-trucklift.html, accessed: 05.02.2017
[5] M. Schmid, Tire modeling for multibody dynamics applications. Technical Report, sbel.wisc.edu, University of Wisconsin‐Madison, 5-14 (2011)
[6] X.B. Ning, C.L. Zhao, J.H. Shen, Procedia Engineering 16, 333-341 (2011).
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[8] P.G. Adamczyk, D. Gorsich, G. Hudas, J. Overholt, Proceedings of SPIE 5083, 63-74 (2003).
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Authors and Affiliations

Tok Hyong Han
1
ORCID: ORCID
Kwang Hyok Kim
1
ORCID: ORCID
Un Chol Han
2
ORCID: ORCID
Kwang Myong Li
2
ORCID: ORCID

  1. Kim Chaek University of Technology, Faculty of Mining Engineering, Pyongyang, Democratic People’s Republic of Korea
  2. Kim Chaek University of Technology, School of Science and Engineering, Pyongyang, Democratic People’s Republic of Korea
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Abstract

The aim of comparing Ecce Homo by Adam Chmielowski (late nineteenth century) with The Surrealist Shooting (1949) by Andrzej Wróblewski is to show how the ability to depict God was gradually breaking down in the modern period. While Chmielowski tried to overcome that deadlock, Wróblewski after having decided to join the Communist revolution, focused on depicting the retreating God.
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Bibliography

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Bauman Zygmunt, Retrotopia. Jak rządzi nami przeszłość, przeł. Karolina Lebek, Warszawa 2018.

Beaumont Justin, Eder Klaus, Concepts, Processes and Antagonisms of Postsecularity, [w:] The Routledge Handbook of Postsecularity, red. Justin Beaumont, London–New York 2019, s. 3–24.

Bilska Małgorzata, Nic na pokaz. Fenomen brata Alberta, Poznań 2017.

Buc Philippe, Pułapki rytuału. Między wczesnośredniowiecznymi tekstami a teorią nauk społecznych, przeł. Michał Tomaszek, Warszawa 2011.

Bunsch Adam, Przyszedł na ziemię święty, Kraków 1947.

Dąbrowski Jakub, Demenko Anna, Cenzura w sztuce polskiej po 1989 roku, t. 1: Aspekty prawne, Warszawa 2014.

de Lubac Henri, Dramat humanizmu ateistycznego, przeł. Arkadiusz Ziernicki, Kraków 2004.

Deus otiosus. Nowoczesność w perspektywie postsekularnej, red. Agata Bielik-Robson, Maciej A. Sosnowski, Warszawa 2013.

Dzwonkowski Roman, Straty osobowe Kościoła katolickiego obrządku łacińskiego pod okupacją sowiecką w latach 1939–1941 i 1944–1945, [w:] Polska 1935–1945. Straty osobowe i ofiary represji pod dwiema okupacjami, red. Tomasz Szarota, Wojciech Materski, Warszawa 2009, s. 327–332.

Eagleton Terry, Culture and the Death of God, New Haven–London 2014.

Faron Assumpta, Ecce Homo. Historia obrazu, Kraków 1998.

Fineman Mia, Ecce Homo Prostheticus, „New German Critique”, 1999 (Winter), 76, s. 85–114.

Grabowski Waldemar, Raport. Straty ludzkie poniesione przez Polskę w latach 1939–1945, [w:] Polska 1935–1945. Straty osobowe i ofiary represji pod dwiema okupacjami, red. Tomasz Szarota, Wojciech Materski, Warszawa 2009, s. 13–38.

Jabłońska-Deptuła Ewa, Zakony diecezji przemyskiej 1772–1938, „Nasza Przeszłość”, 46, 1976, s. 207–268.

Kantor Tadeusz, Porębski Mieczysław, Grupa młodych plastyków po raz drugi. Pro domo sua, „Twórczość”, 1946, 9, przedruk: W kręgu lat czterdziestych. Rysunki, grafiki, akwarele i formy przestrzenne, cz. 1, red. Józef Chrobak, Kraków 1990, s. 99.

Kantor Tadeusz, Surrealizm, „Przekrój”, 1948, 21 (163), s. 12–14.

Kemp Martin, Christ to Coke. How Image Becomes Icon, New York 2012.

Korsak Karol, Sztuka religijna w dawnych wiekach, Poznań–Warszawa–Lublin 1949.

Koza Paweł, Brat Albert i radykalna praca socjalna, „Zeszyty Pracy Socjalnej” 2015, 2 (20), s. 57–70.

Kula Marcin, Communism as Religion, „Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions”, 6, 2005, 3, s. 371–381.

Kula Marcin, Religiopodobny komunizm, Kraków 2003. Latour Bruno, Nigdy nie byliśmy nowocześni. Studium z antropologii symetrycznej, przeł. Maciej Gdula, Warszawa 2011.

Lenin Włodzimierz I., O stosunku partii robotniczej do religii, „Praletarij”, 13 V 1909, za: idem, Dzieła wszystkie, t. 17, Warszawa 1986, za: www.marxists.org/polski/lenin/1909/05/o_st_par.htm (dostęp: 29 III 2021).

Malewska Hanna, Mity, „Życie Literackie”, 1946, 3–4, s. 1–2.

Michalski Konstanty, Brat Albert, Kraków 1946.

Michalski Konstanty, Data urodzin brata Alberta, Kraków 1947.

Nowaczyński Adolf, Najpiękniejszy człowiek mego pokolenia. Brat Albert, Poznań–Warszawa–Wilno–Lublin [b.d.].

Piotrowski Piotr, Artysta między rewolucją a reakcją. Studium z zakresu etycznej historii sztuki awangardy rosyjskiej, Poznań 1993.

Rousseau Jean-Jacques, Umowa społeczna, przeł. Antoni Peretiatkowicz, Kęty 2007.

Ryszkiewicz Andrzej, Malarstwo polskie. Romantyzm, historyzm, realizm, Warszawa 1989.

Ryś Grzegorz, Ecce Homo, Kraków 2013.

Santiago José, From „Civil Religion” to Nationalism as the Religion of Modern Times. Rethinking a Complex Relationship, „Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion”, 48, 2009, 2, s. 394–401.

Sloterdijk Peter, Krytyka cynicznego rozumu, przeł. Piotr Dehnel, Wrocław 2008.

Stiker Henri-Jacques, A History of Disability, transl. William Sayers, Ann Arbor 1999.

Stoichita Victor I., Krótka historia cienia, przeł. Piotr Nowakowski, Kraków 2001.

Świadectwo oddania bez reszty. Karol Wojtyła o bł. bracie Albercie Chmielowski, red. Kazimierz Bukowski, Kraków 1984.

Turowski Andrzej, Między sztuka a komuną. Teksty awangardy rosyjskiej 1910–1932, Kraków 1998.

Unikanie stanów pośrednich. Andrzej Wróblewski (1927–1957), red. Magdalena Ziółkowska, Wojciech Grzybała, Ostfildern– Warszawa 2014.

Wojtyła Karol, Brat naszego Boga, Kluczbork 1996. Wojtyła Karol, Dzieła literackie i teatralne, t. 1: Juwenilia 1938–1946, red. Jacek Popiel, Kraków 2019, s. 220–276.

Wystawa grafiki meksykańskiej, [katalog wystawy], Muzeum Narodowe w Warszawie 1949.

Zaremba Marcin, Wielka trwoga. Polska 1944–1947. Ludowa reakcja na kryzys, Kraków 2012.
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Authors and Affiliations

Anna Markowska
1
ORCID: ORCID

  1. Uniwersytet Wrocławski
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Abstract

The purpose of the present article is to provide an analysis of the iconographic sources used in the depiction of Adam and Eve in the 3rd–4th century wall paintings. The scene of the Original Sin initially appeared in wall painting, with the oldest examples dating back to the 3rd century AD. In the following century, images of Adam and Eve were used in both sarcophagus sculpture and crafts. The author of the article compares two different iconographic sources, which together shape the final appearance of Original Sin in the art of the period. A crucial literary source beside the text of Genesis is the apocryphal Lives of Adam and Eve, tracing a different sequence of events related to the story of the Original Sin. On the other hand, the analysis of ancient depictions of Hercules and the goddess Venus reveals an intriguing connection between the representations of the Original Sin and pagan iconography.
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Authors and Affiliations

Bartłomiej Żurawski
1
ORCID: ORCID

  1. Muzeum Narodowe w Warszawie
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Abstract

Roman Micnas was a distinguished Polish physicist, well known for his works in the field of condensed matter theory and statistical physics. One of his best known achievements is development of theory of superconductivity with local electron pairing. He also published a number of important contributions to the theory of magnetism, theory of phase transitions, and theory of ultracold atoms on optical lattices. His more than 140 publications were cited over 3200 times by other authors. He graduated at the Faculty of Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry of Adam Mickiewicz University (AMU) in 1970, where he hold a position until his passing away on 13 January 2022. He received PhD in 1978, habilitation in 1988, and became Professor in 1990. In the Faculty of Physics of AMU he was the head of Solid State Theory Division in years 1998–2018. For his development of theory of superconductivity with local electron pairing he was awarded, together with Stanisław Robaszkiewicz, the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Scientific Prize of the Polish Academy of Sciences (PAS) in 1989. In 1994 he became Corresponding Member of PAS, and in 2016 – Ordinary Member. He served a number of important functions in PAS, among others he was a member of Committee for Physics of PAS, and since 2015 a Dean of Division III of Exact Sciences and Earth Sciences of PAS. He was a member of several scientific societies: Polish Physical Society, European Physical Society, American Physical Society and American Association for Advancement of Science. He co-organized 35 home and international conferences, among others the cycle of the European Conferences „Physics of Magnetism”, which he co-chaired since 1993.
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Authors and Affiliations

Tomasz Kostyrko
1
Marek Thomas
1

  1. Wydział Fizyki, Instytut Spintroniki i Informacji Kwantowej, Zakład Teorii Materii Skondensowanej, Uniwersytet im.Adama Mickiewicza
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Abstract

How exactly did Adam Zagajewski, the Cracovian exile from postwar Lvov, become the “Poet of 9/11”, as Newsweek hailed him on the tenth anniversary of the infamous terrorist attack? And why has the poem lingered on in the years that follow, comforting readers in the aftermath of all kinds of disasters, private and public, natural and manmade? This essay traces the history behind the poem’s debit in English translation on the final page of the New Yorker magazine’s first issue after the attack. It follows its subsequent afterlife as one of the best-known contemporary poems in the English language, as witnessed by its countless appearances in everything from anthologies to sermons, pop songs, and personal websites in the last eighteen years.
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Authors and Affiliations

Clare Cavanagh
1

  1. prof., profesor literatur słowiańskich i komparatystyki (Frances Hooper Professor in the Arts and Humanities) na Uniwersytecie Northwestern
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Abstract

The author argues that the philosophical position of Karl Marx was primarily shaped by three determinants. The first was the traditional Jewish culture, with its high esteem for intellectual effort, for the genius reflected in intellectual discoveries, and for the ambition that influenced interesting life plans and culminated in some visions of an ultimate end in life. The second was neo- -Hegelianism, which Marx himself recognized as a dominant factor in his thought. Thirdly, Marx was affected by Martin Luther, and this influence is in the focus of this paper. The author clams that both Luther and Marx believed that the essential trait of specifically human existence arises from hard work of any kind except the dullest. Both were bewildered by ideological gullibility and blindness of the masses. Both were convinced that this boundless credulity was sustained by fear of eternal damnation spread by the official church and by slave mentality. Finally both claimed that this noxious influence could only be overcome by a revolution in life conditions and by new social ideas. Each, however, entertained a different conception of that desirable revolution.

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Authors and Affiliations

Jacek Hołówka
ORCID: ORCID
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Abstract

Adam Łomnicki, a member of the Polish Academy of Sciences, the Polish Academy of Arts and Sciences and Academia Europaea, passed away on 15th December 2021. Adam Łomnicki was born in Warsaw, as a descendant of famous Łomnicki scholars - naturalists and mathematicians. He spent his childhood and youth in Sokołów Małopolski and Zakopane, where he completed his secondary school. In the years 1952–1957 he studied biology at the Jagiellonian University, where despite the domination of Soviet biology at the time, which denied the existence of scientific genetics and evolutionism, he had the opportunity to learn about these fields. His first job was at the Department of Nature Conservation of the Polish Academy of Sciences; he worked in the Tatra Mountains. Soon after graduating, Adam Łomnicki spent a few months at Oxford with one of the greatest ecologists of the time, Charles Elton. On his advice and under the supervision of prof. Roman Wojtusiak, he conducted his PhD thesis on the factors determining distribution of arachnids and coleopterans in the Tatra Mts. and graduated in 1961. His habilitation, completed in 1971, concerned the population ecology of Roman snails and led to very important conclusions on the effect of differences between individuals in population regulation (published in Nature). At that time, there was a crisis in environmental biology, caused by the contradictions between the principles of evolutionary theory and the existence of altruism and population regulation. An attempt to resolve these contradictions was Wynne Edwards' concept of group selection (1962), which, thanks, among others, to Łomnicki, turned out to be wrong. The concept of kin selection, put forward by W.D. Hamilton in 1964, of reciprocal altruism by Robert Trivers (1971) and models based on game theory by Maynard-Smith and Price (1973) resolved conflicts with behavioural biology, but it was Łomnicki's concept, based on mathematical models and supported by empirical studies showing the importance of individual variation in a population, that finally solved one of the most important problems of modern evolutionary biology and ecology – regulation of population numbers; Łomnicki's concept, presented in several publications, culminated in the book “Population ecology of Individuals” (Princeton University Press, 1988). Adam Łomnicki was not only a researcher, but also a master and teacher of a few generations of Polish evolutionary biologists and ecologists. With great enthusiasm he organized ecological seminars, national Schools of Mathematical Modeling in Biology (1975–1985), Evolutionary Biology Workshops (4 times a year in 1995–2012) later transformed into several-day international Polish Evolutionary Conferences. He was an excellent lecturer, and author or co-author of the most important Polish textbooks in the field of population ecology, evolutionary genetics and mathematical statistics for natural scientists. In 1981–1988 he was director of the Institute of Environmental Biology (now Institute of Environmental Sciences) of Jagiellonian University; during the dramatic change of political system in Poland, Łomnicki contributed to the modern organization of this institution and to the way of conducting university studies in modern Western style. Privately, he was very sociable, had a great sense of humor, was interested in history and skiing.
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Authors and Affiliations

Jan Kozłowski
1
January Weiner
1
Michał Woyciechowski
1

  1. Em. prof. Instytutu Nauk o Środowisku Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego
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Abstract

The Poznań Branch of the PAN Archive in Warsaw was established in May 1956. From April 1974, the headquarters of the Branch was located in the building of the Poznań Society of Friends of Sciences in Poznań. The Archive collects, processes and makes available archival materials on the activities of the Polish Academy of Sciences and legacies of scholars. The legacies that form the backbone of archival resources are gathered through purchases, donations and deposits. Then they are compiled in the form of inventories and made available for research purposes. The collections of the Archive of the Polish Academy of Sciences in Poznań contain rich documentation of the history of science in Poznań and in Poland. They concern both scientific institutions, including laboratories, editorial offices and some institutes of the Polish Academy of Sciences, the University of Adam Mickiewicz in Poznań and other Poznań universities, as well as biographies of individual scientists, especially those connected to Poznań and Greater Poland. Archival collections with valuable materials related to groundbreaking events in the post-war history of Poznań and Poland are also interesting. Archival collections are also displayed at exhibitions and during scientific conferences. Archives from two legacies are available on the CYRYL portal – the Poznań Local Digital Repository.
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Authors and Affiliations

Jarosław Matysiak
1

  1. PAN Archiwum w Warszawie Oddział w Poznaniu
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Abstract

Adam Mickiewicz's epic poem Pan Tadeusz, published in Paris in 1834, can be seen as an expression of a romantic culture of remembrance which emerged in Poland and Lithuania in the aftermath of a traumatic political event, the January Uprising of 1830–1831. This article discusses the poet's transformation of the devices and generic model of heroic epic for the double purpose of expressing a notion of historical time which holds out an open future for both the individual and the national community, and of promoting the acceptance of a complicated past through the resolution of its conflicts. Both in Poland and in Lithuania, Pan Tadeusz was regarded as a monumental tribute to the culture of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth and a major influence on the modern national literatures in Lithuanian, Belarusian and Yiddish, sprouting on the territory of the former Grand Duchy of Lithuania.
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Authors and Affiliations

Brigita Speičytė
1
ORCID: ORCID

  1. prof. dr hab., Departament Literatury Litewskiej, Wydział Filologiczny Uniwersytetu Wileńskiego
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Abstract

The ten years Stanisław Pigoń spent in Wilno (1921-1931) was a very important phase of his life. Wilno not only attracted a great deal of his research but also became the focus of a lasting emotional attachment, a sentiment which he reaffirmed in a memoir published shortly before his death in 1968. Although a lot is already known about Pigoń’s Wilno decade, there are some episodes that are worth a closer examination. One of them is a debate about Konrad’s cell which he triggered off just before leaving Wilno. The controversy concerns a cell in the former Basylian Monastery where Adam Mickiewicz was imprisoned in 1823 and where Konrad, the main character of his Dziady (Forefathers’ Eve) undergoes a spiritual transformation, the climax of the poetic drama. Pigoń contributions to this interminable debate exhibit a fine balance of scholarly precision and passionate conviction. This article not only looks at the origin and the early phases of the Konrad’s cell controversy in their contemporary background but also tries to show Pigoń’s involvement in the life of the university and the cultural and literary life of Wilno.

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Authors and Affiliations

Tadeusz Bujnicki
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Abstract

This article deals with the issues of the creative process explored by Adam Zagajewski in his writings, especially in his poems forming the cycle of Autoportraits. Indeed, he revisited the subject on numerous occasions, pointing to the importance of inspiration, which, he regretted, received too little attention in today’s world. Be it as it may, in the end it all comes down to the question about how he actually wrote his poems. This article is the first attempt to reconstruct the methods of Zagajewski’s creative work; it also retraces the process of writing a single poem from a poetic note to its final version.
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Authors and Affiliations

Anna Czabanowska-Wróbel
1
ORCID: ORCID

  1. Wydział Polonistyki Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego
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Abstract

The phenomenon of the so-called Polish monumental theatre has for nearly a century resisted attempts at conceptualization. Created by artists living in a transitional period and formed in a peculiar “trans-era” mental space, this theatre was wrought from a hybrid substance that combined a Romantic and post-Romantic content with an avant-garde form. Being “simultaneously national and supra-national”, it appeared as a unique conceptual and artistic construct; a construct that was touted as the innovative Polish input into the reform of European theatre. Owing to the heterogeneity of its subject-matter, it was at times included into, and at other times excluded from the body of endeavours of an avant-garde nature; the correct categorization was until now made difficult by the conceptual template constructed around the dogma concerning the incompatibility of the two areas: the avant-garde and the so-called national duties. Seen in the perspective of modern-day research on the variegated nature of Modernism and on its inner tensions, however, this phenomenon may emerge as an interesting illustration of the synthesizing efforts of Modernism.
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Authors and Affiliations

Joanna Stacewicz-Podlipska
1
ORCID: ORCID

  1. Instytut Sztuki PAN
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Abstract

This article attempts to formulate a new interpretation of the mysterious messianic character marked "Forty and Four" from the Vision of Priest Piotr in Adam Mickiewicz's poetic drama Dziady ( Forefathers' Eve), Part III. After a review of earlier readings of this crux and its symbolism, the author of the article presents his own proposal, which contextualizes the enigmatic number in three historical frameworks. The first of them is ancient history, and, more specifically, 'Forty four' is seen as a reference to the Ides of March in 44 B.C., the date on which Julius Caesar was assassinated by a group of conspirators led by Brutus. The other two relevant contexts are the Reign of Terror during the French Revolution, and the high tides of modern history culminating in tyrannicide. In effect, the 'Forty four' passage is seen as an affirmation or even a sacralization of tyrannicide, symbolized by not only by inexplicit references to Brutus and the Israelite heroine Judith. It is a theme which reverberates not only in Dziady but also throughout Adam Mickiewicz's work.
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Authors and Affiliations

Maciej Szargot
1
ORCID: ORCID

  1. prof. UŁ, dr hab., Uniwersytet Łódzki
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Abstract

The article attempts to outline Adam Mickiewicz’s concept of subjectivity. He introduces it in his visionary poetic drama Dziady (Forefathers’ Eve) where a radically ambivalent situation is presented through the duality of the main character Gustaw/Konrad. The article describes this duality in terms of Paul Ricoeur’s distinction between cogito exalté and cogito brisé. In Dziady Mickiewicz dramatizes the transition from exaltation to dejection, the condition of cogito brisé (living with a wound). His romantic subject cannot throw away his past, but because he is acutely aware of his failings and his inadequacy he is able to free himself from delusions of grandeur and self-centered pride. The condition of uncertainty, inadequacy and chronic insatiability is like a gaping wound or a lack which may lead the ‘I’ to open up and seek the Other. It is a vision of man who knows he is deeply flawed but capable of pursuing a noble desire; vulnerable and fallible, beset by ‘endless error’ and yet able to act and get his act together; self-centered and yet, because of the relational nature of the human identity, capable of redirecting his emancipatory energy to Others. It can be summed up the concept of homo capax (homme capable) which, as this article argues, provides the key to Mickiewicz’s anthropology.

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Authors and Affiliations

Agnieszka Bednarek-Bohdziewicz
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Abstract

In his lecture on Adam Asnyk’s poetry delivered in 1896 Jan Kasprowicz came up with the term endymionism to refer to a relatively small portion of the poet’s work characterized by a tone of extravagant egotism and narcissism. Exemplary for this extravaganza was, according to Kasprowicz, the poem ‘Endymion’. It belongs to a sequence of poems voicing the poet’s trauma after the suppression of the 1863–1864 January Uprising, and is closely connected with the ‘A Dream of the Tombs’, his most opaque and depressive poem. In the Polish literary tradition – from Słowacki’s calling Krasiński the Endymion of poetry, through Norwid and Faleński to a number of Young Poland’s poets (Rydel, Wyspiański, and Lange to mention but a few) – the figure of Endymion marked a situation of the poet being misunderstood or flouted by critics and readers. But with Asnyk’s ‘Endymion’, who, despite the appearance of a lonely dreamer is in fact a guardian of the tombs of heroes who fell in an unequal fight, this mythological figure acquired a new meaning. It became a symbol of loyalty and a noble idealism making no concessions to mundane pragmatism. In the following decades endymionism of that kind would often blend into Parnassianism, a poetic movement committed to the idea of art independent of all practical concerns and obligations.

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Authors and Affiliations

Małgorzata Okulicz-Kozaryn
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Abstract

This is a comparative analysis of the key ideas regarding nation-building in the writ-ings of Adam Mickiewicz and Patrick Pearse, who have gone down to history as icons of the Polish and Irish national revival. In the case of Mickiewicz the article focuses on Dziady – Część III (Forefathers’ Eve – Part III), Konrad Wallenrod, Księgi narodu polskiego i pielgrzymstwa polskiego (Books of the Polish Nation and Poland’s Pilgrimage); the Irish materials include Pearce’s dramas The King and The Singer as well as Theobald Wolfe Tone’s ‘Speech from the Dock’. A trope common to all of them is the concept of ‘a beauti-ful, awesome voice’ / ‘a traitorous song’: literature as a mighty force that can create a community dedicated to the national cause. A comparison of passages that articulate the messianic idea indicates that, though understood by either writer in his own way, they both envision it as a catalyst turning nation-building literature into an apotheosis of martyrdom and death – a process which could be described as axiological metabolism. The article also examines the paradoxes of the projections of the myth of national unity in the work of both writers, especially in Mickiewicz’s Pan Tadeusz and Pearse’s short story ‘In My Garden’.
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Authors and Affiliations

Dobromiła Księska
1
ORCID: ORCID

  1. Szkoła Doktorska Nauk Humanistycznych UJ
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Abstract

After the fall of the Polish-Lituanian Commonwealth, Prince Adam Kazimierz Czartoryski was involved in a number of activities in the field of culture, literature and education. This article explores his activities with regard to the contemporary press market. Adam Czartoryski, Governor (starosta generalny) of Podolia, was (behind the scenes) a promoter and coordinator of initiatives to set up quality periodicals in Wilno (Gazeta Literacka Wileńska, and also the daily Dziennik Wileński), Warsaw (Pamiętnik Warszawski) and Lwów (Pamiętnik Lwowski).
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Authors and Affiliations

Jolanta Kowal
1

  1. Instytut Polonistyki i Dziennikarstwa Uniwersytet Rzeszowski al. Rejtana 16c PL 35-959 Rzeszów

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