Abstract
This article attempts to throw some light on what may be called Poland’s new national-identity
literature and its leading fi gures, Jarosław Marek Rymkiewicz, Wojciech Wencel and Przemysław
Dakowicz. They see their work as a psychopolitical educational tool in the service of a patriotic mission to reactivate the ‘real’ national identity. They believe that such an identity is necessary for
individuals to develop strong personal identities, founded on a sense of belonging to an integral
national community. Rymkiewicz, Wencel and Dakowicz champion this, somewhat archaic, model
of national identity which claims total commitment from its members in virtually all their writings.
This article focuses on the rhetorical devices used by the new national-identity literature to present
and promote its key concept, especially the idea of a ‘sublime’ ethnic community, or a sentimentalized
vision of a Polish Commonwealth.
Go to article