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Abstract

The general view of Tadeusz Rittner, a highly successful playwright of the early 20th century, as an uncommitted realist and author of ‘well-made plays’ has, no doubt, been formed and fixed by Zbigniew Raszewski, renowned historian of the theatre who wrote the introductions to the postwar editions of Rittner's plays. This article shows a rather different picture of Rittner, based on his journalism, autobiographical novels and lesser-known dramas in which he pursued his innovatory theatrical visions. The complete Rittner is, in fact, made up of metatheatricality, the grotesque, the aes-thetics of Viennese modernism and a fair share of commercialism.
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Authors and Affiliations

Sabina Brzozowska
1
ORCID: ORCID

  1. Uniwersytet Opolski
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Bibliography

● Battaglia J.F., Między Wiedniem a Galicją, Austria a Polska. Kalejdoskop stosunków kulturalnych od XVIII do XX wieku, na stronie: http://dspace.uni.lodz.pl:8080/xmlui/bitstream/handle/11089/23368/[165]-183%20Forst-Battaglia.pdf;jsessionid=1CFJq-TYi75eiUnEqUoHP2py9x7qphGpMHZ?sequence=1 [data dostępu: 13.09.2020].
● Danowicz B., Realizm, metafora, publiczność, „Nowy Świat. Tygodniowy dodatek Głosu” 1956, nr 17.
● Flach J., „Przegląd Polski” 1913, tom 189.
● Grzymała-Siedlecki A., Tadeusz Rittner, „Listy z Teatru” 1924, z. 1.
● [Gbr] Gubrynowicz B., „Gazeta Lwowska” 1913, nr 257.
● Hebanowski S., „Lato” Rittnera w Zielonej Górze, „Nowy Świat”, dodatek do „Głosu Wielkopolskiego”, 1956, nr 15.
● Litwinowicz-Droździel M., Zmiana, której nie było. Trzy próby czytania Reymonta, Warszawa 2019.
● Milanowski A., Czy Tadeusz Rittner był pisarzem polskim czy niemieckim?, [w:] Recepcja literacka i proces literacki. O polsko-niemieckich kontaktach literackich od modernizmu po okres międzywojenny, red. G. Matuszek, G. Ritz, Kraków 1999.
● Partyga E., Wiek XIX. Przedstawienia, Warszawa 2016.
● Piotrowicz W., „Wrażenia teatralne”: „Lato”, komedia w trzech aktach Tadeusza Rittnera w Reducie, „Słowo” 1929, nr 95.
● Raszewski Z., Wstęp, [w:] Rittner T., Dramaty, t. I, oprac. Z. Raszewski, Warszawa 1966.
● Raszewski Z., Wstęp, [w:] Rittner T., Głupi Jakub. Wilki w nocy, wstęp i oprac. Z. Raszewski, Wrocław 1956.
● Ratajczakowa D., Komedia w epoce Młodej Polski, [w:] taż, W krysztale i w płomieniu. Studia i szkice o dramacie i teatrze, T. 1, Wrocław 2006.
● Rittner T., Komedia, „Kurier Warszawski”, 1911, nr 285, s. 5–6.
● Rittner T., Lato. Komedia, [w:] idem, Dramaty. Tom II, oprac. Z. Raszewski, Warszawa 1966.
● Rittner T., O teatrze „wesołym” i „smutnym”, „Świat” 1906, nr 17, s. 10.
● Skucha M., Męskość fabrykowana. Rzecz o homospołeczności, [w:] Formy męskości I, red. A. Dziadek, F. Mazurkiewicz, Warszawa 2018.
● Sussman H., Mężczyzna ekonomiczny i powstanie klasy średniej, przeł. T. Kaliściak, [w:] Formy męskości 3. Antologia przekładów, red. A. Dziadek, Warszawa 2018.
● Wandurski W., Magiczny namiastek życia (Światopogląd teatralny Tadeusza Rittnera), „Listy z Teatru” 1924, z. 1.
● Wysocki A., „Lato” Rittnera w Burgteatrze, „Gazeta Lwowska” 1912, nr 240.
● Zaremba P., Rittner? Fellini? Englert! „wPolityce”. https://wpolityce.pl/kultura/421664-rittner-fellini-englert [dostęp: 15.09.2020].
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Authors and Affiliations

Sabina Brzozowska
1
ORCID: ORCID

  1. Instytut Nauk o Literaturze, Uniwersytet Opolski
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Abstract

W tekście wskazuję na etyczny kontekst twórczości Ryszarda Wagnera. W skrócie sygnalizuję kwestię relacji wartości estetycznych i etycznych. Zaznaczam społeczne zaangażowanie pism teoretycznych Wagnera, skupiając się na emancypacyjnym charakterze egalitarnych i rewolucyjnych tez. W kolejnym wątku opisuję wpływ myśli Schopenhauera na autora Sztuki i rewolucji. Szczególnie skupiam się na wątku miłości, wyrzeczenia, poświęcenia i zanegowania woli. W ostatniej części odnoszę się do wagnerowskiego antysemityzmu i tzw. pism regeneracyjnych.

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Authors and Affiliations

Adrian Stelmaszyk
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Abstract

This is the first study of Comrade October, the only drama in the oeuvre of Kazimierz Wierzyński (1894–1969). Written in 1950, it was not published until 1992. The article traces the origins of the play and assigns it to the tradition of dystopian fi ction (as exemplifi ed primarily by George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four. A close reading of the structure of the play (the characters, the plot and its temporal structure, etc.) reveals the originality of Wierzyński’s approach and the links between Comrade October and the poetry he wrote after the war in exile.
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Authors and Affiliations

Jakub Osiński
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Abstract

Tadeusz Rittner steered clear of political themes in his dramas with the single excep-tion of the Wrogowie bogaczy (The Enemies of the Rich). First performed in 1921, the play exposes the insane madness of social (Bolshevik) revolution. At the same time, though, the tragic horror is handled with ironic distance and diverted into absurd grotesque. Moreover, Rittner invests the individual scenes and exchanges between the characters with hints and references that turn the story into a playful game with the theatrical traditions, including the familiar set of plot drivers, i.e. the pursuit of power, love/eroti-cism and art/imagination. For all its cleverness, the play, when staged at the Słowacki Theatre in Cracow, turned out a complete failure. One simple reason for it was that Rittner’s broad, generalized vision failed to meet the current demand for a more con-crete reenactment of historical events.
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Authors and Affiliations

Sabina Brzozowska
1
ORCID: ORCID

  1. Wydział Filologiczny Uniwersytetu Opolskiego
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Abstract

The article presents the history of the competition and design of the building originally intended for the Juliusz Osterwa Theatre in Lublin (currently the Centre for the Meeting of Cultures). Both the concepts of the location of the building and urban conditions were discussed, as well as various conceptual designs of the theatre, awarded and distinguished in an architectural competition at the turn of the 1950s and 1960s. In the further part of the article, the concept of the experimental scene, proposed by Kazimierz Braun in the early 1970s, is discussed. The background for the reconstruction of the history of the design and construction of the building are changes in the style and arrangement of the modern theatre architecture, with particular emphasis on Central and Eastern Europe.
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Authors and Affiliations

Piotr Majewski
1

  1. Uniwersytet Marii Curie-Skłodowskiej w Lublinie
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Abstract

This article was prompted by a joint declaration made on 28 September 2015 by the Archbishops of Cracow and Warsaw and the state authorities of the two cities that they would provide means for publishing project ‘A Critical Edition of the Literary Works of Karol Wojtyła – John Paul II’. This decision, marking the 100th anniversary of the birth of Karol Wojtyła in May 2020, signalizes the importance of the project which goes beyond a standard publication of an author’s complete works. The series was inaugurated by the publication in 2018 of Volume One (Juvenilia, 1938–1946), whose editors are expected to continue working on the following volumes. The author of this article takes a look at the first collected works edition of The Poetry and Dramas of Karol Wojtyła – John Paul II, published in 1979 (it actually went to press in 1980) under the directorship of Jacek Woźniakowski and authorized by John Paul II himself. It was in fact a complete edition as its editors succeeded in collecting all of Karol Wojtyła literary works from the moment he enrolled at the Seminary until his election as Pope in 1978. All the texts used for that edition were collected at source and in that respect can hardly be surpassed. For over forty years it offered a reliable store of Karol Wojtyła’s poems and plays to ordinary readers, translators, producers of plays and public ceremonies. In this article we can find a first-hand account of the story of that first edition from its inception, the role of the editors of the weekly Tygodnik Powszechny, the decisions taken at the Znak head office and the author’s own contribution as editor. It is at this point that he explains the decision to exclude from their edition Karol Wojtyła’s juvenila from his student years.

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Authors and Affiliations

Jan Okoń
ORCID: ORCID
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Abstract

This is a deconstructive reading of Juliusz Słowacki's Lilla Weneda, focusing on Ślaz, an enigmatic character usually marginalized in interpretations of this quasi-historical Romantic drama. Drawing on Professor Marta Piwińska's study of ‘Lilla Weneda’ in Dramat polski: Interpretacje (2001), this article explores the gaps and fissures in Słowacki's text. While complementing her analysis with a number of alternative readings, this article also uses deconstruction to challenge some of the points that are embedded in the traditional reception of the drama.
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Authors and Affiliations

Mirosław Grzegórzek
1
ORCID: ORCID

  1. badacz niezależny, Zespół Szkół Licealnych i Technicznych w Wojniczu
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Abstract

The paper concerns biblical heritage in Polish medieval and early modern literature. In it's first section the author presents the first Polish psalters and their influence upon religious poetry of the time. The second part focuses on the development of biblical scholarship in medieval and Renaissance Poland, presents the most important old translations of the Bible and shortly discusses their impact on Polish literary culture. The last part of the study shows how various types of biblical plots and characters were present in old Polish drama and theatre, in religious hymns and epics, how biblical patterns inspired certain literary genres; it also stresses cer- tain significant differences between Protestant and Catholic authors of the time. The conclusion of the paper points out serious need for more systematic researches and studies in the subject of biblical tradition in old Polish literature.

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Authors and Affiliations

Mirosława Hanusiewicz-Lavallee
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Abstract

This article examines the reception of the féeries, French theatre productions known for their fantasy plots, lavish scenery and spectacular visuals, in the feuilletons by Zofia Węgierska, published in 1853–1869 by the magazine Biblioteka Warszawska. In her reviews of the plays and operas staged in the capital of the French Empire she tried to pinpoint those elements of the productions that were common to the Polish and the French early Romantic aesthetics. She highly appreciated the romantic fairytale magic, the clever juxtaposition of contrastive scenes and moods, historicism, metaphysics, and dazzling stage effects as long as they helped to impress upon the audience the didactic and moral message of a play. The unvarying reference points of her criticism are the plays of Alexandre Dumas père, the Polish Romantic drama, the reception of the Vien-nese romantic fairytale plays in Poland (until 1850) and the journalism of Théophile Gautier.
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Authors and Affiliations

Mirella Kryś
1
ORCID: ORCID

  1. Zakład Literatury Romantyzmu, Instytut Filolofii Polskiej, Wydział Filologii Polskiej i Klasycznej, Uniwersytet im. Adama Mickiewicza w Poznaniu
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Abstract

This article attempts to refute the generally accepted view that Jan Wojciech (Albert) Łubieński, Pantler of Sieradz, was the patron of Piotr Baryka,, the author of the comedy Z chłopa król ( The Peasant Become King), first staged in 1633 (editio princeps, 1637). The attribution results from a conjecture, which has never been properly verified, formulated by Ludwik Bernacki in 1904. Yet in the 1630s Jan Wojciech Łubieński held no public office (he was probably completing his education) and, crucially, did not become Pantler of Sieradz until 1643. In consequence, we presume that Baryka's patron may well have been Łubieński's uncle, a wealthy man renowned for his generosity, who had the same first name.
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Authors and Affiliations

Roman Krzywy
1
ORCID: ORCID

  1. Instytut Literatury Polskiej, Uniwersytet Warszawski

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