Full-text resources of CEJSH and other databases are now available in the new Library of Science.
Visit https://bibliotekanauki.pl

PL EN


2011 | 2 | p. 265-272

Article title

Komparatyzm – italianizm – orientalizm. Badania porównawcze jako Dziedzina

Authors

Title variants

EN
Comparatism – Italianism – Orientalism: Comparative Studies as “THE Discourse”

Languages of publication

PL

Abstracts

EN
The article presents the book by Olga Płaszczewska Przestrzenie komparatystyki – italianizm (Th e Fields of Comparative Studies: Italianism) as a manifesto of the discursive force of Italian studies – or as I call them in reference to Edward Said’s work: “Italianism” – understood as a discipline. Such a perspective stands in opposition to perceiving “Italianism” merely as a method of study. In my attempts to interpret Płaszczewska’s monumental comparative study of Italian and Polish literature (on the examples of Ignacy Kraszewski, Ignazio Silone and many others), in addition backed up by a competent and thorough presentation of the main issues of comparative studies, I indicate the author’s arguments aiming at separation of the “complit” from the literary studies in order to justify the discipline’s autonomy. Płaszczewska’s way of achieving that goal – which by any means does not have to be perceived as a hostile gesture towards any other discipline, but simply as a self-referential discursive refl ex – is very convincing, at least from the rhetorical point of view. By including some of Polish (e.g. Henryk Markiewicz) and foreign (e.g. Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak) researchers in the comparative studies’ field (and therefore excluding them from the literary theory fi eld of study) or by stressing the importance and the infl uence of Italian studies on the status of literary studies as a whole, the author creates a vision of a fully self-referential, autonomous fi eld of literary studies – i.e. comparative studies. In effect I describe the book as a signal of a more complex phenomenon of what I would like to call “comparatism”, another term – after “Italianism” – suggesting a fundamental connection to orientalism as described by Edward Said.

Year

Volume

2

Pages

p. 265-272

Physical description

Contributors

author
  • Uniwersytet Szczeciński, Instytut Polonistyki i Kulturoznawstwa, Zakład Teorii i Antropologii Literatury, al. Piastów 40 b, 71-065 Szczecin

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.desklight-c73e4bfa-1ba7-4d5c-8d91-655a1ad615d2
JavaScript is turned off in your web browser. Turn it on to take full advantage of this site, then refresh the page.