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2021 | 11 | 9-19

Article title

Miasto utrapienia, pejzaż pamięci: Żeromski, Singer i żydowska Warszawa

Authors

Content

Title variants

EN
The Dolent City, the Landscape of Memory: Żeromski, Singer and Their Jewish Warsaw

Languages of publication

PL

Abstracts

EN
In this article the author analyses Stefan Żeromski’s and Isaac Bashevis Singer’s fiction in search of contrasts and similarities in their images of 19th and early 20th century Jewish Warsaw. Singer portrayed it repeatedly in many of his works, such as In My Father’s Court (1966), Shosha (1978), Love and Exile (1984) and The Certificate (1992). Żeromski depicted it in two of his novels: Ludzie bezdomni [Homeless People] (1899) and Przedwiośnie [The Coming Spring] (1924). One would expect the differences to be huge and numerous and the resemblances rare and superficial. Singer memorialized a world that is no more, which was his own universe and heritage, while Żeromski was an outsider exploring an area that is mysterious, afflicted with severe poverty and in some ways out of bounds. Nevertheless, there are some intriguing analogies, particularly when Singer showed his streets, shops and houses through the eyes of a complete stranger or an incomer who perfectly remembers his childhood spent on Krochmalna Street but revisits to find it profoundly transformed—full of new thoughts, ideas and experiences.

Contributors

  • Uniwersytet Wroclawski

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.desklight-9f6f7a6a-ebd1-411b-ac42-6f0644371628
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