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PL
Giovanni Maver, najwybitniejszy włoski polonista, to postać bardzo zasłużona dla rozwoju relacji naukowych i kulturalnych Polski z Włochami w XX wieku. Jest on znany przede wszystkim jako autor licznych opracowań, wykładowca, kierownik katedry języka i literatury polskiej na Uniwersytecie Rzymskim, a także współpracownik polskich instytucji naukowych i kulturalnych we Włoszech i w Polsce. Tej jego działalności dotyczy niniejszy artykuł. Największą zasługę w pozyskaniu Mavera dla kultury i nauki polskiej miał jego długoletni przyjaciel, wybitny historyk literatury Roman Pollak. W artykule jest więc także mowa o ich osobistych kontaktach i współpracy, o więzi trwającej aż do końca życia.
EN
Giovanni Maver, the most outstanding Italian researcher in Polish Studies, is a meritorious figure for the development of the 20th century Polish scientific and cultural relations with Italy. He is known first and foremost as the author of numerous studies, as a scholar, Head of the Chair for Polish Language and Literature, the University of Rome, and also as a collaborator with many Polish academic and cultural institutions in Italy and in Poland. This collaboration is made the subject of the present paper. Roman Pollak, an illustrious literary historian and Maver’s long-time friend, proved to have had greatest contribution in acquiring him for the Polish Studies. The article also touches their private contacts, cooperation, and bonds that lasted until the end of Maver’s life.
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EN
In his book on Stanisław Pigoń, the author outlines the legend of an eminent humanist, literary historian, memoirist, editor, teacher and tutor of many generations of scholars of Polish literature. The narrative is based on his own recollections (as his student) and on extensive correspondence between the professor and Ignacy Chrzanowski, Roman Pollak, Julian Krzyżanowski, Tadeusz Mikulski, Czesław Zgorzelski, Maria Danilewiczowa, and Bishop Ignacy Świrski. This correspondence allows us to take a closer look at the complex problems that the emerging academic milieu of scholars of Polish studies was facing in the difficult postwar times. The volume concludes with a recently uncovered source material – letters of Professor Pigoń to Bishop Świrski – which reveals the secrets of his technique as a literary analyst of Part II of Dziady [Forefathers’ Eve] by Adam Mickiewicz.
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