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The main goal of the paper is to analyze Schulzean transtextual and contextual relations in Polish literature of the 20th and 21st century. Using the theories of Gérard Genette, the author focuses mostly on hypertextual references (such as parody, pastiche, and pamphlet), intertextual references (such as allusion, verbal incrustation, and quotation), paratexts (such as dedication, motto, title, and subtitle), architextual references (such as generic affinity) to the literary and artistic works of Bruno Schulz in fiction, poetry, drama, and picture books. The results of the analysis show that a biographical context of Schulz’s oeuvre was the most frequently invoked by Polish writers. Schulz’s fiction has also been a valuable reservoir of stylistic and compositional patterns for Polish artists.
PL
DOI: 10.19251/sej/2018.7(2)The Second Great Emigration, shaped in a historical context different from the one of the nineteenth century, inherited after the first one the romantic myth of exile. The main goal of the article is to present what Polish writers: Józef Wittlin, Witold Gombrowicz and Czesław Miłosz thought about exile, how they understood the concept of exile and how they defined the problem of artistic communication in the situation of exile and what were their methods for upgrading the romantic context. Keywords: The Great Emigration, The Second Great Emigration, Polish Ro­manticism, Messianism, exile
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