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

Results found: 9

first rewind previous Page / 1 next fast forward last

Search results

Search:
in the keywords:  Stanisław Pigoń
help Sort By:

help Limit search:
first rewind previous Page / 1 next fast forward last
Pamiętnik Literacki
|
2017
|
vol. 108
|
issue 1
199-205
PL
Tekst omawia książkę Czesława Kłaka poświęconą Stanisławowi Pigoniowi, historykowi literatury i edytorowi. Książka, będąca podsumowaniem wieloletnich prac autora nad życiem i spuścizną naukowca, zawiera wiele nowych i cennych informacji na temat nie tylko samego profesora, ale i czasów, w jakich żył. Autor prezentuje korespondentów Pigonia – osoby związane ze środowiskiem naukowym w XX wieku oraz ich wzajemne relacje.
EN
The text reviews Czesław Kłak’s book on Stanisław Pigoń, a literary historian and an editor. The book, an effect of many years’ studies on the scholar’s life and output, includes various new and valuable pieces of information not only about the professor himself, but also about the times he lived in. The author presents Pigoń’s correspondents – figures connected with the 20th c. scholarly circles and their mutual relations.
Pamiętnik Literacki
|
2016
|
vol. 107
|
issue 4
234-242
PL
Recenzja omawia zbiór 16 szkiców Juliana Maślanki, w których autor, wybitny znawca literatury i kultury, komparatysta, folklorysta i edytor, zajął się ważnymi tematami, jak paryskie wykłady Mickiewicza o literaturach słowiańskich, folklor w poglądach romantyków, także sylwetką Juliana Klaczki jako pisarza, krytyka, polityka i patrioty polskiego. Skupiają na sobie uwagę również studia poświęcone edytorstwu: o tekście „Beniowskiego”, o problemach edytorskich w dramatach Norwida oraz o edytorstwie Stanisława Pigonia.
EN
The review discusses a collection of Julian Maślanka’s 16 sketches whose author, an outstanding literature and culture scholar, comparatist, folklorist and editor, takes up such significant topics as Mickiewicz’s Paris lectures on Slavonic literatures, folklore in the views of Romantics, as well as the figure of Julian Klaczko – a writer, politician and Polish patriot. The focus of the papers is also on studies devoted to editing: on the text of “Beniowski”, on editorial problems in Norwid’s dramas, and Stanisław Pigoń’s editorial issues.
EN
The article describes in detail the book by Czesław Kłak, “Pigoń” (the Rzeszów University Publishing House, Rzeszów 2013, 612 pp.). The book is a rarity in the Polish humanities because it presents not only the profile of Stanisław Pigoń (1885-1968), one of the most renowned historians of Polish literature, but also a history of Polish literature studies over the course of about 60 years of the 20th century. The main part of the book is based on the correspondence between Pigoń and other scholars and eminent personages of the time: Roman Pollak, Julian Krzyżanowski, Tadeusz Mikulski, Czesław Zgorzelski, Maria Danilewiczowa as well as Bishops Ignacy Świrski and Czesław Falkowski. The book also contains a discussion of Pigoń’s diaries and memoirs, and the Appendix with two polemic articles in defence of Pigoń against imaginary charges of anti-Semitism.
EN
The article concerns Stanisław Pigoń's research on the "living word" of Adam Mickiewicz. The subject of the reflection are two volumes of Mickiewicz's "Complete Works", published in 1933, including "Speeches" and "Conversations" of the poet. First of all, the method of scientific procedure used by Pigoń was mainly interpreted. This issue was placed in the context of his concept of the history of literature and of the twentieth-century research on the oral aspects of literature. Both volumes published by the scholar deserve to be recalled and appreciated, as they are original Polish contribution to this area of scientific reflection. They also allow us to look at the culture of the Romantic era through the prism of forms and functions of orality and enrich our knowledge about personality of Mickiewicz.
PL
Artykuł dotyczy badań Stanisława Pigonia nad "żywym słowem" Adama Mickiewicza. Przedmiotem refleksji są dwa tomy "Dzieł wszystkich" Mickiewicza, opublikowane w roku 1933, zawierajace "Przemówienia" i "Rozmowy" poety. Celem interpretacji jest przede wszystkim opis metody naukowej zastosowanej przez Pigonia. Zagadnienie to zostało usytuowane w kontekście jego koncepcji literatury i dwudziestowiecznych badań nad oralnymi aspektami literatury. Oba tomy opubliowane przez uczonego zasługują na przypomnienie i uznanie, są bowiem oryginalnym polskim wkładem w tę dziedzinę naukowej refleksji. Pozwalają też spojrzeć na kulturę epoki romantyzmu przez pryzmat form i funkcji oralności i wzbogacają naszą wiedzą o osobowości Mickiewicza. 
EN
The article is dedicated to an unknown letters of Kazimierz Wyka and Stanisław Pigoń to the priest Jan Wiśniewski, which were found in the Diocesan Library in Sandomierz. Both resarchers wishd to gain access to the works of Adam Mickiewicz and Cyprian Kamil Norwid. The main contents of these letters are requests for a possibility of reading authographs of these works. Jan Wiśniewski was a known and worthy collector of Polish memorabilia. Stanisław Pigoń was reasercher and publisher of the works of Adam Mickiewicz. Kazimierz Wyka, as a historian of Polish literature, studied works of Cyprian Kamil Norwid.
8
43%
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.
EN
The article presents hitherto unknown letters in Polish by Edward Możejko, a Canadian scholar of Polish origin, to the Bulgarian scholar Petar Dinekov. These letters reveal the professional contacts between the two men in the 1960s when the young Możejko defends his dissertation on a topic in the field of Bulgarian studies at the Jagiellonian University and Dinekov is one of his reviewers. The letters are explored in the context of other documentary sources. The present study is part of a larger project on epistolary heritage testifying the active professional contacts of Dinekov with the Polish cultural intelligentsia.
first rewind previous Page / 1 next fast forward last
JavaScript is turned off in your web browser. Turn it on to take full advantage of this site, then refresh the page.