Prix bas
CHF56.80
Habituellement expédié sous 2 à 4 jours ouvrés.
Curiosity about the fate of postmodernism combined with interest in the fate of novels about the Holocaust as a chance to explain the common failures of postmodernism and the complicated history of postmodern post-Holocaust prose
Marta Tomczok presents all Polish postmodern novels about the Holocaust, starting with The First Splendor by Leopold Buczkowski and ending with The Suspected Dybbuk by Andrzej Bart. She also presents their rich relationships with selected foreign-language prose, which intensified especially at the turn of the 20th and 21st centuries. The culmination of the entire trend is a discussion around two novels: Tworki by Marek Bieczyk and Fly Trap Factory by Andrzej Bart, which reveals the aestheticizing and post-memorial profile of Polish postmodernization and its advantage over the historiosophical trend. This monograph is not only the first such collection of post-Holocaust postmodern novels, but also the first comprehensive study of postmodernism in the literature about the Holocaust, which, thanks to comparative analysis, tries to analyze and explain the circumstances of the appearance and later disappearance of this trend from cultural landscape of the world and Poland.
Auteur
Prof Dr Marta Tomczok, an environmental literary historian, works in the humanistic department at the University of Silesia in Katowice, Poland. She especially concentrates on carbocene and carbon/decarbonization influence of culture. Her studies are connected with visual arts, contemporary literature, and material and nonmaterial postindustrial heritage. She has published books devoted to Polish-Jewish writers (including Leo Lipski and Irit Amiel). Recently, together with Piotr Mitzner, she prepared an edition of Krystiana Robb-Narbutt's literary works.