Information about a product
Edition: | 1 |
Place and year of publication: | Warszawa 2024 |
Publication language: | polski , angielski , białoruski , ukraiński |
ISBN/ISSN: | 2544-3143 |
Number of page: | 260 |
Method of publication: | PDF |
Publication type: | Praca naukowa , Open access |
The issue contains papers devoted to important problems of Central and Eastern Europe by esteemed Polish and international historians, cultural, literary and linguistic scholars.
The volume opens with an article by Jerzy Grzybowski, who describes the attitude of the Orthodox Christian clergy and faithful of the Hrodna and Vilnius regions towards the policy of the Polish authorities on the eve of the outbreak of the Second World War. Piotr Sawicki attempts to answer the question of the role of the Orthodox Church in shaping the national identity of the Belarusians in the Hrodna region after the end of the First World War. Maxim Karaliou analyses how the Bolsheviks used the school question in the process of creating and liquidating Polish village councils, while Ihar Bortnik shows the spread of republican ideas and concepts in the political thought of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. Katarzyna Duda's text attempts to identify new thematic and genre trends in Russian literature after the collapse of the Soviet Union. Anna Kościołek examines the phenomenon of the Holy Mount Athos on the basis of Andrey Muravyov's Letters from the East. Elena Yanchuk offers a functional-semantic analysis of the lexeme ‘element’ in the work of Marina Tsvetaeva. Yuri Tamkovich presents Belarusian themes in the works of Florian Czarnyszewicz, while Hanna Sytar and Lidia Baranowska discuss the Ukrainian translation of Stanisław Lem's collection of short stories Fables for Robots. Joanna Getka addresses the issue of decolonisation and deimperialisation of Central and Eastern Europe, drawing attention to the need to study the imperial influence of Russia on the Slavic peoples. Iwona Krycka-Michnowska analyses the correspondence of Ivan Shmelyov in order to present the Russian writer's attitude to the Second World War and Nazism, while Paweł Sekuła focuses his attention on the loss of cultural heritage of the Poleshuks in the areas contaminated after the Chernobyl disaster in the context of Stalinist repression and the Holodomor. Marta Brzezińska-Pająk, in her turn, takes a closer look at the reception of film fairy tales from the East German DEFA Studio in the Polish press. The issue closes with review articles by Grzegorz Gąsior and Beata Kubok.
The publication is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Poland license (CC BY 3.0 PL) (full license available at: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/legalcode).
Keywords: Orthodox Christanity, Hrodna region, Vilnius region, Belorusians, Grand Duchy of Lithuania, Russian literature, Andrew Muravyov, Marina Tsvetaeva, Florian Czarnyszewicz, Stanisław Lem, Russia, Holodomor, Chernobyl, Poleshuks
The volume opens with an article by Jerzy Grzybowski, who describes the attitude of the Orthodox Christian clergy and faithful of the Hrodna and Vilnius regions towards the policy of the Polish authorities on the eve of the outbreak of the Second World War. Piotr Sawicki attempts to answer the question of the role of the Orthodox Church in shaping the national identity of the Belarusians in the Hrodna region after the end of the First World War. Maxim Karaliou analyses how the Bolsheviks used the school question in the process of creating and liquidating Polish village councils, while Ihar Bortnik shows the spread of republican ideas and concepts in the political thought of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. Katarzyna Duda's text attempts to identify new thematic and genre trends in Russian literature after the collapse of the Soviet Union. Anna Kościołek examines the phenomenon of the Holy Mount Athos on the basis of Andrey Muravyov's Letters from the East. Elena Yanchuk offers a functional-semantic analysis of the lexeme ‘element’ in the work of Marina Tsvetaeva. Yuri Tamkovich presents Belarusian themes in the works of Florian Czarnyszewicz, while Hanna Sytar and Lidia Baranowska discuss the Ukrainian translation of Stanisław Lem's collection of short stories Fables for Robots. Joanna Getka addresses the issue of decolonisation and deimperialisation of Central and Eastern Europe, drawing attention to the need to study the imperial influence of Russia on the Slavic peoples. Iwona Krycka-Michnowska analyses the correspondence of Ivan Shmelyov in order to present the Russian writer's attitude to the Second World War and Nazism, while Paweł Sekuła focuses his attention on the loss of cultural heritage of the Poleshuks in the areas contaminated after the Chernobyl disaster in the context of Stalinist repression and the Holodomor. Marta Brzezińska-Pająk, in her turn, takes a closer look at the reception of film fairy tales from the East German DEFA Studio in the Polish press. The issue closes with review articles by Grzegorz Gąsior and Beata Kubok.
The publication is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Poland license (CC BY 3.0 PL) (full license available at: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/legalcode).
Keywords: Orthodox Christanity, Hrodna region, Vilnius region, Belorusians, Grand Duchy of Lithuania, Russian literature, Andrew Muravyov, Marina Tsvetaeva, Florian Czarnyszewicz, Stanisław Lem, Russia, Holodomor, Chernobyl, Poleshuks
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