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Zofia Nałkowska

Zofia Nałkowska (, Warsaw, Congress Poland, 10 November 1884 – 17 December 1954, Warsaw) was a Polish prose writer, dramatist, and prolific essayist. She served as the executive member of the prestigious Polish Academy of Literature (1933–1939) during the interwar period.

Contents

  • 1 Biography
  • 2 Literary output
  • 3 Tribute
  • 4 Works
    • 4.1 Novels
    • 4.2 Short stories
    • 4.3 Stage plays
  • 5 See also
  • 6 References
  • 7 External links

Biography

Nałkowska was born into a family of intellectuals dedicated to issues of social justice, and studied at the clandestine Flying University under the Russian par*ion. Upon Poland's return to independence she became one of the country's most distinguished feminist writers of novels, novellas and stage-plays characterized by socio-realism and psychological depth.

Literary output

Nałkowska's first literary success was the Romans Teresy Hennert (The Romance of Teresa Hennert, 1923) followed by a slew of popular novels. She is best known for her books Granica (Boundary, 1935), the Węzły życia (Bonds of Life, 1948) and Medaliony (Medallions, 1947).

In her writing, Nałkowska boldly tackled difficult and controversial subjects, professing in her 1932 article "Organizacja erotyzmu" (Structure of Eroticism) published in the Wiadomości Literackie magazine:– the premier literary periodical in Poland at the time – that:

...a rational, nay, intellectual approach to eroticism must be encouraged and strengthened, to allow for a consideration of eroticism in conjunction with other aspects of the life of the human community. Eroticism is not a private matter of the individual. It has its ramifications within all domains of human life and it is not possible to separate it from them by way of contemptuous disparagement in the name of morality, discretion, or yet by a demotion on the hierarchy of subjects worthy of intellectual attention: it cannot be isolated by prudery or relegated to science for its purely biological dimension."

Graves of Julian Tuwim (left) and Zofia Nałkowska (right) adorned with dark bronze bust, in Powązki Cemetery, Warsaw

Tribute

On November 10, 2014, Google celebrated her 130th birthday with a Google Doodle.

Works

Novels

  • Kobiety (Women, 1906), translated by Michael Henry Dziewicki, 1920
  • Książę (The Prince, 1907)
  • Rówieśnice (Contemporaries, 1909)
  • Narcyza (1911)
  • Noc podniebna (Heavenly night, novella, 1911)
  • Węże i róże (Snakes and roses, 1914)
  • Hrabia Emil (Count Emil, 1920)
  • Na torfowiskach (At the bogs, 1922)
  • Romans Teresy Hennert (The Romance of Teresa Hennert, 1923), translated by Megan Thomas and Ewa Malachowska-Pasek, 2014
  • Dom nad łąkami (House upon the meadows, autobiography, 1925)
  • Choucas (1927), translated by Ursula Phillips, 2014 (winner of the Found in Translation Award 2015)
  • Niedobra miłość (Bad love, 1928)
  • Granica (Boundary, 1935), translated by Ursula Phillips, 2016
  • Niecierpliwi (Anxious,1938)
  • Węzły życia (Living ties, 1948)
  • Mój ojciec (My father, 1953)

Short stories

  • Medaliony (Medallions, 1946), a collection of 8 short stories about German World War II atrocities in occupied Poland, translated by Diana Kuprel, 2000

Stage plays

  • Dom kobiet (1930)
  • Dzień jego powrotu (1931) (The Day of his Return, translated by Marja Slomczanka, performed 1931)
  • Renata Słuczańska (1935)

See also

  • Feminism in Poland
  • List of feminist literature

References

    • Mortkowicz-Olczakowa, Hanna (1961). Bunt wspomnień. Państwowy Instytut Wydawniczy.
    • This article may be expanded with text translated from the corresponding article in Polish Wikipedia.

    External links

    • Media related to Zofia Nałkowska at Wikimedia Commons
    • Works by Zofia Nałkowska at Project Gutenberg
    • Works by or about Zofia Nałkowska at Internet Archive

    Zofia Nałkowska Is A Member Of