|
Polish Cultural Institutes
Ministry of Culture and National Heritage - Ministerstwo Kultury i Dziedzictwa Narodowego Ministry of Foreign Affairs - Ministerstwo Spraw Zagranicznych
Publisher:
Adam Mickiewicz Institute ul. Mokotowska 25 00-560 Warsaw tel. (+48 22) 44 76 100 fax (+48 22) 44 76 152 www.iam.pl ![]() about us
redakcja@culture.pl
order newsletter
|
Born in Warsaw in 1924, Szczypiorski was a journalist and novelist. He died in Warsaw on 16 May 2000. He took part in the Warsaw Uprising and was imprisoned after the fall of the Uprising in Sachsenhausen Concentration Camp. He began working as a journalist in 1946. Since the appearance of his first collection of stories in 1955, he had published more than 20 volumes of novels, newspaper reports and columns, essays and articles. Szczypiorski aligned himself with the democratic opposition in the late 1970s, being interned during Martial Law (1981-1982) and then, in 1989, being elected Senator (holding office until 1991). After resigning from an active political role, he became one of the country's most highly respected columnists, as well as a moral and intellectual authority. Szczypiorski's novels, like his newspaper columns, are predominated by two issues: contemporary Polish-German relations and the moral and political conflicts of recent decades. He has made his mark as a mediator engaged in improving relations among the Polish, German, and Jewish peoples. He won enormous renown for his novel "Początek / The Beginning", (known in Germany and elsewhere as "The Beautiful Mrs. Seidenman"), in which he depicted the different attitudes of Poles, Jews and Germans during the Nazi Occupation. This novel became a great success above all - but not only - in the German-speaking countries (winning the Austrian State Prize for European Literature as well as the Nelly Sachs Prize). Szczypiorski saw literature as "a kind of mission... entrusted to writers by society". Szczypiorski tried to remain true to this calling in both his fiction and his autobiographical writing, like "From the Martial Law Notebook", published in London in 1983. The first edition of "The Beautiful Mrs. Seidenman", which came out in Paris in 1986, was an immediate success. It was followed by "Night, Day and Night", a fascinating study of the mechanism of political provocation. Next came the convincing psychological portrait "Self-Portrait with Woman" (1994), and collections of stories including "American Whiskey", which won the German Catholic Art and Culture Award. Polish literary critics paid the most attention to the parable-as-novel "A Mass for Arras" (1971), which recounted authentic fifteenth-century historical events (plague, famine, and the persecution of Jews and heretics). Szczypiorski sat down to write this novel in the autumn of 1968, in response to the dramatic and shameful events of the preceding spring - the anti-Semitic campaign and attacks on intellectuals orchestrated by the communist authorities. The issues concealed "between the lines" were perfectly clear to the first Polish readers, and "A Mass for Arras" was regarded as an important commentary on current events by a writer with moral concerns. Selected Bibliography
Source: www.polska2000.pl, Copyright: Stowarzyszenie Willa Decjusza |
Browsing history
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() RECENTLY ADDED
![]() Museum of Modern Art in New York will host a screening of Bartek Konopka's Oscar nominated documentary "Rabbit à la Berlin" on February 28. On February 22, a play by Dorota Masłowska "Miedzy nami dobrze jest" will premiere at Teater Galeasen in Stockholm. The European Fairy Tale Centre in Pacanów (Świętokrzyskie region) will open on February 24, 2010. Art from the collection of Kraków's Czartoryski Museum will be on display in the Castle in Niepołomice, starting in spring 2010. This is due to renovation work in the Czartoryski Museum scheduled to end in 2012. Niepołomice Castle will host around 1700 works of art, including paintings by Paolo Veneziano, Pieter Brueghel the Younger and Lorenzo Lotto. On February 12, "The Ghost Writer", the newest film by Roman Polański, will officialy screen at the Berlinale Film Festival. A week later, on February 19, the film will premiere in theaters in Poland, Switzerland, and in the U.S. On February 10, 2010 in Rome's Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia, Krystian Zimerman will give a Chopin piano recital marking the Chopin Year celebrations in Italy. The 46th Wrocław Jazz Festival "Jazz nad Odrą" will start on February 28. The festival will last until March 6, 2010. For more info see www.jnofestival.pl. The 7th edition of "Misteria Paschalia" in Kraków will take place on March 29 - April 5, 2010. In honor of the Chopin Anniversary Year, 1st Chopin International Piano Competition in Hartford, Connecticut, will be held from February 20-21, 2010. Tchaikovski Gala with Grzegorz Nowak as conductor - London, Cadogan Hall, February 18, 2010. Krystian Zimerman at Chopin Birthday Concert 1 - London, Royal Festival Hall - Southbank Centre, February 22, 2010. The 8th Kinoteka Polish Film Festiwal in London opens on March 4 and will last untill April 12, 2010.
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |