Results 1 to 10 of about 2,217 (179)
Czesław Miłosz’s Translations as “Re-Visioning” of the Psalms: Poetry and Eschatology
This article focuses on Czesław Miłosz’s translations of parts of the Psalms and their influence on his poetry. For Miłosz, poetry had an eschatological dimension, a view deeply influenced by his distant cousin, the Lithuanian poet and playwright Oscar ...
Ewa Chrusciel
doaj +1 more source
Czesław Miłosz’s “Theological treatise” in the context of Fyodor Dostoevsky’s religious worldview
The article investigates a religious and philosophical dialogue of Miłosz and Dostoevsky. The antinomic content of Miłosz's poem “Theological Treatise” is analyzed in the context of Dostoevsky's Christocentric worldview, as well as religious and ...
Leonid A. Maltsev
doaj +1 more source
This article rethinks critically a landmark work of the twentieth century—The Captive Mind, by Nobel laureate Czesław Miłosz. Published in 1953, the book sought to understand human subjectivity, or, as it put it, “how the human mind functions,” in Cold ...
Milen Jissov
doaj +1 more source
CZESŁAW MIŁOSZ’S “PIESEK PRZYDROŻNY” AND “ABECADŁO” AS THE PICTURE OF THE 20th CENTURY [PDF]
The article aims to study the poetics evolution of a great Polish poet and prose writer, Nobel prize winner Czesław Miłosz towards a fundamentally new comprehensive literary form: from “Piesek Przydrożny” (“Roadside Dog” 1997) to “Abecadło” (“Milosz`s ...
Luiza K. Oliander
doaj +1 more source
Czeslaw Milosz against the Communist System - Contribution to the Discussion
On the base of the scientific literature arose the disputes related to the question of whether literary works of Czesław Miłosz - exemplified by novel Zniewolony umysł - was a symptom of anti-communist or anti-totalitarian beliefs of Miłosz.
Mikołaj Tarkowski
doaj +1 more source
Viktorija Ušinskienė Milosz and Russia The article presents the writer’s views on Russia found in his key pieces, such as Russia. A trans-oceanic point of view, Family Europe and some others.
Виктория Ушинскене
doaj +1 more source
There Will be no Strength. (In)coherence and (Im)potency
In 1949, Czesław Miłosz spent a few days in Wroclaw, which was still in ruins after WWII. Six years later Miłosz wrote an interesting poem entitled Pokój (The Room) and created a symbolical vision of the city.
Mateusz Antoniuk
doaj +1 more source
Miłosz’s Response to Brzozowski. On Człowiek wśród skorpionów... [Man among Scorpions...] and More
The aim of the author of the article is to investigate Miłosz’s relation to Stanisław Brzozowski. Proceeding from the interpretation of Miłosz’s Człowiek wśród skorpionów..., and diagnosing his personal motivation for turning to Brzozowski’s works in ...
Sylwia Panek
doaj +1 more source
Miłosz’s Sojourns in Parallel (Translation) Universes
The well known interpretation of Miłosz’s work as an attempt to capture fulness, has been most fully formulated by Jan Błoński’s “Miłosz jak świat” [“Miłosz like a World”]. The author of the article provides a more detailed version of the interpretation,
Ewa Rajewska
doaj +1 more source
Double identity in Czesław Miłosz’s The Captive Mind
In The Captive Mind, Czesław Miłosz describes two mechanisms of intellectual enslavement, namely Murti-Bing pills and Ketman. Although these mechanisms are similar, in reality they function somewhat differently.
Wojciech Rechlewicz
doaj +1 more source

