Results 1 to 10 of about 992 (170)

Polish Theatre in the Time of War (1939–1945). Fight—Will to Survive—Losses—Legacy

open access: yesTematy I Konteksty, 2020
During World War II Polish theatre people took an active part in the fight with both Germany and the Soviet Union. Several of them fought with a weapon inhand as officers and soldiers of Polish armies in the September 1939 campaign, later as combatants of the Home Army (AK), and also within Polish armed forces fighting abroad.
Kazimierz Braun   +2 more
exaly   +4 more sources

Przekład literacki na język polski podczas II wojny światowej – rekonesans [PDF]

open access: yesPrzekładaniec, 2023
Literary Translation during World War 2 – A Reconnaissance On the basis of studies by literary historians (especially the monumental Polish Literature and Theatre in the Years of World War II) and ...
Marzena Chrobak
doaj   +3 more sources

Polish Literature of the Holocaust. The First Instalment: 1939-1968

open access: yesPoznańskie Studia Polonistyczne. Seria Literacka, 2015
The text is a critical attempt discussing the compendium Literatura polska wobec Zagłady, (“Polish Literature in the Face of the Holocaust”) edited and published by three prominent scholarly experts on the subject: Sławomir Buryła, Dorota Krawczyńska and
Katarzyna Kuczyńska-Koschany
doaj   +3 more sources

Wojna i zagłada: Odbicie doświadczeń z lat 1939–1945 w przedstawieniach i pisarstwie Erwina Axera

open access: yesPamiętnik Teatralny, 2019
The essay is an attempt to recreate the experiences of the director Erwin Axer (1917-2012), who staged productions not only on Polish- but also German-language stages during the war of 1939-1945.
Rafał Węgrzyniak
doaj   +2 more sources

Przygody z cenzurą polskiej uchodźczej społeczności na Węgrzech (1939–1945)

open access: yesKlio, 2011
Censorship games among the Polish émigré community in Hungary in the years 1939–1945 (Summary) Civilian and military émigrés of the wartime period who had come to Hungarywhen the Polish-Hungarian border had been temporarily open (17–28 Sept.
Krzysztof Woźniakowski
doaj   +3 more sources

Children's right to play in times of war. [PDF]

open access: yesBioethics
Abstract This paper discusses children's right to play and its bioethical importance for children affected by war. Against the background of the current military conflicts, it analyses physical, psychological, and institutional factors that limit children's right to play in a situation involving armed conflict.
Glos A.
europepmc   +2 more sources

Blue days: A mid‐20th century war memorial swimscape and the persistence of memory

open access: yesNew Zealand Geographer, Volume 78, Issue 3, Page 186-199, December 2022., 2022
Abstract War memorials were intended to console the living, honour the dead and remind future generations of duty and sacrifice. In living memorials, the combination of remembrance with celebrating life introduces a tension between the sacred and the profane, affecting the memory work of the memorial. Here, the persistence of memory in living memorials
Gretel Boswijk
wiley   +1 more source

Wincenty Lutosławski i Juliusz Osterwa: Dzieje kontaktów

open access: yesPamiętnik Teatralny, 2020
Based on epistolary material and diaries, the article attempts a reconstruction of the history of Juliusz Osterwa’s (1885–1947) friendship with the famous philosopher Wincenty Lutosławski (1863–1954).
Dorota Jarząbek-Wasyl
doaj   +1 more source

The Social Backgrounds of Nazi Leaders: A Statistical Analysis of Political Elites in Weimar Germany, 1918–1933

open access: yesJournal of Historical Sociology, Volume 35, Issue 2, Page 222-249, June 2022., 2022
Abstract This article compares the social backgrounds of Nazi leaders and representatives of democratic parties in the Weimar Republic. It does not advance any overarching new narrative on Nazism’s social origins, but rather aims to present a nuanced statistical picture of Weimar’s political elites.
Simon Unger‐Alvi
wiley   +1 more source

POLEN ALS NEGATIVFOLIE FÜR SELBSTENTWÜRFE IN DER DEUTSCHSPRACHIGEN GEGENWARTSLITERATUR

open access: yesGerman Life and Letters, Volume 74, Issue 2, Page 263-284, April 2021., 2021
ABSTRACT This article demonstrates that in some contemporary German‐language novels Polish motifs serve as a foil for the negative projection of cultural self‐images. The image of Poles is stereotypical because it contains a high degree of generalisation and embodies world views – such as nationalism, anti‐Semitism, anti‐Romanyism, fundamentalism ...
Marion Brandt
wiley   +1 more source

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