Józef Ignacy Kraszewski[a] (28 July 1812 – 19 March 1887) was a Polish novelist, journalist, historian, publisher, painter, and musician.
Józef Ignacy Kraszewski | |
---|---|
Born | Warsaw, Duchy of Warsaw | 28 July 1812
Died | 19 March 1887 Geneva, Switzerland | (aged 74)
Pen name | Bogdan Bolesławita, B.B., Kaniowa, Dr Omega, Kleofas Fakund Pasternak, and JIK |
Occupation | Novelist, journalist and historian |
Language | Polish |
Genres | Primarily novel, but also drama, poetry and non-fiction |
Years active | 1830–1887 |
Notable works | Chata za Wsią (The Cottage Beyond the Village, 1854) Hrabina Cosel (The Countess Cosel, 1874) Stara Baśń (An Ancient Tale, 1876) |
Spouse |
Zofia Woroniczówna
(m. 1838–1887) |
Children | 4 |
Signature | |
Born in Warsaw into a noble family, he spent much of his youth with his maternal grandparents in Romanów and completed his education in various cities, including Vilna. Kraszewski's literary career began in 1830, and he became an influential writer and journalist. Despite facing political challenges and imprisonment for his involvement in the November Uprising, he continued to support Polish independence. He spent his later years in Dresden, where he remained active in political and literary circles until his death in Geneva.
Kraszewski wrote over 200 novels and several hundred novellas, short stories, and art reviews, making him the most prolific writer in the history of Polish literature and one of the most prolific in world literature. He is best known for his historical novels, including an epic series on the history of Poland, comprising twenty-nine historical novels; and for novels about peasant life, critical of feudalism and serfdom. His works have been described as liberal-democratic but not radical, and as proto-Positivist.
Life
editEarly life
editJózef Ignacy Kraszewski was born in Warsaw on 28 July 1812 to a family of Polish nobility (szlachta) bearing the Jastrzębiec coat of arms.[1][2][3]: 221 He was the oldest son of Jan Kraszewski and Zofia and had four siblings, including artist Lucjan Kraszewski and writer Kajetan Kraszewski.[1][4]: 145 [3]: 222
Józef Ignacy Kraszewski spent much of his youth in the house of his maternal grandparents in Romanów. His grandmother influenced him during this time and taught him French, history, and drawing.[3]: 222
From 1822 to 1826 he attended school in Biała Podlaska (the Biała Academy ); from 1826 to 1827, a gymnasium (secondary school) in Lublin; and in 1829, in Svislach. He graduated from the Svislach gymnasium after passing his matura examinations there.[1][3]: 222 [5]: 259
Beginning in 1829, he studied medicine at University of Vilnius; soon after, he transferred to the Faculty of Literature and Fine Arts.[1][3]: 222 1830 marked his literary debut with several short stories ("Biografia sokalskiego organisty ", "Kotlety. Powieść prawdziwa", and "Wieczór, czyli przypadki peruki"), followed a year later with his first novel (Pan Walery ).[6][2][3]: 222 [5]: 259
While at university, he participated in a Polish-independence movement in support of the November 1830 Uprising. On 3 December 1830 he was arrested and was imprisoned until 19 March 1832.[1][3]: 222 Thanks to his family's intervention, he avoided being conscripted into the Imperial Russian Army. After release, until July 1833 he lived in Vilna under police supervision. He was then allowed to go to his father's estate in Doŭhaje (Dołhe), near Pruzhany in Volhynia.[1][3]: 222 [5]: 259 He also spent time, at Horodziec , in the library of Antoni Urbanowski, whom he would visit often in future.[3]: 222
Landowner
editIn 1836 Kraszewski was nominated to join the faculty of Kiev University as professor of Polish language, but the nomination was vetoed by the Russian government, which considered him politically suspect.[1][3]: 222 [5]: 259 In 1851 he was offered a professorship at the Jagiellonian University in Kraków, but this was again vetoed by the authorities, this time both Russian and Austrian.[1][3]: 223
In 1837 Kraszewski leased a farm in the village of Omelno .[1][3]: 222 Eventually he also became a landowner in several nearby villages: Gródek , 1840–1848; Hubin , from 1848; and Kisiele , from 1854. As time passed, he steadily lost interest in farming and focused on his literary work.[1][3]: 222 By the 1840s he was becoming well known as a prolific writer, and his works appeared in numerous Polish-language magazines and newspapers.[1][3]: 223 [5]: 259
On 10 June 1838 he married Zofia Woroniczówna, niece of Jan Paweł Woronicz , former Bishop of Warsaw. They had four children: Konstancja, born 1839; Jan, born 1841; Franciszek, born 1843; and Augusta, born 1849.[1][3]: 222, 227
Kraszewski travelled extensively, visiting and staying for extended periods in Warsaw (1846, 1851, 1855, 1859); in 1860 he bought a Warsaw townhouse, now known as the Kraszewski House ), in Kiev (on numerous occasions), and in Odesa (1843, 1852).[3]: 222 [3]: 223 [5]: 259 Through the 1850s and 1860s he periodically travelled through Western Europe (visiting Italy, German and France, among other places), and published travel accounts from them: Kartki z podróży 1858–1864 (Letters from Travels, 1858–1864; 1866).[7] His most significant trip occurred in 1858, when he travelled to Western Europe, visiting Austria, Belgium, Italy, Germany, and France. In Italy he was received by Pope Pius IX, who admonished him for his alleged liberal bias. This, however, likely heightened Kraszewski's critical view of the Holy State. His travels in the West also made him impatient with the feudal relations – particularly, serfdom – in eastern Poland.[3]: 223 [7]
In 1853, in an effort to better support and educate his four children, Kraszewski moved to his wife Zofia's inherited family estate near Zhytomyr, where he became, from 1856, school superintendent and director of the local theatre (Teatr Szlachty Wołyńskiej, or Zhytomyr Theater).[8]: 256 [3]: 222 [5]: 259 At first popular with the local nobility, he became less so on account of his support for the abolition of serfdom.[3]: 222 [5]: 259
As a result, in February 1860 he moved to Warsaw to take up the editorship of Gazeta Polska , a position he had accepted the previous year,[1][3]: 223 leaving his family in Zhytomyr. He grew increasingly distant from his wife, whom he would last see in 1863.[3]: 227
In 1858 he became a corresponding member of the Kraków Scientific Society .[3]: 223
In 1861 he became a member of the Delegacja Miejska , a patriotic civic organization based in Warsaw.[9] Kraszewski's political stance was fairly moderate; while supporting the cause of Polish independence, he saw armed struggle as premature, and initially supported conciliatory negotiations with Russian authorities represented by Aleksander Wielopolski.[3]: 224 [5]: 259 His moderate centrist attitude had alienated him from many; Kraszewski has described himself as "too red for the whites, too white for the reds".[3]: 225–226 [5]: 259 [10]: 160
As tensions grew, Kraszewski found it increasingly difficult to remain moderate, and started to increasingly criticize the Russian authorities. For his criticism of censorship in December 1862, the Russian authorities forced him to resign his editorship of Gazeta Polska and ordered him to leave Congress Poland. Following the eruption of the January 1863 Uprising, on 3 February 1863 he fled Warsaw.[1][3]: 224 [5]: 259
Saxony
editLeaving the Russian partition, Kraszewski arrived in Dresden. His wife and children remained in the Russian partition, and he would support them financially for many years.[2][3]: 225 After his Russian passport expired, the Saxon authorities, in cooperation with the Russian embassy, attempted to declare him an illegal immigrant; to counter that, Kraszewski used a false French passport until he received Austrian citizenship in 1866.[3]: 225 [5]: 260
In Dresden he connected with other Polish refugees and supported the January 1863 Uprising and the cause of Polish independence in the European press (often pseudonymously, to avoid trouble with the Saxon government).[11][5]: 260 From 1870 to mid-1871, with his own funds, he published a weekly, Tydzień Polityczny, Naukowy, Literacki i Artystyczny, but eventually gave up on the endeavour due to financial difficulties.[1][3]: 225
From 1865 he travelled extensively in the Austrian partition of Poland, visiting Lviv, Kraków, Krynica, and Zakopane, and also visited Poznań in the Prussian Partition.[3]: 225 He was again considered but rejected for professorships of Polish literature, at the SGH Warsaw School of Economics in 1865 and the Jagiellonian University in 1867.[3]: 225
Beginning in the 1870s, he increasingly suffered from health problems (kidney stone disease, asthma and bronchitis; some medical treatments for those included treatments with what would be today described as narcotics).[3]: 225
His application for Saxon citizenship was approved in 1869 and for a time he ran a printing press in Dresden.[3]: 225 In 1871 he briefly campaigned to be elected a deputy from the Poznań region, but withdrew facing a strong opposition from the Polish conservative-clergy circles that he opposed in his newspaper polemics. In politics he kept representing the weak moderate faction.[3]: 225–226
Despite his health problems, he kept travelling, often invited to give lectures and attending academic conferences.[5]: 260 In 1872 he became the member of the Academy of Learning.[11] In 1873 he decided to become a full-time writer, and this year alone he wrote ten novels and two academic texts.[2] He acquired a villa in Dresden.[3]: 225 In 1879 he celebrated the 50th anniversary of his literary career in several cities in Europe, including in Kraków in a large event (on 2 to 7 October) during which he received the honorary degrees from Jagiellonian University as well as the Lviv University.[1][2][3]: 225 In 1880 he attempted to travel to Warsaw but was denied permission by the Russian authorities.[1][3]: 225 In 1882 he helped to found the educational institution Macierz Polska in Lwów.[11][3]: 225
He lived in Saxony until 1883, when he was arrested, while visiting Berlin, and accused of working for the French secret service, for whom he indeed worked since c. 1870.[1][3]: 225 After being tried by the Reichsgericht in Leipzig in May 1884, he was sentenced to three and a half years imprisonment in Magdeburg (in the Magdeburg fortress ).[1][2] The case was seen as political, since Kraszewski was a vocal critic of German chancellor Otto von Bismarck, and Bismarck saw this as an opportunity to deal a blow to the Polish faction in Germany, even personally advocating a death sentence for the writer.[2][3]: 226 While in prison, he was given preferential treatment - he was allowed to write, paint, and receive guests. Due to poor health, high profile of the case covered in European press, and requests from clemency from Kraszewski's influential friends (such as prince Antoni Wilhelm Radziwiłł and king of Italy, Umberto I), he was released on bail after a year and a half in 1885.[1][2][3]: 226–227
Rather than remain in Magdeburg, as his bail required, he moved to a new home in Sanremo, Italy; where he hoped to recuperate in peace. This, however, violated the terms of his release and led to the German government issuance of an arrest warrant for him.[1][2] While in Sanremo, he witnessed the 1887 Liguria earthquake.[3]: 227 When the possibility of extradition arose, he decided to move to Lausanne, Switzerland, where he bought a new house; however, he never arrived in it - he died in Hôtel de la Paix in Geneva, from pneumonia, on 19 March 1887,[1][2][3]: 227 four days after his arrival there.[5]: 260 His remains were transferred to Kraków, and after a large funeral on 18 April 1887 he was interred at "Skałka" Basilica, in the Crypt of Merit .[1][3]: 227 [5]: 260
Reception
editKraszewski is credited with over 600[1] or 700[8]: 256 works, including 223 novels, 20 dramas and many short stories.[1][3]: 227 [5]: 260–261 He is considered one of the most prolific Polish writers,[1] and arguably one of the most prolific writers worldwide,[8]: 256 [12]: 17 and one of the first Polish writers whose works were widely translated (several dozens of his works were translated into Russian, Czech, German, and French; about a dozen, to Serbo-Croatian; several, to English, Italian, Lithuanian and to various Scandinavian languages).[1][5]: 261 His novels, which were very popular even into the mid-20th[8]: 256–257 and early 21st century,[5]: 260 encouraged Polish literacy.[8]: 256–257 Many of his works were compulsory readings in Polish schools. As of 2010, he was the most prolific writer in Poland by the number of published editions of his works (almost 900 editions published in the years 1944–2010, with the most popular title being his Stara Baśń - An Ancient Tale, which received 78 editions).[13]: 41, 43, 89
Czesław Miłosz, 1980 Nobel laureate Polish poet, in his The History of Polish Literature (1969) described him as best exemplifying the genre of historical novel in Polish literature.[8]: 256 Miłosz further wrote that in Polish literature, Kraszewski founded the "new genre of fiction based upon documents and other sources where the faithful presentation of a given epoch is the main goal, and plot and characters are used simply as a bait for the readers". In popularizing Polish history, Miłosz drew a parallel between Kraszewski and Poland's foremost painter, Jan Matejko, whose works likewise focused on the history of Poland.[8]: 257
Works
editNovels
editKraszewski is best known for his novels. Those could be divided into four major subgenres: historical novels, novels about the life of peasants, novels about the life of nobility and novels about artists.[3]: 223 Out of those four, critics most often mention his historical and peasant novels.[3]: 223 [8]: 256–257 [12]: 17 [11]
His historical novels (94 total[3]: 227 ) include the epic series on the history of Poland, comprising twenty-nine historical novels in seventy-nine parts, covering the period of Polish prehistory (chronologically beginning with Stara Baśń, An Ancient Tale, 1876) to Kraszewski's era of partitions of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth (Saskie ostatki - Saxon Remnants, 1890).[8]: 257 [12]: 17 [11][3]: 226 Also significant are the three "Saxon Novels" (the Saxon trilogy ), written between 1873 and 1883 in Dresden.[11][3]: 226 Together, they create a detailed history of the Electorate of Saxony, from 1697 to 1763. Miłosz noted that the best of these are first two, Hrabina Cosel (The Countess Cosel, 1874) and Brühl (1875).[8]: 257
His "peasant" novels, critical of serfdom and feudalism, are also often mentioned among his important contributions. Miłosz called them his most popular works[8]: 257 and Wincenty Danek wrote that they are the works that have popularized his name.[3]: 223 That series includes nine novels, out of which the most important are Historia Sawki (The Story of Sawka, 1842), Ulana (1843), Ostap Bondarczuk (1847), Chata za Wsią (The Cottage Beyond the Village, 1854), Jermoła: obrazki wiejskie (Jermoła: Pictures from a Village, 1857) and Historja kołka w płocie (The Story of a Peg in a Fence, 1860).[8]: 257 [3]: 223–224 Danek also noted, referring to Historia Sawki, that Kraszewski's works were the first time Polish literature discussed the oppression of Ukrainian peasants by the Polish nobility.[3]: 224 Ulana in turn has been praised for its "bold and innovative analysis of the experiences of a peasant woman wronged by her lord".[11]
Danek also praised Kraszewski's novels about the life of nobility, calling them groundbreaking for their criticism of nobility. He cited Latarnia czarnoksięska (Magical Lighthouse, 1843–1844), Interesa familijne (Family Business, 1853), Złote Jabłko (Golden Apple, 1853), and Dwa światy (Two Worlds, 1855) as the most important novels with that theme.[3]: 224
Examples of his works about the life of artists and the place of art in the wider society include Poeta i świat (The Poet and the World, 1839),[14][15] Sfinks (Sphinx, 1842), Pamiętniki nieznajomego (Diaries of the Unknown, 1846), and Powieść bez tytułu (Novel without a Title, 1855). Some of those works are partly autobiographical.[3]: 223
While Danek described the above four subgenres as Kraszewski's major directions, he also noted that Kraszewski, a very prolific writer, wrote novels representing most if not all major contemporary genres: romances, adventures, comedies, satires, memoires and their pastiches, gawędas, crime novels, psychological novels, sensation novels, and others.[3]: 227–228
From the technical perspective, Danek noted that Kraszewski novels introduced elements of common speech to Polish literary language.[3]: 224, 228 With regards to Kraszewski's characters, Danek sees them as having relatively little psychological depth, but memorable due to vivid descriptions and mannerisms, and notes that Kraszewski was best at depicting strong female characters.[3]: 228
Other writings
editAlongside novels, Kraszewski also wrote poetry, collected in Poezje (Poems, two volumes in 1838 and 1843), and Hymny boleści (Hymns of sorrow, 1857), as well as the lengthy poem-trilogy Anafielas (1843–1846). He also penned dramas, most notably the comedies Miód kasztelański (The Castellan's Honey, 1853) and Panie Kochanku (Mr. Lover, 1857). However, as noted by critics, Kraszewski was not particularly gifted in those dimensions.[3]: 224 [16]
In addition to his literary work, he was a contributor to many newspapers, journals and magazines, where he published works of fiction as well as reviews and articles on topics such as art, music and morality, and later, contemporary politics.[3]: 223 [2] Between 1841 and 1851 he published sixty volumes of the literary and scientific journal Athenaeum , printed in Vilna.[8]: 256 [17] From 1836 to 1849 he was a contributor to the Tygodnik Petersburski (St. Petersburg Weekly).[8]: 256 [3]: 223 From 1842 to 1843 he contributed to Pielgrzym .[3]: 223 Before 1859 he was a contributor to the Gazeta Warszawska.[3]: 224 He was the editor of the Gazeta Polska (1859–62, from 1861, renamed to Gazeta Codzienna).[11][3]: 223–224 In the 1860s and 1870s he wrote for, among others, Tygodnik Illustrowany, Kłosy , Bluszcz , Ruch Literacki , Tygodnik Mód i Powieści , Kraj , Biesiada Literacka , Dziennik Poznański, Wiek , and Kurier Warszawski.[3]: 227 [5]: 260
While his works of fiction are the most enduring, his scholarly endeavours, primarily in the fields of history (particularly the history of Lithuania, and art history) and literary criticism, produced not only journal articles but a number of monogaphs (Wilno od początków jego do roku 1750, 1840–42; Litwa, starożytne dzieje, ustway, język, wiara, obyczaje, pieśni, 1848; Litwa starożytna, 1850; Dante, 1869; Polska w czasie trzech rozbiorów, 1873–1875; Krasicki, 1879); collected volumes of his articles (Studia literackie, 1842; Nowe studia literackie, 1843; Gawędy o literaturze i sztuce, 1857); and collections of primary materials (Pamiętniki Stanisława Augusta Poniatowskiego, 1870; Listy Jana Śniadeckiego, 1878; Listy Zygmunta Krasickiego, 1882–83).
He was also an editor, supervising publication of works by Kazimierz Brodziński (Pisma, 1872–1874) and translations of Shakespeare (Dzieła dramatyczne, 1875–1877).[3]: 224, 227–228
Other arts
editWhile Kraszewski is best remembered as a writer, he was also an illustrator (he illustrated many of his works) and a painter (he displayed some of his paintings at local art exhibitions, and some were exhibited at others after his death).[1][3]: 227 He also played piano and composed music (Pastusze piosenki - Shephards songs,1845).[3]: 228
He was also a collector, amassing a substantial collection of Polish drawings and etchings, which he sold in 1869 due to financial difficulties.[3]: 227–228
Themes
editKraszewski's early works describe the lives of ordinary people, and are thus a proto-Positivist critique of romantic traditions that focused on heroic individuals.[6][3]: 222 : 226 [11] Danek attributes his focus on reality to inspirations with classic novelists such as Charles Dickens, Honoré de Balzac and Nikolai Gogol. While his focus on history is similar to that of Walter Scott, Danek argues that it is sufficiently different to be considered not a copy of Scott's style. His early novels also show likely influence of Laurence Sterne, Fryderyk Skarbek, Jean Paul and E. T. A. Hoffmann.[3]: 223, 228
A significant theme in his works was the criticism of feudal relationships, and a number of his novels featured peasant and female heroes.[8]: 257 [12]: 17 [11] His works have been described as leaning liberal-democratic,[11] but not radical.[8]: 257 Danek writes that Kraszewski supported the ideal of egalitarianism.[3]: 228 He often criticized nobility, particularly aristocracy, as unproductive and degenerative, and praised peasantry and the middle class.[3]: 226, 228
His attitude to religion changed over time. He became more religious after marriage, likely because his relatives and friends of that time included several prominent religious figures, such as bishops Jan Paweł Woronicz and Ignacy Hołowiński and priest Stanisław Chołoniewski ). Over time, however, he became opposed to more conservative values aligned with clergy and the church hierarchy (something for which he was criticized by the Pope).[3]: 223, 225–226, 228 [5]: 259
In the realm of politics, he supported the cause of Polish independence, but opposed armed struggle, which in his literary works he depicted as unlikely to succeed. He became more supportive of it in his newspaper polemics after the January Uprising started, effectively accepting it as a fait accompli.[3]: 225–226, 228 Some of his novels and articles have been described as critical of Germany, reflecting a push against the policies of Germanization; this theme was particularly visible in his novels such as Na Wschodzie (In the East, 1866), Dziadunio (Grandpa, 1869), Mogilna (1871) i Nad Spreą (At Sprea, 1874), and many of his historical novels, which covered often antagonistic Polish-German relations (ex. Polish-Teutonic Wars).[3]: 226 [18] Others were critical of Russia; in particular his Rachunki Bolesławity (Bolesławita's accounts,1867) portrayed Russia as a primitive, barbaric country.[5]: 260 [19] He also criticized Russian ideology of panslavism, aiming at unifying all Slavic lands, and supported self-determination for Belorussians and Ukrainians.[18] As one of the major themes of his works was Lithuania, and his works, although written in Polish, are seen as contributing to the Lithuanian National Revival.[8]: 256
Remembrance
editKraszewski's works were adapted into numerous dramas; Stanisław Moniuszko composed music for the drama version of Anafielas third part, Witolorauda.[3]: 228
The first of his books to be adapted for film was Chata za wsią, adapted into Cyganka Aza (1926).[3]: 228 The second was Hrabina Cosel, resulting in Countess Cosel (1968), directed by Jerzy Antczak, with Jadwiga Barańska in the title role.[20][3]: 228 Twenty years later, in East Germany, the DEFA presented a six-part television series, the Saxon Trilogy , including a new version of Gräfin Cosel, directed by Hans-Joachim Kasprzik.[21] In 2003, Stara Baśń was adapted to the movie An Ancient Tale: When the Sun Was a God, directed by Jerzy Hoffman.[22]
Monuments to Kraszewski exist in Biała Podlaska (Józef Ignacy Kraszewski's bench in Biała Podlaska ) and Krynica-Zdrój (Kraszewski's bench in Krynica-Zdrój ); many other places feature memorial plaques dedicated to him.[5]: 260
Since 1960, his former home in Dresden has been the Kraszewski-Museum .[23][5]: 260 Another museum dedicated to him was opened in 1962 in Romanów (the Józef Ignacy Kraszewski Museum in Romanów ).[1][5]: 260
See also
editNotes
edit- ^ In his works, he used a number of pseudonyms, including Bogdan Bolesławita, B.B., Kaniowa, Dr Omega, Kleofas Fakund Pasternak, and JIK.[3]: 222
References
edit- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Tarkowski, Paweł. "KRASZEWSKI Józef Ignacy (1812-1887), pisarz, publicysta, wydawca, historyk, rysownik". Słownik biograficzny Południowego Podlasia i Wschodniego Mazowsza. Uniwersytet Przyrodniczo-Humanistyczny w Siedlcach. Retrieved 3 July 2023.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Grzywacz, Marta (18 July 2016). "Józef Ignacy Kraszewski: osobisty wróg Bismarcka. Historia szpiegowska". Gazeta Wyborcza.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb Danek, Wincenty (1970). "Józef Ignacy Kraszewski". Polski słownik biograficzny (in Polish). Vol. 15. Zakład Narodowy im. Ossolińskich - Wydawawnictwo Polskiej Akademii Nauk.
- ^ Antkowiak, Zygmunt (1982). Patroni ulic Wrocławia (in Polish). Zakład Narodowy im. Ossolińskich. ISBN 978-83-04-00995-0.
Jan i Zofia mieli pięcioro dzieci, z których Józef Ignacy był najstarszy
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Roszkowska-Sykałowa, Wanda; Albrecht-Szymanowska, Wiesława (2001). "Kraszewski Józef Ignacy". In Loth, Roman (ed.). Dawni pisarze polscy od początków piśmiennictwa do Młodej Polski: przewodnik biograficzny i bibliograficzny. Vol. 2. Warszawa: Wydawnictwa Szkolne i Pedagogiczne. ISBN 978-83-02-08101-9.
- ^ a b Zajkowska, Joanna (21 December 2023). "Kraszewski w Wilnie – jak się narodził pisarz". Bibliotekarz Podlaski Ogólnopolskie Naukowe Pismo Bibliotekoznawcze i Bibliologiczne (in Polish). 60 (3): 149–166. doi:10.36770/bp.826. ISSN 2544-8900.
- ^ a b Stożek, Joanna (2018). ""Kartki z podróży" Józefa Ignacego Kraszewskiego a poetyka reportażu". Zeszyty Prasoznawcze (in Polish). 4 (236): 778–792. doi:10.4467/22996362PZ.18.045.10403. ISSN 0555-0025.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Milosz, Czeslaw (24 October 1983). The History of Polish Literature, Updated Edition. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-04477-7.
- ^ "Delegacja Miejska, Encyklopedia PWN: źródło wiarygodnej i rzetelnej wiedzy". encyklopedia.pwn.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 21 January 2024.
- ^ Czachowski, Kazimierz (1967). Między romantyzmem a realizmem [Between romanticism and realism] (in Polish). Państwowy Instytut Wydawniczy.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Kraszewski Józef Ignacy". Encyklopedia PWN (in Polish). Retrieved 16 January 2024.
- ^ a b c d Davies, Norman (24 February 2005). God's Playground A History of Poland: Volume II: 1795 to the Present. OUP Oxford. ISBN 978-0-19-925340-1.
- ^ Kościewicz, Katarzyna (2019). Preparowanie dziedzictwa: pisma Kraszewskiego, Sienkiewicza, Żeromskiego i innych autorów pod cenzorskim nadzorem 1945-1955 [Preparation of heritage: writings by Kraszewski, Sienkiewicz, Żeromski and other authors under censorship supervision, 1945-1955]. Białystok: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu w Białymstoku. ISBN 978-83-7431-564-7.
- ^ Jauksz, Marcin (2012). "Postacie poezji. Nad mottami "Poety i świata" Józefa Ignacego Kraszewskiego". Wiek XIX. Rocznik Towarzystwa Literackiego Im. Adama Mickiewicza (in Polish). XLVII (1): 377–390. ISSN 2080-0851.
- ^ Wojciechowska, Ewa (2012). "Bildung Nowoczesnego Poety. O Poecie i Świecie Józefa Ignacego Kraszewskiego / The Bildung of a Modern Poet: Józef Ignacy Kraszewski's The Poet and the World". Ruch Literacki; 2012; No 4-5. 53 (4–5): 433–450. doi:10.2478/v10273-012-0028-9. ISSN 0035-9602.
- ^ Kącka, Eliza (2012). "Człowiek według Smilesa. Kraszewski pozytywistów (Struve, Chmielowski, Orzeszkowa)". Wiek XIX. Rocznik Towarzystwa Literackiego Im. Adama Mickiewicza (in Polish). XLVII (1): 457–470. ISSN 2080-0851.
- ^ Roszkowska-Sykałowa, Wanda (1974). Athenaeum Józefa Ignacego Kraszewskiego, 1841-1851: zarys dziejów i bibliografia zawartości (in Polish). Zakład Narodowy im. Ossolińskich.
- ^ a b Danek, Wincenty (1963). "Sprawy słowiańskie w życiu i twórczości Kraszewskiego" [Slavic issues in Kraszewski's life and work] (PDF). Pamiętnik Literacki: Czasopismo kwartalne poświęcone historii i krytyce literatury polskiej (in Polish). 54 (2): 357–374.
- ^ Dutka, Wojciech (2008). "Fatalna siła wrogości. Mit obcości i barbarzyństwa Rosji i Rosjan w polskim piśmiennictwie historycznym dotyczącym powstania styczniowego w latach 1863-1918" [Fatal force of hostility. The myth of foreignness and barbarism of Russia and Russians in Polish historical literature regarding the January Uprising in 1863-1918] (PDF). Historica. 91 (3): 133–151.
- ^ "PISF - Jubileusz Jadwigi Barańskiej" (in Polish). Retrieved 16 January 2024.
- ^ ""Sachsens Glanz und Preußens Gloria": Wie eine Filmlegende entstand" ["Saxony's splendor and Prussia's glory": How a film legend came to be]. MDR KULTUR. 27 December 2020. Archived from the original on 28 December 2020.
- ^ "Lektura nieobowiązkowa - Recenzja filmu Stara baśń. Kiedy słońce było bogiem (2003)". Filmweb (in Polish). Retrieved 22 January 2024.
- ^ "Kraszewski Museum | Museums of Dresden". museen-dresden.de. Retrieved 16 January 2024.
Further reading
edit- Elżbieta Szymańska/Joanna Magacz: Kraszewski-Museum in Dresden, Warschau 2006. ISBN 83-89378-13-2
- Zofia Wolska-Grodecka/Brigitte Eckart: Kraszewski-Museum in Dresden, Warschau 1996. ISBN 83-904307-3-8
- Elżbieta Szymańska/Ulrike Bäumer: Andenken an das Kraszewski-Museum in Dresden, ACGM Lodart, 2000
- Victor Krellmann: "Liebesbriefe mit ebenholzschwarzer Tinte. Der polnische Dichter Kraszewski im Dresdner Exil", In: Philharmonische Blätter 1/2004, Dresden 2004.
- Friedrich Scholz: Die Literaturen des Baltikums. Ihre Entstehung und Entwicklung. Westdeutscher Verlag, Opladen 1990. ISBN 3-531-05097-4
- Henryk Szczepański: Gwiazdy i legendy dawnych Katowic – Sekrety Załęskiego Przedmieścia. Katowice: Wydawnictwo Naukowe Śląsk, 2015. ISBN 978-83-7164-860-1
External links
edit- Media related to Józef Ignacy Kraszewski at Wikimedia Commons
- Detailed biography from the Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary @ Russian Wikisource
- Works by Józef Ignacy Kraszewski at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about Józef Ignacy Kraszewski at the Internet Archive
- Works by Józef Ignacy Kraszewski at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
- Polish Literature in English Translation
- Kraszewski's Museum
- Detailed biography @ the Virtual Library of Polish Literature
- Józef Ignacy Kraszewski - biography and poems at poezja.org