We kindly inform you that, as long as the subject affiliation of our 300.000+ articles is in progress, you might get unsufficient or no results on your third level or second level search. In this case, please broaden your search criteria.
Opowiadanie Hiya („Ona”) zostało napisane w maju 1969 roku. Weszło do zbioru Bajt min lahm („Dom pełen ciał”), który ukazał się dwa lata później (Idris 1982; Idris 1990, 146–154). Tytuł utworu oraz ogólny rys tytułowej postaci zostały zaczerpnięte z powieści Henry’ego Ridera Haggarda (zm.1925) She („Ona”) z 1886 roku oraz jej kontynuacji, Ayesha, the Return of She („Ayesha, powrót Onej”) z 1905 roku.
More...
Opowiadanie Bestie nocy (月夜のけだもの) znaleźć można w zbiorze Miyazawa Kenji, Ginga Tetsudō no yoru (Miyazawa Kenji dōwa-shū II), Kuroiwa-shoten, 1963 [宮沢賢治 銀河鉄道の夜(宮沢賢治童話集 II)、 岩波書店、1963]. Tekst dostępny jest również online: https://www.aozora.gr.jp/cards/000081/files/4420_29934.html
More...
A reprint of Oskar Aleksandrowicz’s story, “Z dworu ślepej bogini,” published in the Lviv periodical Chwila (1937, no. 6632, p. 11-12). The story includes four yet unknown illustrations by Bruno Schulz.
More...
In Gogol’s Dikan’ka stories cycle, the absence of a fundamental figure for the genre in question (the mother) is evident. Each story, in fact, features a “stepmother” or a surrogate of some sort, who turns out to be a demonic entity, if not a witch. This paper argues that for Gogol the Mother God, originally venerated as the main deity, assumes the form of Moist Mother Earth, forgotten by the modern Slavonic man as he increasingly distances himself from the collective (the “mir”). This process culminates in the Dikan’ka’s tale The Terrible Revenge, in which Gogol highlights the transition from the feminine to the male principle, that is to say from the Moist Mother Earth to the apocryphal God of the Ukrainian sung epic poem (“duma”). Evenings on a Farm Near Dikan’ka tells of the dangerous path trodden by modern man, a path where he – in the empty space left by Moist Mother Earth – takes exclusively responsibility for the eponymous revenge.
More...