Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1104004 | Russian Literature | 2011 | 17 Pages |
Abstract
Since 1989, Marian Pankowski has been read by critics as a representative of the emancipatory discourses on identity. Enquiry into the origin of his writings, both aesthetic and ideological, has remained in the shadow of such interpretations. A feminist reading looking into the role of women helps to understand his writings in their literary and historical context. This paper examines three areas: the motherland of Pankowskiʼs early texts, the bunker, which symbolizes hidden, preserved histories, and liberal discourse. All these areas speak in unison and reveal the dynamics of a writing that is both revolutionary towards the existing norms and immersed in the late Modernist patriarchal idiom.
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