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Maciej Nowak's book is the first monograph on the writings of Andrzej Bobkowski (1913-1961), a Polish émigré writer from the millieu of Jerzy Giedroyc's Kultura journal. Bobkowski is famous for his diary Wartime Notebooks: France 1940-1944, translated into many languages, including English. Using current methods of the French school in the study of diaristics and epistolography, Nowak overcomes the limits of aesthetic analysis to reach the anthropological center of Bobkowski's authorial practices. In this way, Nowak unveils the existential and axiological dimension of Bobkowski's work. Thus,…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Maciej Nowak's book is the first monograph on the writings of Andrzej Bobkowski (1913-1961), a Polish émigré writer from the millieu of Jerzy Giedroyc's Kultura journal. Bobkowski is famous for his diary Wartime Notebooks: France 1940-1944, translated into many languages, including English. Using current methods of the French school in the study of diaristics and epistolography, Nowak overcomes the limits of aesthetic analysis to reach the anthropological center of Bobkowski's authorial practices. In this way, Nowak unveils the existential and axiological dimension of Bobkowski's work. Thus, the book offers a coherent depiction of the rich and diverse writings of Bobkowski, prepared with methods of modern humanities.
Autorenporträt
Maciej Nowak is Assistant Professor at the Center for the Study of Religious Literature, John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin. His work focuses on the relationship of literature and religion, novelist historiosophy, and modern diaristics and epistolography. He also publishes essays on jazz aesthetics and reviews on jazz music albums.