Intymność niemożliwa, intymność "zaprzeczona". O dwóch powieściach współczesnych
Intimacy impossible, intimacy ‘denied’. Two contemporary novels
Author(s): Krzysztof UniłowskiSubject(s): Literary Texts
Published by: Instytut Badań Literackich Polskiej Akademii Nauk
Keywords: Andrzej Falkiewicz; transgression; Adam Ubertowski; contemporary Polish literature
Summary/Abstract: The sketch concerns two novels dated 1998. Andrzej Falkiewicz’s novel Ledwie mrok proves to be interesting in terms of its aesthetics and problems, whilst being a somewhat late-date recapitulation of experiences of modern prose. The Author outlines a transgressive project of expressing those aspects of corporeality which are hardly graspable in the language, whilst at the same time gathering arguments testifying to a utopian nature of any such project. In turn, Adam Ubertowski, a representative of a much younger generation of authors, uses in his Szkice do obrazu batalistycznego, in a pastiche mode, certain cultural and literary matrices (well-established models of manliness, initiation pattern, etc.) along with elements of a modern literary code, to place a ‘simulac’ – i.e. intimacy seen in terms of a copy of one’s self, relating to repetition; an intimacy that is multiplied and reproduced as a narrative phantasm – precisely where modernism situated the individual’s source experience.
Journal: Teksty Drugie
- Issue Year: 2007
- Issue No: 1-2
- Page Range: 235-248
- Page Count: 14
- Language: Polish