The Holocaust – the Border of Pragmatic Language Cover Image

Holokaust – hranica pragmatického jazyka
The Holocaust – the Border of Pragmatic Language

Author(s): Zora Prušková
Subject(s): Jewish studies, Studies of Literature, History of the Holocaust, Theory of Literature
Published by: Uniwersytet Adama Mickiewicza
Keywords: Holocaust; language; document; fiction; interpretation;

Summary/Abstract: Prušková Zora, Holokaust – hranica pragmatického jazyka (The Holocaust – the Border of Pragmatic Language). “Poznańskie Studia Slawistyczne” 12. Poznań 2017. Publishing House of the Poznań Society for the Advancement of the Arts and Sciences, pp. 259–270. ISSN 2084-3011. The theme of the paper is observing and revealing non-pragmatic language that, when dealing with deliberately chosen texts about acts of violence, leads to productive aesthetic disturbance. In its substance, this language refers to the gulf between intensity of representation and ideological intention towards a reader declared in a complicated manner. The paper discusses five texts with the theme of the Holocaust. Three of them deal with the Holocaust as with a recent experience, namely Curzio Malaparte’s Caput (1944), Žofia Nalkowska’s Medallions (1945), and Leopold Lahola’s Last Thing (1949–1956, published in a book in 1968); whereas two other ones deal with the Holocaust after some time in a form of belles-lettres memoirs or testimony, namely Juraj Špitzer’s I Did Not Want to Be a Jew (1994) and Jerzy Kosiński’s Painted Bird (in English in 1965, Czech translation was published in 2011). All interpreted texts are marked by specific language situated beyond the border of traditional literary representation. This language is either extremely subjective, expressive and periphrastic – in this case it borders on with absurd Realism or nonsense (in case of C. Malaparte, J. Kosiński, and L. Lahola) – or, in its neutral representation (in case of Ž. Nalkowska, and J. Špitzer), it borders on with a melancholic self-referential document on limits of cultural humanism or of normal, common humanity.

  • Issue Year: 2017
  • Issue No: 12
  • Page Range: 259-270
  • Page Count: 12
  • Language: Slovak