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The post-war displacement of populations, the origin of which is commonly associated with the Yalta Conference, included around six million people on the Polish side alone (in a soulless approximation), which, at the time, constituted nearly a third of the entire population of the country. These fig...
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| Format: | Online |
| Sprache: | Polnisch |
| Veröffentlicht: |
Instytut Badań Literackich Polskiej Akademii Nauk
2024
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| Online-Zugang: | ONIX_20240916_9788367637534_167 |
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| Zusammenfassung: | The post-war displacement of populations, the origin of which is commonly associated with the Yalta Conference, included around six million people on the Polish side alone (in a soulless approximation), which, at the time, constituted nearly a third of the entire population of the country. These figures speak for themselves: it is one of the largest collective experiences of Polish society after World War II and, as such, it should be ascribed a foundational character. In this book, Kinga Siewior assigns herself the task of verifying whether it is also one of the most significant post-war experiences of Polish society and whether it was/is/could be considered in the light of this foundationality. The author is interested in the issue of how post-war migrations of Polish population to the West were represented in recent decades, and how they are portrayed today, as well as what their place and role in the construction of Polish collective identity was considered to be in the past, and how it is seen nowadays. To word it differently: in this book, the author poses the question of whether Polish society can be regarded as a (post)migrational society. |
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