Kapitel Open Access

Marxism in Poland

  • Michał Mrugalski
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© 2022 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

© 2022 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

Kapitel in diesem Buch

  1. Frontmatter I
  2. Table of Contents V
  3. I Introduction: Entangled Literary Theory
  4. Introduction 1
  5. The Migration of Concepts 23
  6. Translation of Theories – Theories of Translation 47
  7. Migrants of Theory 59
  8. Spaces of Theory 76
  9. A Case Study of a Migrating Term: Intertextuality 96
  10. II Formations of Literary Theory: Schools and Institutions, Concepts and Methods
  11. II.1 Institutions of Interdisciplinary Research from the 1910s until the 1930s
  12. Journal and Society of Aesthetics and the General Science of Art 115
  13. Institute of the History of the Arts 137
  14. The Institute for the Comparative History of the Literatures and Languages of the West and East (ILIaZV) 152
  15. The State Academy of Art Studies in Moscow (RAKhN/GAKhN) 164
  16. II.2 Formalism in Russia, Poland, Bohemia, and Germany
  17. Formalism in Germany 179
  18. Herbartian Aesthetics in Bohemia 200
  19. The Four Faces of Russian Formalism 212
  20. Formalism in Poland 258
  21. Jurij Striedter’s Reading of Russian Formalism 277
  22. The North American Reception of Russian Formalism 289
  23. II.3 Phenomenology in German-speaking Areas, Russia, Czechoslovakia, and Poland
  24. Phenomenology in German-Speaking Areas and in Russia 307
  25. Phenomenology in Czechoslovakia (Jan Patočka, Přemysl Blažíček) 323
  26. Phenomenology in Poland 340
  27. II.4 Hermeneutics
  28. Hermeneutics in Russia 357
  29. Hermeneutics in the Czech Context (F. X. Šalda, Václav Černý, and Dimitrij Tschižewskij [Dmytro Chyzhevsky]) 369
  30. Poetics and Hermeneutics 381
  31. II.5 Psychoanalysis and Literature and the Psychology of Art
  32. The Psychologisation of the Central and Eastern European Humanities: Mechanisms and Consequences of the Psychological Turn 395
  33. Psychoanalysis and Literature and the Psychology of Art (C. G. Jung’s Archaic Images and the Russian Jungians) 410
  34. Psychoanalysis and Literature in Poland 423
  35. ‘Aesthetic Reaction’ and ‘Verbal Reaction’: Reader-response Criticism from Vygotskii to Voloshinov 438
  36. II.6 Sociological and Marxist Theory
  37. Realism and Modernism, Aesthetics and Politics: Lukács, Brecht, Adorno 449
  38. Sociological and Marxist Literary Theory in Colonial Context 472
  39. Marxism in Poland 486
  40. II.7 Walter Benjamin and the Frankfurt School
  41. Siegfried Kracauer and Walter Benjamin. Precursors of the Frankfurt School in Transference with the Slavic Body of Thought 505
  42. Tragic Realism: On Karel Kosík’s Insights into Kafka 529
  43. II.8 Bakhtin, Bakhtin Circles and the (Re)Discovery of Bakhtin in the West
  44. Bakhtin Circles 545
  45. Bakhtin’s Philosophy of Literature and its Relation to Literary Theory, Literature and Culture 561
  46. The (Re)discovery of Bakhtin in Anglophone Criticism 593
  47. II.9 Structuralism and Semiotics
  48. Transfer as the Key: Understanding the Intellectual History of the Relationship between Formalism and Structuralism from the Perspective of the Prague Linguistic Circle 611
  49. Approaches to an Anthropologically- Oriented Theory of Literature and Culture in the Czech Avant-Garde and the Aesthetics of Prague Structuralism 632
  50. Semiotics of Drama and Theatre: The Prague School Model 653
  51. Structuralism and Semiotics in Poland 670
  52. Russian Structuralism and Semiotics in Literary Criticism and its Reception 723
  53. III Beyond Literary Theory
  54. Semantic Paleontology and Its Impact 785
  55. Postcolonial Studies: Processes of Appropriation and Axiological Controversies 807
  56. From Literary Theory to Cultural Studies 821
  57. Russian Theory in Africa: From Marxism to the Bakhtinian Postcolony 833
  58. Translation Studies (From Theories of Literary Translation to a Paradigm of Modernity) 847
  59. The Eastern European Origins of the Contemporary Activist Humanities: The Tragic Template of Socialist Kantianism at the Turn of the Twentieth Century 863
  60. IV Some Key Terms
  61. Alienation/Defamiliarisation/Estrangement (ostranenie) 879
  62. Carnival, Carnivalism and Bakhtin’s Culture of Laughter 887
  63. Function 899
  64. Hybridity 907
  65. Indeterminacy and Concretization 912
  66. Literary Evolution 918
  67. Montage 926
  68. Novoe zrenie / Neues Sehen / New Vision 930
  69. Theatricality 937
  70. Contributors 942
  71. Index of Names 945
Heruntergeladen am 8.9.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110400304-029/html
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