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Hysteria virilis? Polska historia i histeria Wielkiej Wojny

cris.lastimport.scopus2024-02-12T19:56:29Z
dc.abstract.enThe article’s aim is critical analysis of the Great War’s cultural memory in Poland and its production’s mechanism that emerged during the war and just after the conflict was over. Masculinist, heroic, brave – always heterosexist – and picturesque vision of the war that dominated, both, official and collective war memory, described by Maria Janion as “the uhlan western”, is a critical point of departure for introduction another version of the Great War memory in Poland. This one, contrary to the official one, is rather antiheroic and traumatic, and might be read as a kind of counternarrative that goes against the official ways of the Great War’s conceptualisations. The article wishes also to discuss the role and mechanism of the “war rumour” that has been identified by Marc Bloch in his study Réflexions d’un historien sur les fausses nouvelles de la guerre by means of applying it to selected life narratives from the Eastern front – in particular memoirs and diaries written by male participants of the Great War. The French historian was particularly interested in how lying affects the psychology of war witnesses, how the witnesses constructed stories about the war events in which they participated or observed, as well as how rumours contribute to the birth of mass psychosis and hysteria. An in-depth scrutiny of several texts written in Polish during the war will also facilitate an identification of another, i.e. gendered, racial, and class aspect of the “false news” which Bloch ignored: namely its role in the creation of male hysteria. One could risk a claim that the relationship between war rumours and male hysteria is a major feature of the war narratives that are to be favoured by this article. The narratives, one should note, which have been erased from the official memory of the Great War and substituted by a heterosexist, masculinist tale about brave and rational soldiers and – here’s another lie – about irrational and hysterical women, civilians, and Jews.
dc.affiliationUniwersytet Warszawski
dc.contributor.authorSzymański, Wojciech
dc.date.accessioned2024-01-25T03:32:07Z
dc.date.available2024-01-25T03:32:07Z
dc.date.issued2018
dc.description.financeNie dotyczy
dc.identifier.doi10.4467/2084395XWI.18.029.10193
dc.identifier.issn1897-1962
dc.identifier.urihttps://repozytorium.uw.edu.pl//handle/item/108822
dc.pbn.affiliationarts studies
dc.relation.ispartofPolylogue - The Magazine of the Faculty of Polish
dc.rightsClosedAccess
dc.sciencecloudnosend
dc.subject.enhysteria virilis male hysteria the Great War Polish Legions’ art exhibitions shell shock Eastern front Polish cultural memory
dc.subject.plmęska histeria I wojna światowa wystawy sztuki legionowej szok artyleryjski front wschodni polska pamięć kulturowa
dc.titleHysteria virilis? Polska historia i histeria Wielkiej Wojny
dc.typeJournalArticle
dspace.entity.typePublication