Schulz w Drohobyczu po raz piąty
Journal Title: Schulz/Forum - Year 2015, Vol 6, Issue 6
Abstract
In September 2012, Pedagogical University in Drogobych, Ukraine, hosted 5th International Bruno Schulz Festival. The Festival’s topic was “Bruno Schulz as Philosopher and Literary Theorist.” In 2014, thanks to financial support of the Polish Institute in Kyiv, a four-language volume was published, including all the academic papers delivered during the festival conference. The opening section of the collection includes four statements by special guests: the Polish intellectual Adam Michnik, the noted Israeli fiction writer David Grossman, the Ukrainian writer Taras Prokhasko, and the Russian writer Victor Yerofeev. The remaining sections focus on new interpretations of Schulz’s works, various comparative contexts, and the history of the town of Drogobych, where Schulz was born and finally killed by the Nazis.
Authors and Affiliations
Marek Wilczyński
Opowieść robak toczy
Jakub Woynarowski limits the plot of his comic book based on Schulz’s fiction to a minimum: the composition consists of full-page planes while balloons have been replaced by micro-narration. Placing the quotes from Schul...
Przypadek hermeneutyki fenomenologicznej Brunona Schulza
The fundamental premise of Bruno Schulz’s theory of interpretation is an assumption that reality has some meaning. This meaning is an intentional object which must be discovered in a process of creative interpretation. I...
À la manière de… Bruno Schulz
A pastiche of Schulz’s work focusing on a vision of the Father’s particularly important mission. The old Jacob, wearing his coat and hat, sits on a chamber pot to defend “with all his waning power and the remains of the...
Wspomnienie o Schulzu
In Izabela Czermakowa’s memory, Bruno Schulz appears to be a writer that attracted people’s attention and had many occasions to socialize with the “high society,” not only in Drogobych. Yet he was so shy that those who m...
Klucz w dłoni Jakuba (i inne klucze)
“Schulz? I’ve written all about him,” Artur Sandauer allegedly declared in the 1970s. Still, the critic did not put Schulz under lock and key, and no one else did later. Although the writer’s work has provoked hundreds o...