Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W3202820003> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 48 of
48
with 100 items per page.
- W3202820003 endingPage "353" @default.
- W3202820003 startingPage "332" @default.
- W3202820003 abstract "This chapter addresses the role Virginia Woolf plays in contemporary Polish literature, examining the significance of her modernist legacy – as a vital part of planetary feminism – to Polish feminist fiction. Though Woolf entered Polish culture in the 1920s and her hybrid fictional forms were translated in the 1950-60s, her reception was delayed. Feminist rewritings of Woolf’s oeuvre began to emerge after the first Polish translations of <italic>Orlando</italic> (1994) and <italic>A Room of One’s Own</italic> (1997), followed by her auto/biographical writings. Polish writers – Joanna Bator, Sylwia Chutnik, Marta Konarzewska, Renata Lis, Izabela Morska, Maria Nurowska, and Olga Tokarczuk – transform, rewrite and re-use Woolf’s works in Central European cultural contexts. The most visible signs of Woolf’s ‘afterlives’ are transtextual relations between contemporary fiction, biographies of Woolf and her oeuvre. This chapter explores biofiction with Woolfian themes and intertextual echoes that enhance polyphonic effects. It also focuses on hypertextuality by analysing the functions of Woolfian hypotexts, for instance, tracing back the generic fusing of the Nobel Prize Laureate Tokarczuk’s ‘constellation novels’ to Woolf’s hybrid fictional forms. The chapter applies Jessica Berman’s ‘trans critical optic’ that allows to read Polish textual dialogues with Woolf from transdisciplinary, transnational and transgender perspectives." @default.
- W3202820003 created "2021-10-11" @default.
- W3202820003 creator A5067329126 @default.
- W3202820003 date "2020-12-01" @default.
- W3202820003 modified "2023-09-24" @default.
- W3202820003 title "Trans-Dialogues: Exploring Virginia Woolf’s Feminist Legacy to Contemporary Polish Literature" @default.
- W3202820003 doi "https://doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474448475.003.0019" @default.
- W3202820003 hasPublicationYear "2020" @default.
- W3202820003 type Work @default.
- W3202820003 sameAs 3202820003 @default.
- W3202820003 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W3202820003 crossrefType "book-chapter" @default.
- W3202820003 hasAuthorship W3202820003A5067329126 @default.
- W3202820003 hasConcept C107993555 @default.
- W3202820003 hasConcept C124952713 @default.
- W3202820003 hasConcept C128979739 @default.
- W3202820003 hasConcept C142362112 @default.
- W3202820003 hasConcept C144024400 @default.
- W3202820003 hasConcept C2777688943 @default.
- W3202820003 hasConcept C2779367526 @default.
- W3202820003 hasConcept C52119013 @default.
- W3202820003 hasConceptScore W3202820003C107993555 @default.
- W3202820003 hasConceptScore W3202820003C124952713 @default.
- W3202820003 hasConceptScore W3202820003C128979739 @default.
- W3202820003 hasConceptScore W3202820003C142362112 @default.
- W3202820003 hasConceptScore W3202820003C144024400 @default.
- W3202820003 hasConceptScore W3202820003C2777688943 @default.
- W3202820003 hasConceptScore W3202820003C2779367526 @default.
- W3202820003 hasConceptScore W3202820003C52119013 @default.
- W3202820003 hasLocation W32028200031 @default.
- W3202820003 hasOpenAccess W3202820003 @default.
- W3202820003 hasPrimaryLocation W32028200031 @default.
- W3202820003 hasRelatedWork W11386920 @default.
- W3202820003 hasRelatedWork W11799108 @default.
- W3202820003 hasRelatedWork W14313011 @default.
- W3202820003 hasRelatedWork W15117415 @default.
- W3202820003 hasRelatedWork W199302 @default.
- W3202820003 hasRelatedWork W24661359 @default.
- W3202820003 hasRelatedWork W25663613 @default.
- W3202820003 hasRelatedWork W5342645 @default.
- W3202820003 hasRelatedWork W6058357 @default.
- W3202820003 hasRelatedWork W19461909 @default.
- W3202820003 isParatext "false" @default.
- W3202820003 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W3202820003 magId "3202820003" @default.
- W3202820003 workType "book-chapter" @default.