Antoni Słonimski
Antoni Słonimski | |
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Antoni Słonimski | |
Born |
Antoni Słonimski 15 November 1895 Warsaw, Congress Poland |
Died |
4 July 1976 80) Warsaw, Poland | (aged
Resting place | Forest Cemetery in Laski |
Occupation | Writer |
Language | Polish |
Nationality | Polish |
Ethnicity | Polish, Jewish |
Literary movement | Skamander |
Antoni Słonimski (15 November 1895 – 4 July 1976) was a Polish poet, journalist, playwright and prose writer, president of the Union of Polish Writers in 1956–1959 during the Polish October, known for his devotion to social justice.
Słonimski was the grandson of Rabbi Hayyim Selig Slonimski, the founder of the first Hebrew weekly ha-Tsefirah in Poland. His father, an ophthalmologist, converted to Christianity when he married a Catholic woman. Słonimski was born in Warsaw and baptized and raised as a Christian.[1] Słonimski studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Warsaw. In 1919 he co-founded the Skamander group of experimental poets with Julian Tuwim and Jarosław Iwaszkiewicz. In 1924 he travelled to Palestine and Brasil and in 1932 to the Soviet Union.
Słonimski spent the war years in exile in England and France, returning to Poland in 1951. He worked as contributor to popular periodicals: Nowa Kultura (1950–1962), Szpilki (1953–73) and Przegląd Kulturalny. He was an active anti-Stalinist and supporter of liberalization. Słonimski died on 4 July 1976 in a car accident in Warsaw.
Works
- Sonety (1918)
- Parada (1920)
- Godzina poezji (1923)
- Torpeda czasu (Time Torpedo, 1926), a science fiction novel influenced by H.G. Wells[2]
- Droga na wschód (Road to the East; 1924), a collection of poems inspired by his travels to Palestine and Brazil
- Z dalekiej podróży (1926)
- Rodzina (Family; 1933), a comedy about two brothers: a communist, and a fascist
- Okno bez krat (1935)
- Dwa końce świata (Two Ends of the World; 1937), a novel predicting Warsaw's destruction by a Nazi dictator
- Alarm (1940)
- Wiek klęski (1945)
- Nowe wiersze (1959)
- Wiersze 1958–1963 (1963)
- 138 wierszy (1973)
See also
References
- ↑ Antony Polonsky, Monika Adamczyk-Garbowska (2001). Contemporary Jewish writing in Poland: an anthology. University of Nebraska Press. p. 321. ISBN 0-8032-3721-9. Retrieved 11 July 2011.
Source: "Alfabet wspomnień" by Antoni Słonimski (memoir), PIW, 1975
- ↑ Patrick Parrinder, John S. Partington, The Reception of H.G. Wells in Europe. Continuum, 2005. ISBN 0826462537, (p. 140)
- Barry Keane, Skamander. The Poets and Their Poetry (2004), Agade; Warsaw, ISBN 83-87111-29-5.
Sources
External links
- Profile of Antoni Słonimski at Culture.pl
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