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Beskrivning
This edited volume explores the historical, cultural and literary legacies of Polish Britain, and their significance for both the British and Polish nations.
Maggie Ann Bowers is Senior Lecturer in English Literature at the University of Portsmouth, UK. She is the editor of two special issues focusing on contemporary writing and culture: Journal of Postcolonial Writing’s ‘Imaginary Europes’ and Wasafiri’s ‘North American Native Literature and Literary Activism’. She is also the author of Magic(al) Realism (2004), and the editor of the multilingual volume Convergences and Interferences: Newness in Intercultural Practices (2001).Ben Dew is Associate Professor in Cultural History at the Centre for Arts, Memory and Communities, Coventry University, UK. He is the author of Commerce, Finance and Statecraft: Histories of England, 1600-1780 (2018) and the editor of Tea and Commerce (2010) and Historical Writing in Britain (2014).
Innehållsförteckning
1 Introduction.-Part I Before 1918.-2 From the Moon to Kennington Common: British Perceptions of the Poland and the Poles 1750–1850.-3 Brave and Patriotic Poles: British Politics and Polish Independence, 1830–1847.-4 Why Britain? The Motives and Circumstances of Polish Political Refugees’ Arrivals to the United Kingdom in the 1830s and 1840s.-5 Polish History in Britain: The Work of Napoleon Feliks.-6 “Poland Has No Claim on You”: By Celia’s Arbour and British Representations of Poland in the VictorianEra.-Part II After 1918.-7 Polish Post-World-War-II Exiles in Britain: The London Wiadomości and Its Cultural Milieu.-8 Migrant Lives and the Dynamics of (Non)belongingin the Polish-British Works of A.M. Bakalar, Wioletta Greg, and Agnieszka Dale.-9 A Country Constructed from Memories: Representations of Poland and Poles in Migrant Writing in theTwenty-First Century.-10 Poles Among Others: Literary Perspectives on Polish Migrants in Britain Since 2004.-11 The Good Pole in an Ailing Britain: An Imagological Approach to Polish Migration in British Literature