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Janusz
Barański Highlander Culture and Memory
The point of
departure for this article is the Polish highlander culture of the
Podhale region, an exceptional case of local culture and a valuable
laboratory of cultural constancy and change. For those reasons, this
particular culture also became a sui generis domain of a
theoretical dispute about the comprehension of such phenomena as
tradition/modernity, continuum/change,
authenticity/non-authenticity, and the autotelism/instrumentalism of
culture. The dispute also enters the range of the obligations of the
researcher threatened with a confrontation with methodological
dilemmas along the cognitive objectivism/subjectivism,
distance/involvement, etc. axis. The above problems compel him to
pursue reflections about the meanings of basic terms and concepts
serving the description/explanation of cultural phenomena. This hold
true in particular for the context of folk qualities, whose
explanatory usefulness does not decrease albeit its meaning content
succumbs to changes calling for methodical recognition and use in
the scientific discourse.
Jan Gondowicz
Demonic Zakopane – Myth and Fact
Zakopane – the
only Polish locality considered to be demonic – emerged 130 years
ago as the utopian project of visitors representing the Polish
intelligentsia. Justification for this opinion was sought in
assorted sources: Zakopane was supposed to possess the qualities of
a health resort, provide foundations for new social harmony, and
become the fount of a revival of national sturdiness and supreme
“racial” ideals, an artists’ colony, and a site for the abolition of
the antinomy of nature and culture. The fiasco of this vision was
accompanied by a growth of the “dark” mythology of Zakopane, still
alive today, first envisaged as a place for the suspension of
“normalcy” for the sake of individualism (Witkacy) and next as a
decadent community with an underpinning of irony (Rafał Malczewski).
Thus comprehended miasma of Zakopane isolated the local residents
within the range of their esoteric, incomprehensible and
indissoluble problems, whose in-depth examination threatens the
psychic equilibrium of the inhabitants of the lowlands.
Antoni Kroh
The Tatra Museum – First and Last Love
A sentimental
and simultaneously anecdotal reminiscence about the Tatra Museum in
Zakopane, where the author worked as an ethnographer in 1967-1970;
he remained loosely connected with this institution for more than
forty years. We read about people, ambiance, changing outer
conditions, and problems associated with the protection of folk art
from the Podhale region.
Maciej Krupa
Zakopane is a School of Longing
The author
analysed the names of hotels, guesthouses, villas and restaurants in
Zakopane from the beginnings of the resort to the present day. Up to
the First World War they described the world of Zakopane in the
categories of a province, but in the interwar period the number of
names designating affiliation with the great world and the centre
grew, thus disclosing a provincial mentality. This trend is
continued to this day, indicating that Zakopane remains provincial
and for this reason, to cite Sławomir Mrożek, is a “a school of
longing”.
Kuba Szpilka
Following Traces – About the Residents of Zakopane in Search for
Identity
A presentation
of Zakopane qualities as a cultural phenomenon constantly created by
the local inhabitants – a narration about existence between Mt.
Giewont and Gubałówka Hill, with a town in the middle. This is a
story written by resorting to human fate and efforts at its
comprehension as well as material monuments – the outcome of work
and events.
Wojciech
Michera Residents of Zakopane and the Nekyia
In their
programme text the authors of the exhibition: Residents of
Zakopane in search for identity refer to the category of the
“fragment”, defining the latter in a manner proposed in the book by
Dariusz Czaja (“sometimes fragments may indicate the whole”). The
author of the article agrees that the “poetic of the fragment” is
important for the narration of the Zakopane exposition but proposed,
by way of a example, a decisive radicalisation of the manner of its
comprehension. In his interpretation, the fragment is an irreducible
aspect of the image, including a photographic one; it is a
diffraction force that while shattering the illusion of a whole does
not offer anything in return but only endlessly multiplies
particular frames and “fissures”.
Piotr Mazik
The Role of Photography in History
Do we delve
into history whole looking at photographs? Do we take them while
thinking about writing history? Roland Barthes extracted the
difference between participation in history and its study. The
parallel nature of those activities is probably impossible. The
division into the moment of taking a photograph – recording reality
and watching it, i.e. transition into history, is much too simple.
The role played by the photograph in history, its recording,
deciphering and deformation is highly ambivalent. Hence the form of
this text is somewhat unsteady and mosaic-like, and derived of the
inner light that breaks through chaos. It introduces anxiety, just
as in the case of the object of its interest. The fleeting nature of
photographs forces us to assume an erroneous interpretation, the
role of an accident, and distracts attention focused on the theme
and the author’s intentions, the creation of the portrayed.
Photographs, however, still continue to be the most universal manner
of recording, an imprint of reality. Aware of the fleeting nature of
memory and how written history does not adhere to the world, which
we recall or in whose appearance, we believe, the photograph is the
only possible way.
Wojciech
Szatkowski Goralenvolk – an Identity Crisis
The text
attempts to resolve several questions. Who betrayed and why? Who
created the theory about the Teutonic origin of the Polish Tatra
Mts. highlanders? At the time of the Nazi occupation Goralenvolk was
the most significant and largest organised form of collaboration in
Poland. This certainly black page in the history of the Podhale
region has been rarely discussed. Rejected, it gives rise to various
emotions and for years has been surrounded by a sui generis
conspiracy of silence. Unsurprisingly, the topic is not readily
broached in Podhale, an attitude that was conducive for the
communists, on the one hand, and for the surviving participants of
the wartime events, on the other hand. Censorship effectively
assisted in this conspiracy of silence and Goralenvolk was mentioned
in few scattered, fragmentary and low-circulation publications.
Praise is due to those authors who endeavoured to write about it,
i.a. Janusz Berghauzen, Henryk Jost, Sylwester Leczykiewicz, Adam
Palmrich, and Włodzimierz Wnuk. The first monograph on the history
of Goralenvolk appeared 66 years after the war: the book by Wojciech
Szatkowski demonstrates the mechanisms of treason.
Małgorzata
Maj, Stanisława Trebunia-Staszel
Nazi
Anthropological and Folklore Studies in the Podhale Region. Document
and Memory
The authors
are interested in the documentation created at the time of the
Second World War by the Nazi Institut für Deutsche Ostarbeit in
Cracow, and predominantly by one of its sections – Sektion Rassen
und Volkstumforschung, involved in anthropological and ethnographic
studies focused on selected groups of the population of the General
Government, including highlanders of the Podhale region. The prime
task of the project realized by M. Maj is to examine and partly
verify heretofore knowledge about the work performed by Sektion
Rassen- und Volkstumforschung IDO in Podhale during the 1941-1942
period upon the basis of an extensive collection of previously
unknown documents, in 2008 entrusted to the Jagiellonian University
Archives. At the same time, by referring to accounts by still living
persons (at the time, school children) subjected to anthropological
and medical examinations, the authors tried to demonstrate the way
in which the campaign conducted by Nazi anthropologists left an
imprint upon the children’s memory.
Aleksandra
Melbechowska-Luty Several Recollections about the Zakopane Wood
Industry School and Its Carvers (1876-1939)
The Wood
Industry School opened in Zakopane in 1876 was an important centre
of teaching construction, furniture production and carving. During
the nineteenth century the Tatra Mts. and the Podhale region,
together with their pantheistic landscape, were conceived as “sacred
space”, a terrain that in contrast to big city culture attracted
numerous outstanding authors, i.e. the instigator of the “Zakopane
style” Stanisław Witkiewicz, Tytus Chałubiński, and Karol
Szymanowski. For long, the school existed within the Austrian
partition area and its first headmasters: Franciszek Neužil and
Edgar Kováts taught according to methods imposed by Vienna, thus
recommending the emulation of Alpine design. A genuine breakthrough
came with Karol Stryjeński (1923-1927), who restored the prominence
of the local art of Podhale, stimulated the pupils’ imagination, and
developed their inborn talents. In 1938 another rebirth of the
school was achieved by Antoni Kenar, who from 1947 was head of the
State Secondary School of Art Techniques. Eminent artists who proved
permanently influenced by Zakopane and the Tatra Mts. region
included Jan Szczepkowski, a sculptor enamoured of folk carving;
using the system of “highlander wedges” he executed in pine wood,
i.e. the Nativity Shrine, winner of the Grand Prix at the Paris
exhibition of 1925.
Urszula
Makowska The Zakopane Berghof
A medical
institution in Zakopane for “those suffering from chest ailments”
established and headed in 1902-1918 by Kazimierz and Bronisława
Dłuski was the first tuberculosis sanatorium in the Polish high
mountains. Its building referred to the architectural conception of
an ideal sanatorium conceived by Dr. Karl Turban from Davos, and the
interior arrangement and equipment corresponded to European
standards. Therapy and the patients’ daily schedule also did not
differ from Swiss norms, and thus even the details of the Zakopane-based
institution resembled the Berghof described by Thomas Mann in The
Magic Mountain. The distinguishing features of the Polish
sanatorium against the background of similar institutions across
Europe were the outcome of the ambitions of its authors, who decided
to render it not only an exemplary centre using almost exclusively
local products but also a showpiece of Polish art. This is the
reason why the design of the generally accessible interiors was
entrusted to artists – Jan Rembowski, Karol Frycz, Henryk Uziemblo
and Wojciech Brzega. In this fashion, the sanatorium became a
prolongation of a literary-art salon, whose role was played at that
time by Zakopane. The establishment of the sanatorium coincided with
an outbreak of animosity amidst the authorities and residents of
Zakopane towards patients suffering from tuberculosis, whose
presence could have deterred potential visitors. At the beginning of
the twentieth century the tuberculosis myth, questioned and
incapacitated in The Magic Mountain, still remained real in the
Tatra Mts. resort despite, or because of the fact that this was the
site of a first attempt at a successful battle against the disease
in Poland.
Antoni Beksiak
Sequel: Reflections on the Role of Podhale in Shaping the Stands of
the “Dom Tańca” Milieu in Warsaw
When in 1994
and 1995 I inaugurated, together with a group of friends, joint
“access” to a relic of Polish traditional culture for the purpose of
reviving a fading musical practice we faced a basic absence of
models and world outlook stands that we could use or initiate. 90%
of my opinions about traditional Polish music functioning publicly
were false; for all practical purposes, our undertakings were
unprecedented in Poland. In this text I propose a light-hearted
approach to the development of this situation, in particular to the
role played by the Podhale region, accepted as a stereotypical but
totally inadequate symbol of Polish traditional culture.
Maria
Małanicz-Przybylska Does Highlander Culture Exist…?
The essay
attempts to consider the justification of present-day mention of
highlander culture. The accepted perspective obligates to situate
the culture in question along the crossroads of an imposed discourse
and individual choices (at times accepted unthinkingly) of a certain
“traditional” lifestyle. Does the titular highlander culture really
exist? How should this concept be comprehended? What does it mean
for the contemporary inhabitants of the Podhale region? The author
sought a response for thus formulated questions by referring to the
history of Podhale, the role of the intelligentsia in moulding the
highlander identity, as well as the strategy, activity and views of
the contemporary residents of Zakopane and nearby localities.
Beata Klocek
di Biasio, Bohdan Michalski Zakopane, Poland, Europe: the
Provincialism and Universalism of Władysław Hasior
The authors
analysed the secret of the workshop of W. Hasior, which consists of
a synthesis of the local, provincial and folk with the universal,
the archetypes of Greek mythology that the artist carefully studied.
Hasior expressed the great dramas of the Greek deities by resorting
to the most common material borrowed from the fairground refuse heap
of daily life. In doing so, he transposed the classical myth into
the sensitivity of the contemporary recipient.
Łukasz
Kossowski Let’s Talk about Women. Schulz, Witkacy, Gombrowicz et
al.
The Let’s
Talk about Women... exhibition at the Tatra Museum in Zakopane
should have been open only to members of the public aged over 18.
Instead, it became a vacation joke, a discourse about the women of a
number of outstanding artists: Schulz, Witkacy, Gombrowicz,
Makuszyński, Lebenstein, Sroka… I looked at women worshipped,
demanding constant homage, and followed closely by timid Bruno
Schulz or those situated alongside Gombrowicz: emancipated and
modern doctors’ wives from Wilcza Street, portrayed in
Oligofrenie by Grzegorz Moryciński. In turn, the “bathing
paintings” by Jacek Sroka are unique, grotesque paraphrases of the
eternal motif of the female bather. The complicated love life of
Witkacy was illustrated with magnificent photograms of the assorted
ladies associated with this artist, borrowed from the collections of
Lech Okołowicz and with professional glossa by Jan Gondowicz. The
episode of an encounter with a she-bear described by Witkacy in
Pożegnanie jesieni inspired the authors of the exhibition to
show a designate of the story – a bear in an apiary, on show in the
Museum collections. The culmination point of the exhibition was a
display of paintings by Jacek Sroka, a contemporary Savonarola
confronting ideological feminism. One of his works features
immediately above some generous female buttocks an image of Che
Guevara, the ultimate revolutionary icon.
Jerzy S.
Wasilewski Ethnologist on the Road (8): Mandar, an Extraordinary
Man
Ethnographer’s
dilemma: to construct his ethnography on what is average and typical
for a given society/culture, or, rather, to look for those
outstanding, unusual individuals. And, to what extent might their
particular experiences be considered representative. One of such
unique personalities is Mandar Uus, a Sakha (Yakut) blacksmith, or,
to be precise, a multitalented artist, handicraftsman and
storyteller. He is famous in the whole Siberian Yakutia not only for
making remarkable hunting knives or documenting in hundreds of
drawings old folk ornament but also for telling in public moral
lessons from his mystic encounters in the wilderness of taiga or
presenting an ingenious cosmology of his own. Although he is a
rather idiosyncratic, one of a kind personality, he is positioned in
the Yakut media discourse as a perfect representative of ”the old
Yakut knowledge, traditions and values”. |