The Second Life of Objects
Objects in the theatre of Tadeusz Kantor play a specific role. They
cannot be treated as ordinary props, since they constitute rather antiprops. First and foremost,
they include used second hand objects, discovered anew, sometimes extracted from daily life,
frequently associated with the lives of the poor. Those "poor objects", suffused with emotion, can
be abandoned, ignored, degraded, and possess special merits connected with memory (links with the
deceased and childhood reminiscences). In the Kantor theatre such things perform an ennobled
role; hence, the dramatis personae are often reduced to the status of mere things, and are
empty, dead mannequins. Paradoxically, such "reduction" is tantamount to ennoblement. The object,
matter comprises that which we encounter when we flee psychology. What is the nature of an object
if it is better then the psyche? It simply must be spiritual, something concealed within matter,
and superior to the latter. Through this material trait Kantor returned to the spiritual world,
and in this specific manner he restored mythical qualities to cultural contents.
The article by Małgorzata Dziewulska is supplemented by texts written by the students with whom
she conducted courses (1996-1997). In the majority of cases, the objects were described solely
upon the basis of a filmed version of two spectacles by T. Kantor: Niech sczezną artyści
(May the Artists Perish) and Wielopole, Wielopole: E. Bielawska, The Camera - Machine
Gun, T. Kalczyński, Doors, D.Novak, The Bed - Death Machine, A. Łoboda, The
Tablecloth, D. Rembelska, Uncle Stasio-the Exile, K. Rekosz, The Handcar, M.
K. Tylkowska, The Barrel-organ, and J. Kowalik, The Pool. back
Per monsra ad sphaeram . Aby Warburg and his Library
The library of Aby Warburg, an historian of art specialising in the
Renaissance, is not a mere collection of books, but a museum of of the imagination and the collection
of memories. Its purpose was to indicate the function of social memory, conceived as a force which
renders possible the re-emergence of style, and a recognition of classical civilisations a
permanent quality. Warburg maintained that the European civilisation is a process which constitutes
the outcome of a collision of assorted tendencies. back
"The Blind librarian". On the Written Dimension of the Oral
With a tangle of meanings, in which the written word and name
appear in a religious-magic context, as the point of departure, the presented text demonstrates
the possibility of comprehending writting as concealment (lethe in the Heideggerian sense of word),
and as "rendering indelible by means of oblivion". Such an understanding of writting, characteristic
for its sacral application, creates the specific style of culture, which could be described as
"oral", in the meaning of term. back
The Unusual
The unusual is a subjective and relative classification; in order
that it may come into the being, it must be perceived and calls for a background: the context of
ordinariness, contention and norm. It is sought-after feature, found almost everywhere (not only
in the accomplishments of visual depictions), albeit with differentiated intensity, type and
nature of effects, decisive for its presence: from natural phenomena to the formes of objects and
scenarios of behaviour. From make-up to the oratorical manners, vocal and instrumental techniques.
The presented text accompanied an exhibition featured under the same title in the State Ethnographic
Museum in Warsaw (November 1998 - January 1999). The category of the unusual is not one of the
categories frequently applied in museum pursuits. Hence, the exhibition can be treated as a
search for a new sphere of meaning.
"Camera à la Minute",or a Tale by a "Five-Minute Photografer"
Stanisław Łabiszewski (1916-1985) was a self-taught photographer.
Fascinated by photography from his youth he did not devote himself to it until after his return
from forced labour in Germany. Łabiszewski worked with a camera of his own construction, imitating
so-called five-minute cameras (whose interiors contained an entire "chemical laboratory") - the
client waited only five minutes for the ready picture.Łabiszewski, a resident of the Warsaw
district of Praga, also painted the screens against whose background he took photographs in market
squares and at church fairs all over Poland. The presented text is based on a vivid interview
held by Piotr Szacki and Tomasz Potkański. The camera built by Stanisław Łabiszewski was purchased
by the State Ethnographic Museum in Warsaw.back
"A Naked Man on a Naked Earth"
This reflection by a micro-essayist concerns things and their classification.
An ambitious systematist would be compelled that things create around us a sphere without which
it is impossible to exist without friction, as in the favorite example cited by physicists. To posses
nothing is a sign of depersonalization, the loss of human condition, the antechamber of death.
The contradiction of the naked man on a naked Earth is a person surrounded with all possible
sorts of things, and situated on an Earth transformed totally into an entity of useful objects.
The coming century will be encumbered with the task of describing this globe, whirling in the
Universe and composed of chairs and holy pictures, oil refineries and plush teddy bears...
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The Travelling Barbarians
The article presents the material aspects of journeys made by
Franks and Longobards from the fifth century to the mid-seventh sentury. The author describes
means of transport from the period and a brief history of particular inventions. She takes
into considerations journeys made on foot, methods of crossing rivers (bridges, boats, fords,
horseback, on shields), lodgings (and the hospitality of the hosts), meals during the journeys
and items taken by the travellers. The sources material used as a base for the study include
early medieval chronicles: Historia Francorum by Gregory of Tours, Historia Longobardorum
by Pauls Diaconus and the fourth book of the Fredegar chronicle.
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A Non-axistent Film, a Non-existent Life.
Propaedeutics of Wanderings beyond a Dictionary
An attempted interpretation of a certain film about a journey to
Venice. The fact that this film was never made does not stop the author from pursuing reflections
about connections between the cinema, myth and life. Such deliberations posses the features of
a journey during which we encounter, i. a. Thomas Mann, Witold Gombrowicz and Walter Benjamin,
although to the end we are uncertain whether there exists any destination. The answer is:
probably not. At the very last moment we become deported, sharing the lot of the heroes of the
described film. That which cannot be reached comprises the concealed theme of the article.
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Dayroom, or about Two Kingdoms
A description of travelling in a commuter train on the
Warsaw-Pilawa line (about 60 kms.). The destination is both known and dangerous, and the
journey itself is indispensable and run-of the-mill. The author delves predominantly into two
kingdoms, mutually permitted and embroiled into a constant war. This battle is won by one side,
but the other side must be the victor too.
Freidrich Engels divided time and activities performed in it into
the Kingdom of Necessity and the Kingdom of Liberty.The commuter train is a place in which the
author and his fellow travellers spend time that belongs to the Kingdom of Necessity. The
passengers are primarily peasants working in town and school children. Since it links two
worlds: that of Mazovian village and the capital of the country, the train should be called rural.
It was precisely the petty peasants from the suburban villages, travelling to their additional
jobs in town, who performed a breakthrough in time and its activities by introducing a journey
into the Kingdom of Freedom. For this purpose, they made use of a compartment which they named
the Dayroom. back
Holy Time and Holy Space
The moment of crossing the French-British border is approaching. The
magical dimension of activities encountered by every person passing through this frontier are
decisive for its very nature. This is an excellent example of a place where we are dealing with contact
between the sacrum and profanum. Crossing this border, the author felt that he had arrived from
an indefinite space and was entering a territory of exceptional intense sacral qualities.
Thanks to the fact that Hereford became the central spot in the definition of space, delineated
by the "picker", it is here that he should seek the mythical beginning. The "picker" returned
to a "holy" place, or at least a highly exceptional one, since everything started here. The
author came to experience another adventure and perhaps to earn some money, but he brought back
experiences which will enable him to understand the appearance of holy space in the contemporary,
secular world, and to experience holy time. back
Journey: The Sheltering Sky
The author analyses vacation travels, universally present in
contemporary culture. The scale and dimension of this phenomenon appear to testify that we are
dealing with a particular type of cultural behavior which discloses the essential features of
Western mentality. By means of comparison of holiday travels with the journey undertaken by
the heroes of Bertolucci`s film The Sheltering Sky, the author accentuates a certain
common feature: the periodical longing for freeing oneself from one`s world and structure of the
rite of passage. back
Syracuse - The Town of Great Women (Part II)
Syracuse is a town created by deities, saints, historians,
trevellers, apologists, theologians, photographers, and, primarily, its own residents.It comprises
a phenomenon located above a division into an urban and social subsystem, an area of eloquent
meanings, a space for the realisation of concrete and specifical attitudes.
The metaphorical, mystic-symbolic space of Syracuse is that of
three women. This is the birthplace of Arthemis, the refuge and the site of the eternal rest
of Arethusa, and the town of the birth, life and martyrdom of Lucia. By demonstrating of constant
presence of the patron in the life of the city, which provokes assorted formes of group imagery,
a process of rendering space mythical, and a creation of a world of values shared by its
residents, Syracuse gains new meaning. It appears as a town of light. a land of purity,
saintliness and glory, a city of luminescence and joy. Its topography is superimposed upon that
of its inhabitants, and vice versa, while observed behaviour is granted a double meaning, and
comprises an example of the observation of a distinguished place, but also of a transformation of
a myth into a ritual, frequently without social awareness. Its outcome assumes the form of the
specific dramaturgy of the everyday life of the population of Syracuse, whose sense of existence
is restricted to an encounter with the three patrons, advocates,guides and friends, a fact which
entitled the author to describe it as "the town of great women". The presented cult of St. Lucia
is more of a cult of her image than the worship of saint,while a version of the hagiographic
legend becomes a reference to a myth. That what, at first glance, appears to be contradictory,
is encountered on the ethical level of a symbolic structure. By the refering to an analysis
of the fundamental structure of those transmissions, with different contents but similar form
and meaning, the author demonstrates the symbolic continuum of elements characterising Syracuse
across the ages. The point of departure for such journeys was the ascertainment of the
"strangeness" of this place, disclosed by the omnipresent cult of St. Lucia and her pagan
companions in assorted aspects of culture. Their outcome assumed the form of co-existence of
the literary-metaphorical topos of Syracuse and its real, magical-ritual counterpart.
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What`s so to be Found in Wardrobe? Parallel Worlds of C. S. Lewis`s
Chronicles of Narnia (Part II)
The author attempts to analyze parallel worlds described by
Lewis in his Chronicles of Narnia and focuses particularly on the issue of passage from
one world to another. Having initially classified "other realities" of the Chronicles
into secondary and parallel worlds, the author concentrates on their status and characteristic
features of their spatiotemporality. Attention is then drown to magic places in which parallel
realities overlap or cohere which broad background allows to examine the mechanics of the
characters` passages from one world to another. This done in the light of the Eastern (and
partly medieval) theory of the elements: space, air, fire, water and earth.
In the main part of his work, the author proposes a classification
of all instances of passage between different worlds present in the Chrolicles into four
categories: direct volitional, indirect volitional, direct nonvolitional and indirect nonvolitional.
The division between volitional and nonvolitional passages is constructed upon the feelings
which present themselves to the characters during the procedure of passage, whereas the division
between direct and indirect ones - upon mutual relationship of the worlds between which the
passage takes place. Drawing on examples from the Chronicles, the author endeavours to
substantiate his thesis applying in his analyses the technique of gradation of sensory
impressions. back
Chair. A Sketch to a Portait
The author proposes a new and fresh look at this very ordinary,
familiar and tame object in our day life. A reference to poetry (Herbert, Białoszewski, Rymkiewicz
and Brodski) and to the examples from the fine arts (Bendnarski, Mickiewicz, Pągowska, Kantor)
shows that underneath the shell of ordinariness, automatic associations and modes of thinking about
a chair, there remains embedded an unrecognised, strange and mysterious reality.
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The Ball
What is a ball? The author tries to answer a question concerning the
nature of this question by reffering to the Ball, a poem by Rilke and to three short films
by Zbigniev Rybczyński: Tango, New Book and The Duel. She brings forth and
comments on motifs associated with the ball, from obvious ones such as sport and entertainment,
to metaphorical and symbolic ones: game, Life, motion and sacrum.
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Smoke
This impression was inspired by Smoke, the by Wayne Wang,
and ideas contained in, i.a. studies by M. Eliade, R. Barthes and B. Bettelheim. The resultant
long poem considers meetings of people bending over an album containing photographs of their
small homeland or last love, and bonded by cigarette smoke. The author follows the fate of the
heroes of Smoke by employing Freudian psychoanalysis and the outcome of research by the
American psychiatrist Rollo May. Resorting to tales and myths, she identifies conscious and
subconscious longings, wishes and strivings, which prove to be contemporary America`s "plead for
a myth". back
Cigarette and Ashtray
Cigarette advertisements suggest that we should choose between smoking
and health. With the text of a ministerial warning that accompanies advertisements as her point
of departure, the author recalls the historical origin of the appearance of this stimulant in
Europe and ensuing problems.
In a further part of her study, which refers to literary texts
(Sosnowski, Stasiuk, Baran, Swietlicki) and films (Smoke, Brooklin Boogie, Coffee
and Cigarettes), she discloses the metaphorical meaning connected with the cigarette.Emphasis
is placed on its ontology (permanence and illusiveness) and, chiefly, its paradoxical symbolic,
which combines the essence of vitality and reflection on death.
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Fumare Humanum Est. A brief lexicon of the Tobacco Stimulants
Around US.
Tobacco is omnipresent. It succumbs to culture as well as
creating it. Propagated or persecuted, it continues to exist, leaving no one indifferent. By
citing several ways of using tobacco (smoking, snuff, chewing) and intentionally exaggerated
examples, the author tries to draw attention to the whole gamut of "tobacco" behavior, full of
delicate hues and located between the two extremities. The article is a sample of an M.A.
dissertation written in the Chair of Ethnography and Cultural Anthropology at Warsaw University
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Green leaves in the Streets of Berlin
The text is the outcome of research conducted by a Summer School in
the Chair of European Ethnology at Humboldt University in Berlin. Already superficial studies on
the consumption of hemp products discovered a multi-aspect application. The stimulants obtained
from hemp (hashish and marijuana) are only a fragment of the extensive usage of hemp in Berlin.
Hemp is consumed in Berlin directly - as a stimulant, fabric and clothes, and a component of
paper, beverages, cosmetics, etc.,as well as in a symbolic dimension. The symbol of the hemp leaf
became, to a certain degree, a designate of a pro-ecological lifestyle which, according to
proposed self-definition, remains alternative vis a vis technical civilisation. Adherents of an
all-sided consumption of hemp argue that as a crop, hemp is "environment friendly", and as raw
material it has multiple (50 000) uses. The residents of Berlin are supplied with hemp products
(with the exception of stimulants) by rather numerous specialized shops (Hanf Hauses). The Berlin
Hemp Museum, opened in 1994, and a special unit of Green Party, which supports the legislation
of hemp as a stimulant, are examples of institutionalised interest in the positive aspects of the
consumption of this plant. back
Bus
According to Red Vonnegut a bus is a box for carring people from
one place to another. Applying such "objectivised" images of the bus present in art (i. a.
Nowa książka /New Book/- a film by Zbigniew Rybczyński, the paintings by Bronisław W. Linke
and the book by Red Vonnegut Na klęczkach /Kneeling/) as well as his own observation the author
proposes a cultural-sociological study of the phenomenon of the bus, and the behaviour and
customs associated with bus rides. back
"Vlepka" or the Interpretation of a Bus
"All faces on a bus look the same", claims a vlepka. A "vlepka" is
a sticker, with a short text, poem slogan or drawing, placed in the back of Warsaw buses. The
author describes this new phenomenon (1996-1998) of the local subcultures, drawing attention
to the places in which the vlepka appears (the back of the bus - the appraisal of the
rear...), the need for a community, which signifies also a common enemy (the "battle" waged by
the person placing the stickers and those tearing them off, reflected in the texts of particular
vlepkas) as well as unitentional reference to futuristic traditions.
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The Fleeing Art of Innocence
The author draws attention to vlepki, stickers bearing small
pictures and inscription, and placed in buses. Thanks to the activity of young creators,
municipal transport turns into a scene witnessing an exchange of thought. Olędzki examines the
undertaking of one of those groups,which is by no means restricted exclusively to buses and
appears in the streets. back
To and from Ostrowiec - via PKS
The leitmotif of the text are journeys by bus (the titular PKS)
between Warsaw and Ostrowiec Swiętokrzyski, made by the author (a Fulbtright Research Scholar)
for the purpose of gathering data for a film about her grandmother, a resident of Ostrowiec up to
emigration in 1923. Letters written in 1920-1923 to a husband seeking employment and a new home
in the U. S. A. and Canada constitute a source of inspiration for the film and important material
utilised therein. The presented text combines experience from those travels with more general
reflections about the fate of the Polish Jews and the traces, frequently enigmatic, of the once
thriving Jewish culture in Poland. back
Pluralis non maiastaticus, or the People as Things
At least from the time of Sapir and Whorf it is known that language
is a medium which acts as an intermediary of the relation between our consciousness and all that
which remains beyond it. This feature is particulary vivid in the case of assorted formes of the
emotive use of language, including its application in a magical or rhetorical function. The
author interprets a device known to scholars dealing with rhetorics, namely the so-called
pluralis,envisaged as an expression of a magical world outlook that is by no means a domain
exclusively of so-called traditional societies, but it present equally forcefully in modern and
postmodern culture, especially in the realm of politics. Pluralis appears as a rhetorical
costume for draping political clans in axiologically valorised meanings. On the one hand,
manipulation with the names of political opponents exhausts the symptoms of magical operations and,
on the other hand, comprises part of a larger whole, i. e. the political game, a contemporary
ritual of sorts. back
Escape into the Screen
This brief essay comments on the view expressed by Leszek
Kołakowski: "Who needs seventy television channels? Everyone, since it is manner way of fleeing
from absurdity into absurdity". The author considers where (and how)is it possible to seek refuge
in an era of omnipresent simulation and a postmodern world devoid of a cantre, and discusses the
nature of the absurdity which is the destination of the escape.
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On the Other Side of the Screen
The present texts deal with the Internet, virtual reality and other
phenomena associated with computer technology, showing that behind the computer screen there
starts a world which introduces its own spatial divisions and establishes its own laws. The
author describes the topography of this world and the ways of travelling across it.
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The Hyper-reality of Lara. The Lara of Hyper-reality
The author discusses Lara Croft, heroine of one of the most
popular computer games (Tomb Raider). This super agent, endowed with the extraordinary
physical prowess, is capable of taking all conditions and every enemy. Her admirers accentuate
her uncommon beauty - voluptuousness, a long braid, perfect make-up and fashion style: a silicone
blouse, shorts combat boots and a belt with an attached gun, with which she never parts. The
author considers the popularity of Lara, who appears on numerous Internet pages, in comic books,
a video clip and, in the near future, will star a film. In real life, she is enacted by an
English actress. Many girls pretend to the role of the earthy representative of Lara, and dream
about becoming her embodiment. The story about virtual heroine is also a pretext for reflection
on the phenomenon of hyper-reality (Baudrillard) and the relation between the text (in the wide
meaning of word) on the computer screen and the traditional text from the age of Gutenberg
galaxy. back
The Planet Diana - an Attempted Analysis of
Reaction to the Death of the Princess of Wales
An analysis dealing with the extraordinary phenomenon of worldwide
reactions to the death of Diana Spencer, Princess of Wales. The text is based on press reports from
the period immediately after the death of the Princess (31 August - 6 September 1997). The author
concentrates attention predominantly on individual reactions registered by reporters - the object
of the analysis are, therefore, quotations from official statements (speeches, condolence letters)
and the private comments and opinions, gathered from people in the street. Such material produces
an image of the Princess as a sui generis consumer commodity, a specific virtual creation
of the media. The attitudes accompaning her death (pseudo-religious adoration, the need to
confirm one`s own existence and a desperate search for community bonds) appear to be an attempt
at deceiving the emptiness generated by a confrontation of this "safe" creation with reality, the
concrete and irreversible fact of individual death.
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Audiophilia
In the article Audiophilia the author analyses the concept
of hyper-reality upon the example of the titular phenomenon. His reflections concern the
perception of hyper-reality owing to assorted reference systemes, i. a. semiological and
hermeneutic. back
A Visit in the Kingdom of Lilia
This realm is situated in a humble village cottage in the
Belorussian region of Polesie. Its queen is the native painter Lilia Szpakowska
(Shpakovskaya), who lives in an imaginary, fairy-tale world of her imagination.
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