What is it about?
After the Second World War Brandys joined the Communist Party, became editor for a leading state-sponsored literary journal, and a devout socialist-realist defending communism in his writing. However through the 'thaw' of the mid-1950s his opinion shifted towards support for Revisionist critics of the régime.
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Why is it important?
This article considers two major works, Nierzeczywistosc (Polish Unreality, 1978) and Miesace (Warsaw Diaries, 1978-87), as detailed records of the inner life of the intellectual and creative community of post-war Poland. It sets Brandys's work in a specific Polish-Jewish literary-political context, and considers how his sense of 'otherness', of being an outsider at the margin of an acceptable Polish identity, permeates and informs his observations.
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This page is a summary of: Kazimierz Brandys's Warsaw Diaries, Contemporary European History, March 1998, Cambridge University Press,
DOI: 10.1017/s096077730000477x.
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