Skip to main navigation menu Skip to main content Skip to site footer

Vol. 62 No. 1 (2018): THE GENEALOGY OF SOCIAL DIVISIONS

Wokół lektur

The Revolution, Completed and Defended

DOI: https://doi.org/10.35757/KiS.2018.62.1.9
Submitted: April 18, 2021
Published: March 26, 2018

Abstract

The author disputes Leder’s idea in Prześniona rewolucja. Ćwiczenie z logiki historycznej [A Missed Revolution: Exercise in Historical Logic] (2014) that a great revolution, eliminating the “late feudalism” of the 19th century, occurred in Poland in the years 1939–1956 and that it happened because of the war’s destruction of the old social structures and the Nazi genocide of the Jewish population, that is, the bourgeois class, which was replaced in the years 1945–1956 by unconscious beneficiaries of the change. The beneficiaries were unaware, he writes, because the essence of the changes and their benefits never entered the social imaginary. The core of the author’s polemic is the claim that such change, which was conducted by force and by foreigners, can not be called a “revolution,” that is, the passage of society to modernity. Furthermore, the author claims that the great Polish revolution was conducted in full by the nation, by the peasant classes, in the years 1914–1922, and was popular and independence-oriented in nature. It was the continuation of the Polish independence uprisings of the 19th century, the result of changes in the social structure that had been occurring for years in the Polish lands, which were at the time divided between the partitioning states, and of deepening self-awareness among the people. The revolution was continued after Poland’s acquisition of independence in 1918. The Second World War, and foreign intervention, only disrupted that process.

References

  1. Benjamin Walter, 2003, Pasaże, tłum. Ireneusz Kania, Wydawnictwo Literackie, Kraków.
  2. Budyta-Budzyńska Małgorzata, 2014, Bezalternatywna, narzucona zmiana społeczna czy prześniona rewolucja?, „Kultura i Społeczeństwo”, nr 2.
  3. Gołębiowski Bronisław, 2015, Pokolenia ruchu ludowego, „Myśl Ludowa”, nr 7.
  4. Malia Martin, 2008, Lokomotywy historii. Zwroty w dziejach i kształtowanie nowoczesnego świata, Maria
  5. Grabska-Ryńska, Wydawnictwo Naukowe PWN, Warszawa.
  6. Paczkowski Andrzej, 1998, Pół wieku dziejów Polski 1939–1989, Wydawnictwo Naukowe PWN, Warszawa.
  7. Taylor Charles, 2001, Źródła podmiotowości. Narodziny tożsamości nowoczesnej, tłum. Marcin Gruszczyński i in., Wydawnictwo Naukowe PWN, Warszawa.
  8. Taylor Charles, 2010, Nowoczesne imaginaria społeczne, tłum. Adam Puchejda, Karolina Szymanich, Znak, Kraków.
  9. Słabek Henryk, 1983, Dzieje polskiej reformy rolnej, Książka i Wiedza, Warszawa.
  10. Słabek Henryk, 1998, O społecznej historii Polski, IH PAN, Warszawa.
  11. Sowa Andrzej Leon, 2011, Historia polityczna Polski 1944–1991, Wydawnictwo Literackie, Kraków.
  12. Zaremba Marcin, 2012, Wielka trwoga. Polska 1944–1947. Ludowa reakcja na kryzys, Znak–Instytut Studiów Politycznych PAN, Kraków.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Similar Articles

<< < 39 40 41 42 43 > >> 

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.