Juliusz Słowacki's notebook from his travels to Greece and the East as a romantic open and syncretic work

translating a journey into poetry

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.60056/CCL.2022..41-58

Keywords:

Travel writing, Romanticism, Polish poetry, multimodal expression, transcultural dimension

Abstract

Juliusz Słowacki (1809-1849), together with Adam Mickiewicz, is one of the most important Polish Romantic poets. After the failure of the November Uprising (1830-1831), he lived in Western Europe as a political émigré. He was politically involved in the cause for Polish independence, while also being a profoundly European Romantic poet. He has been hugely influential on Polish literature, as well as on the national imagination of subsequent generations.

This article, resulting from a research and editing project dedicated to Słowacki’s travel notebook (raptularz), characterises the complex, syncretic nature of the Romanic oeuvre, unifying travel sketches and poetry writing into a highly personal, open whole. The poetry that comes into being during the poet's travel to Greece and the Orient is derived from a holistic experience of places and events. The scholarly work on the manuscript, its material aspect, and the implications of the encounter with the world of which it testifies opens a series of editing and research questions. The appreciation of the Romantic travel as an experience that finds a multimodal expression requires a transdisciplinary approach. On the other hand, Słowacki stands apart from other Polish writers of his time, who focused on consolidating the support for the cause of national independence; as a representative of a European margin, without an independent homeland, he occupies a distinct position in relation to other Oriental travellers; therefore, his work requires a transcultural approach.  

Author Biographies

  • Maria Kalinowska, University of Warsaw

    Maria Kalinowska is a professor at the Faculty of “Artes Liberales” of the University of Warsaw. She is the author of several books on Romantic literature and the Romantic reception of classical antiquity. These include Mowa i milczenie – romantyczne antynomie samotności [Speech and Silence: Romantic Antinomies of Solitude, 1989], Grecja romantyków. Studia nad obrazem Grecji w literaturze romantycznej [Greece of the Romantics: Studies on the Perception of Greece in Romantic literature, 1994], Los, miłość, sacrum. Studia o dramacie romantycznym i jego dwuziestowiecznej recepcji [Fate, Love, Sacrum: Studies on Romantic Drama and its Reception in the Twentieth Century, 2003], and a new edition of the poem Journey to the Holy Land from Naples by Juliusz Słowacki (2011). She headed a Philhellenic team to prepare publications on Philhellenism in Poland (2007, 2012) and on Sparta in Polish culture (2014, 2015).

  • Ewa A. Łukaszyk

    Ewa A. Łukaszyk is a comparativist and innovative theorist. From 1997 to 2018, she was employed at the leading Polish universities, Jagiellonian University in Kraków and the University of Warsaw (Faculty of “Artes Liberales”); currently, she has switched to the identity of itinerant, transnational scholar. She has recently been a Calouste Gulbenkian fellow in Portugal, a Marie Skłodowska-Curie fellow in France, a guest researcher at Leiden University in the Netherlands and, again in France, a fellow-in-residence at CY Advanced Studies. Her work puts in the limelight transcultural aspects, transgressive imagination and religious heterodoxies. She published several books, the most recent Mgławica Pessoa. Literatura portugalska od romantyzmu do współczesności [Nebula Pessoa. Portuguese literature from the Romanticism to the present, 2019].

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Published

2025-11-06

Issue

Section

I. TRANSLATION, CONTEXT, IMAGES

How to Cite

Juliusz Słowacki’s notebook from his travels to Greece and the East as a romantic open and syncretic work: translating a journey into poetry. (2025). Colloquia Comparativa Litterarum, 8, 41-58. https://doi.org/10.60056/CCL.2022..41-58