Halina Poświatowska

Halina Poświatowska

cast metal commemoration with a statue likeness, installed in her hometown of Częstochowa
Born (1935-05-09)May 9, 1935
Częstochowa, Poland
Died October 11, 1967(1967-10-11) (aged 32)
Warsaw, Poland
Pen name Haśka
(more of an intimate diminutive form of Halina, used by her and those around her, rather than a true pseudonym)
Occupation Poet, Student of logic and philosophy
Genre Lyric
Literary movement 20th-century Polish post-WWII poetry
Notable works Hymn bałwochwalczy (1958),
Opowieść dla przyjaciela (1967, prose),
"Tańcząca Nina" [p. 19 in Wiersze Wybrane, Jan Zych, ed.],
"***('my nie wierzymy w piekło...')" [22],
"***('Jestem Julią...') [35],
"***('codziennie')" [352],
"W przestrzeni i czasie" [400]
"***('Kiedy Izolda umierała...')" [422]
Bajka o sówce, ktora w dzień spać lubiła (a 10-page poem fable in strict rhyme)

Halina Poświatowska (née Halina Myga, entered into church records as Helena Myga;[1] May 9, 1935 in Częstochowa, Poland October 11, 1967 in Warsaw, Poland) was a Polish poet and writer, one of the most important figures in modern/contemporary Polish literature.

Halina Poświatowska is famous for her lyrical poetry, and for her intellectual, passionate yet unsentimental poetry on the themes of death, love, existence, famous historical personages, especially women, as well as her mordant treatment of life, living, being, bees, cats and the sensual qualities of loving, grieving and desiring.

Biography

Her first heart operation was performed in Philadelphia, in 1958, her sea passage on the Polish ocean liner MS Batory, the costs of her stay, and the procedure itself, funded by monies gathered in collection by Polish-Americans, and was successful enough to enable her to live for nine more years. Instead of returning to Poland afterward, she enrolled at Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts, where she completed her undergraduate studies in 3 years, commencing with no command of the English language whatsoever. Then, turning down an offer of graduate admission with full financial support, extended to her by the faculty of Stanford University's Department of Philosophy, she returned to Poland, where she matriculated in Philosophy at the Jagellonian University, Kraków, and died before continuing on to complete the doctorate, as a 4th year student.

She died at 32 after a second heart operation, this time, performed in Poland, to correct an acquired chronic heart defect that limited her mobility and breathing, which befell her due to chronic chill as a 9-year-old child during the World War II German occupation of Poland.

Literary heritage

Her works have been collected in the four-volume Dzieła (Works), published by Wydawnictwo Literackie, Kraków, Poland, 1997, of which the first two volumes (several hundred pages) are poems, and the latter two prose and letters, respectively. She is the subject of several scholarly books and many reprints. Her popularity as a poet continues unabated in Poland, and new translations have increased her importance to world literature. If her own poem content, as well as her own poetry translations are any indication, she was influenced by Ezra Pound, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Federico García Lorca, Jacques Prévert, and a bevy of Slovene poets: Kajetan Kovič, Jože Udovič, Saša Vegri, Dane Zajc, as well as the classical Greek philosopher Aristotle, bees, cats, the color red, the texture of fur, Metropolitan Museum of Art's antiquity collections, and her contemporary Black American (Negro) city culture in particular, the people of New York City, in Harlem.

Notable translations (ad hoc collections)

Books and journals

Unpublished/Internet

References

  1. by the baptizing local diocese priest, over the objections of her family
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