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New Insights Into Conrad and Poland
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03 June 2025

Despite the large number of publications on Joseph Conrad’s Polishness—including previous volumes of the series Conrad: Eastern and Western Perspectives—many questions remain. New Insights Into Conrad and Poland, edited by Wiesław Krajka, brings together a variety of thematic and methodological approaches in search of new insights. After the opening chapter, which comments on Polishness as studied in previous volumes of this series, contributions examine the life of Conrad and members of his close family; Conrad’s literary works in relation to Polish literature; Polish reception of his oeuvre, including adaptations and educational influence, as translations, as works of art, and in schools and popular culture; the Polish Jewish experience; and exilic feelings. The coda of the volume is a study that presents a view of Russia as antithetical to Polishness. Essays range across traditional biographical criticism, literary analysis and interpretation, comparison of Conrad’s literary works and their intertextual study with those by other authors and with other works of art, translation and adaptation studies, investigations of reception of literature and popular culture, archetypal criticism, and philosophical criticism. The book is volume 33 of the series Conrad: Eastern and Western Perspectives, edited by Wiesław Krajka.
CONTRIBUTORS: Wiesław Krajka, Lilia Omelan, Karol Samsel, Daniel Vogel, Ewa Kujawska-Lis, Olga Binczyk, Mirosława Buchholtz, Agnieszka Adamowicz-Pośpiech, James Mellor, John G. Peters.
LITERARY CRITICISM / European / Eastern (see also Russian & Soviet), LITERARY CRITICISM / European / English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh
Wiesław Krajka: Introduction
Wiesław Krajka: The Methodology of Studying Joseph Conrad Globally in the 21st Century. Reflections on the Publishing Strategy of the Series Conrad: Eastern and Western Perspectives
Lilia Omelan: Stefan Bobrowski: A Faithful Fighter for Poland’s Freedom
Lilia Omelan: Conrad’s Lwów
Karol Samsel: The Echoes of Polish Romanticism in Nostromo
Daniel Vogel: Conradian “heart of darkness” in Selected Science Fiction Works by Stanisław Lem: Solaris, Return from the Stars, and Fiasco
Ewa Kujawska-Lis: Janko Góral: The Polish Face of “Amy Foster” – between Translation, Appropriation, and Refraction
Wiesław Krajka: Social Archetypes of Identity in Joseph Conrad’s "Tomorrow,” One Day More, and Jutro by Baird, Hussakowski, and Sito
Olga Binczyk: First Encounters: Joseph Conrad on Reading Lists among Pre-
College Audiences
Mirosława Buchholtz: Digital Footprints: The Reception of “Jądro ciemności” (“Heart of Darkness”) on YouTube
Agnieszka Adamowicz-Pośpiech: Graphic Adaptations of “Heart of Darkness”
James Mellor: Schiffs and Spectators: John Auerbach and Joseph Conrad’s Orientations Home
John G. Peters: Russia and Nothingness in Joseph Conrad’s Writings
Index of Non-Fictional Names
Index of Conrad’s Works and Letters