ISBN-13: 9780820478661 / Angielski / Twarda / 2008 / 174 str.
Literary and Cultural Images of a Nation without a State applies Benedict Anderson s theory about the coherence of imagined communities by tracing how Galicia, the heart of Polish culture in the nineteenth-century which would never be an independent nation-state emerged as a historical and cultural touchstone with present-day significance for the people of Europe. After the Three Partitions and Poland s complete disappearance from Europe s political map, images of Poland arose to replace the lost kingdom with a national identity grounded in culture and tradition rather than in politics. This book examines the circumstances leading to Galicia s emergence as the imagined and representative center of Polish culture, juxtaposing the era s political realities with its literary texts to provide evidence of the cultural community that existed among ethnic Germans and Poles. Collectively, these images reflect a dialogue about Polish identity, and in consequence about the rise of a new European identity that did not correspond to ethnic nation-states but rather to a shared culture, history, and community that Galicia came to represent until its division between Poland and the Ukraine following World War I."