Encyclopedia

Przybyszewski, Stanislaw

The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Przybyszewski, Stanisław

 

Born May 7, 1868, in Łojewo, Kujawy; died Nov. 23, 1927, in Jaronty, Kujawy. Polish writer.

Przybyszewski studied architecture and medicine in Berlin in 1889–90. His first literary essays, prose, poems, and symbolist and naturalistic novels were written in German and later translated into Polish. Noteworthy novels of this period include The Requiem Mass (1893; Polish translation, 1901) and The Children of Satan (1897; Polish translation, 1899). In 1898 he moved to Kraków, where he became the leader of the Polish modernist movement, publishing a manifesto of antirealistic and antidemocratic art entitled “Confiteor” in the magazine życie in 1899. Influenced by F. Nietzsche, Przybyszewski’s philosophical and aesthetic program was also expressed in his symbolist dramas For the Sake of Happiness (1900), Guests (1901), The Golden Fleece (1901), and Snow (1903).

WORKS

Wybor pism. Wrocław, 1967.
In Russian translation:
Poln. sobr. soch., vols. 1–10. Moscow, 1905–11.

REFERENCES

Istoriia pol’skoi literatury, vol. 2. Moscow, 1969. Pages 13–17.
Hutnikiewicz, A. “Stanislaw Przybyszewski.” In Obraz literatury polskiej XIX i XX wieku. Warsaw, 1967. Pages 107–52. (With bibliography.)
The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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