Postcolonial Irony. The Language of Political Correctness as a Source of Polish Literary Fiction After 1989
The article argues that Polish post-1989 literature absorbed the language of numerous debates on controversial issues that have been present in the Polish public opinion for twenty-five years of democracy – including the phenomenon of the so-called “political correctness”. The basic rhetorical figure used in its defense by three writers – Mariusz Sieniewicz, Arthur Daniel Liskowacki and Joanna Bator – is an ironic quotation of hate speech. The author compares this phenomenon to the classic figure of post-colonial mimicry. In this case, the ethnocentric language of the communist regime would constitute the language of the colonizer. Literature, whose main character is the language of exclusion, provides a good study of how it helps constructing and dismantling the identity.
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Emilia Kledzik | [pdf] | [237 KB] |