
Saturday 21 October: 12:30pm - 1:30pm
Little Hall, Sidgwick Site, CB3 9DA
PART OF THE CAMBRIDGE FESTIVAL OF IDEAS
Dr Stanley Bill, Lecturer in Polish Studies, Department of Slavonic Studies, Faculty of Modern and Medieval Languages
In the twentieth century, Poland became the laboratory for two violent totalitarian experiments, suffering massive destruction and harsh oppression from both Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union. The unhealed wounds of this painful history are still strikingly present in both public debate and politics in Poland today. This talk examines different perspectives on historical ‘truth’ and the politics of history.
Stanley Bill is lecturer in Polish Studies at the University of Cambridge. He works largely on twentieth-century Polish literature and culture, with particular interests in religion, secularization theory, Polish-Ukrainian relations, and postcolonial interpretations of Polish cultural history. He has written on Czeslaw Milosz, Bruno Schulz, postcolonial theory in the Polish context, Polish Romanticism, as well as on religious problems in the novels of Fyodor Dostoevsky. He recently published a translation of Czeslaw Milosz's unfinished novel 'The Mountains of Parnassus' with Yale University Press.
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