Precarious belonging: blindness,masculinity, and work in Polish young adult literature of the 1970s and 1980s |
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Authors: | Natalia Pamula |
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Affiliation: | 1. Center for Disability Studies, University at Buffalo (SUNY, Buffalo), Buffalo, NY, USA;2. University of Warsaw, Warsaw, Polandnpamula@buffalo.edu |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACTThis article explores the relationship between disability, identity, and productivity in two Polish young adult novels published under state socialism: Jak trudno kocha? (How difficult it is to love) and Spotkania (The meetings). How Difficult it is to Love by Jerzy Szczygie? (1976) tells the story of a young blind man who, after living many years “unproductively” with his mother, decides to study and work. Published in 1986, Klementyna So?onowicz-Olbrychska’s novel The Meetings also focuses on a blind male teenager who leaves his hometown to live with other blind students at a residential school where he plans a future profession. The two works are concerned with the processes of becoming disabled and becoming a part of the blind community. Crucially, it is productivity – the main value in a socialist state – that participates in the formation of disability identity and enables disabled men to form separate communities and workshops for disabled people. |
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Keywords: | Disability Poland socialism young adult literature work |
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