Józef Łobodowski
Józef Łobodowski | |
|---|---|
Łobodowski in 1938 | |
| Born | 19 March 1909 Purwiszki, Partitioned Poland |
| Died | 18 April 1988 (aged 79) Madrid, Spain |
| Pen name | Stefan Kuryłło Łoboda Iosif Władisławowicz Łobodowskij Paragraf |
| Occupation | Poet, dramatist, writer, translator, magazine editor, opinion journalist, radio personality |
| Nationality | Polish |
| Period | Interbellum Ciemne dziesięciolecie ("Dark Decade"; 1928–1939) Second World War Post-War period |
| Genre | Catastrophism (katastrofizm) Neo-romanticism Lyric poetry Ghazal Qasida Bagatelle (fraszka) Satirical poetry |
| Literary movement | Skamander The Second Avant-garde (Druga Awangarda) |
| Notable works | Rozmowa z ojczyzną ("A Conversation with the Fatherland"; 1935); Demonom nocy ("To the Demons of the Night"; 1936) |
| Notable awards | Youth Prize of the Polish Academy of Literature (1937) |
| Spouse | Jadwiga Laura Zofia Kuryłło (Marriage: 1938-03-01, Divorce: 1950-04-09) |
| Relatives | Władysława Łobodowska (b. 1905; married name (from 1927), Tomanek or Tomankowa; sister) Adam Tomanek (b. 1928; nephew) |
Józef Stanisław Łobodowski (19 March 1909 – 18 April 1988) was a Polish poet and political thinker.
His poetic works are broadly divided into two distinct phases: the earlier one, until about 1934, in which he was sometimes identified as "the last of the Skamandrites", and the second phase beginning about 1935, marked by the pessimistic and tragic colouring associated with the newly nascent current in Polish poetry known as katastrofizm (catastrophism). The evolution of his political thought, from the radical left to radical anticommunism, broadly paralleled the trajectory of his poetic oeuvre.
To the contemporary reading public Łobodowski was also known as the founder and editor of several avant-garde literary periodicals, of a newspaper, translator, novelist, prose writer in the Polish and Spanish languages, radio personality, and preeminently a prolific opinion writer with sharply defined political views active before, during and after the Second World War in the Polish press (since 1940 only in the émigré press). Łobodowski described himself as a Ukrainophile and devoted three of his books to Ukrainian themes, including two collections of poetry (Pieśń o Ukrainie and Złota hramota). He spoke out in defence of ethnic minorities in Poland before and after the Second World War, condemning for example the forced resettlement of the Lemko community in the so-called Operation Vistula mounted by the communist régime in 1947, or the destruction of churches built in the Eastern Orthodox architectural style out of favour in the Western-oriented Poland of the Interbellum. He denounced in print the anti-Jewish sentiment prevalent in some Polish literary circles before the War, defending for example the Polish poet Franciszka Arnsztajnowa against antisemitic attacks. An inveterate and caustic critic of totalitarianism in all its forms (except fascism), he was blacklisted by the communist censorship of the post-War Poland and spent most of his life in exile in Spain.