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Julian Tuwim

Julian Tuwim (13 September 1894 – 27 December 1953), known also under the pseudonym "Oldlen" as a lyricist,[1] was a Polish poet, born in Łódź, then part of the Russian Partition. He was educated in Łódź and in Warsaw where he studied law and philosophy at Warsaw University. After Poland's return to independence in 1918, Tuwim co-founded the Skamander group of experimental poets with Antoni Słonimski and Jarosław Iwaszkiewicz. He was a major figure in Polish literature, admired also for his contribution to children's literature. He was a recipient of the prestigious Golden Laurel of the Polish Academy of Literature in 1935.[2]

Julian Tuwim
Julian Tuwim
Born(1894-09-13)September 13, 1894
Łódź, Congress Poland
DiedDecember 27, 1953(1953-12-27) (aged 59)
Zakopane, Poland
OccupationPoet
NationalityPolish
Literary movementSkamander
Notable awardsGolden Laurel of the Polish Academy of Literature
SpouseStefania Tuwimowa (since 1919)
ChildrenEdward Tuwim-Woźniak Ewa Tuwim-Woźniak (adopted)[citation needed]
RelativesIrena Tuwim (sister, a poet herself)
Kazimierz Krukowski (cousin)

Life and work Edit

Tuwim was born into a family of assimilated Jews. The surname comes from the Hebrew tovim (טובים‎) meaning "good ones". His parents, Izydor and Adela, provided Julian with a comfortable middle-class upbringing. He was not a particularly diligent student and had to repeat the sixth grade. In 1905 the family had to flee from Łódź to Wrocław (Breslau) in order to escape possible repercussions following Izydor's involvement in the Revolution of 1905.

Initially, Tuwim's poetry, even more than that of the other Skamandrites, represented a decisive break with turn-of-the-20th-century mannerism. It was characterized by an expression of vitality, optimism, in praise of urban life. His poems celebrated everyday life in the city, with its triviality and vulgarity. Tuwim often used vernacular language in his work, along with slang as well as poetic dialogue.

 
Portrait of Tuwim by Witkacy.

His collections Czyhanie na Boga ("In Lurking for God"; 1918), Sokrates tańczący ("Dancing Socrates"; 1920), Siódma jesień ("Seventh Autumn"; 1922), and Wierszy tom czwarty ("Poems, Volume Four"; 1923) are typical of his early work. In his later collections – Słowa we krwi ("Words in the Blood"; 1926), Rzecz Czarnoleska ("The Czarnolas Matter"; 1929), Biblia cygańska ("The Gypsy Bible"; 1933) and Treść gorejąca ("A Burning Matter"; 1933) – Tuwim became restless and bitter, and wrote with fervour and vehemence about the emptiness of urban existence. He also drew more heavily from the romantic and classicist traditions, while perfecting his form and style, and becoming a virtuoso wordsmith.

 
Julian Tuwim Monument by sculptor Wojciech Gryniewicz

From the very beginning and throughout his artistic career, Tuwim was satirically inclined. He supplied sketches and monologues to numerous cabarets. In his poetry and articles, he derided obscurantism and bureaucracy as well as militaristic and nationalistic trends in politics. His burlesque Bal w Operze ("The Ball at the Opera"; 1936) is regarded as his best satirical poem.

In 1918, Tuwim co-founded the cabaret (comedy troupe) named Picador and worked as a writer or artistic director with many other comedy troupes, such as Czarny Kot (1917–1919), Quid pro Quo (1919–1932), Banda, Stara Banda (1932–1935), and finally Cyrulik Warszawski (1935–1939). Since 1924, Tuwim was a staff writer at Wiadomości Literackie where he wrote a weekly column titled Camera Obscura. He also wrote for the satirical magazine Szpilki.[3]

Tuwim displayed his caustic sense of humour and unyielding individuality in works such as "Poem in which the author politely but firmly implores the vast hosts of his brethren to kiss his arse." Here, Tuwim systematically enumerates and caricatures various personalities of the European social scene of the mid-1930s -- 'perfumed café intellectuals', 'drab socialists', 'fascist jocks', 'Zionist doctors', 'repressed Catholics' and so on, and ends every stanza by asking each to perform the action indicated in the title. The poem ends with a note to the would-be censor who would surely be tempted to expunge all mention of this piece for its breach of 'public standards.'

His poem Do prostego człowieka (To the Common Man), first published on 7 October 1929 in Robotnik, provoked a storm of attacks on Tuwim both from left-wing circles, which criticized the poem's "bourgeois expression of pacifist sentiment", and from right-wing groups which accused Tuwim of calling for the disarmament of the young state.[4]

Julian's aunt was married to Adam Czerniaków, and his uncle from his mother's side was Arthur Rubinstein.

World War II and after Edit

In 1939, at the beginning of World War II and the German occupation of Poland, Tuwim emigrated through Romania first to France, and after France's capitulation, to Brazil, by way of Portugal, and finally to the US, where he settled in 1942. In 1939–1941, he collaborated with the émigré weekly "Wiadomości Polskie", but broke off the collaboration due to differences in views on the attitude towards the Soviet Union. In 1942–1946, he worked with the monthly "Nowa Polska" published in London, and with leftist Polish-American newspapers. He was affiliated with the Polish section of the International Workers Organization from 1942. He was also a member of the Association of Writers From Poland (a member of the board in 1943).

 
Tuwim's grave in Warsaw's Powązki Cemetery.
 
Tuwim St. in Chrzanów

During this time he wrote "Kwiaty Polskie" (Polish Flowers), an epic poem in which he remembers with nostalgia his early childhood in Łódź. In April 1944 he published a manifesto, entitled "My, Żydzi Polscy" (We, Polish Jews).

Tuwim returned to Poland after the war in 1946 but did not produce much in Stalinist Poland. He died in 1953 at the age of 59 in Zakopane. Although Tuwim was well known for serious poetry, he also wrote satirical works and children's poems, for example Lokomotywa (The Locomotive [pl]; 1938, tr. 1940), translated into many languages.[5] He also wrote well-regarded translations of Pushkin and other Russian poets.[6][7]

Russian Soviet poet Yelizaveta Tarakhovskaya translated most of Tuwim's children's poetry into Russian.[citation needed]

Notable poems Edit

  • Czyhanie na Boga (Lurking for God, 1918)
  • Sokrates tańczący (Dancing Socrates, 1920)
  • Siódma jesień (The Seventh Autumn, 1921)
  • Wierszy tom czwarty (Poems, volume four, 1923)
  • Murzynek Bambo (The little black boy, Bambo, 1923 or 1924, published 1935)
  • Czary i czarty polskie (Sorcery and Deuces of Poland, 1924)
  • Wypisy czarnoksięskie (The Sorcery Reader, 1924)
  • A to pan zna? (And do you know this, sir?, 1925)
  • Czarna msza (Black Mass, 1925)
  • Tysiąc dziwów prawdziwych (A thousand true wonders, 1925)
  • Słowa we krwi (Words in the blood, 1926)
  • Tajemnice amuletów i talizmanów (Secrets of amulets and talismans, 1926)
  • Strofy o późnym lecie (stanzas on a late summer)
  • Rzecz czarnoleska (The Czarnolas affair, 1929)
  • Jeździec miedziany (The brazen rider, 1932)
  • Biblia cygańska i inne wiersze (The Gypsy Bible and other poems, 1932)
  • Jarmark rymów (The rhyme market, 1934)
  • Polski słownik pijacki i antologia bachiczna (The Polish drunk's lexicon and anthology of Bacchus, 1935)
  • Treść gorejąca (A Burning Matter, 1936)
  • Lokomotywa (The Locomotive, 1938)
  • Rzepka (The Turnip, 1938)
  • Bal w Operze (A ball at the opera, 1936, published 1946)
  • Kwiaty polskie (Flowers from Poland, 1940–1946, published 1949)
  • Pegaz dęba, czyli panoptikum poetyckie (Oaken Pegasus, or the poetical panoply, 1950)
  • Piórem i piórkiem (With pen and quill, 1951)

Tuwim's poems set to music Edit

  • Karol Szymanowski - Słopiewnie for voice and piano, op. 46bis (1921)
  • Witold Lutosławski - Piosenki dziecinne (Children's Songs) (1952); Spóźniony słowik (The overdue nightingale, 1947), O Panu Tralalińskim (About Mr. Tralalinski, 1947), for voice and piano (also arr. for orchestra)
  • Several of his poems were set to music by Zygmunt Konieczny and sung by Ewa Demarczyk, including "Tomaszów" and "Grande Valse Brillante" (this text is part of the Kwiaty Polskie poem, which references the Chopin composition several times)
  • Mieczysław Weinberg - Symphony No. 8 Polish Flowers, Op. 83 (1964)[8]
  • Krzysztof Meyer - Quartettino for voice, flute, cello and piano (1966); Symphony No. 2 (1967); Spiewy polskie (Polish Songs) for voice and orchestra (1974)
  • David Bruce - Piosenki for soprano, baritone and ensemble (2006) - setting of 11 songs. Piosenki at David Bruce's website
  • Akurat - Do Prostego Człowieka
  • Czesław Niemen - Wspomnienie
  • Marek Grechuta - Mandarynki i pomarańcze

Further reading Edit

  • Keane, Barry (2004) "Skamander. The Poets and Their Poetry.", Agade: Warszawa, ISBN 83-87111-29-5.
  • Mortkowicz-Olczakowa, Hanna (1961). "Bunt wspomnień." Państwowy Instytut Wydawniczy.

Notes and references Edit

  1. ^ Biographical notes at his song Co nam zostało z tych lat on YouTube
  2. ^ Julian Tuwim (1894-1953), 2012-04-26 at the Wayback Machine Qlturka.pl. Europejski Fundusz Rozwoju Regionalnego. Retrieved December 12, 2011.
  3. ^ "Julian Tuwim - poeta dla dzieci i dorosłych - "Ogólnopolski Katalog Szkolnictwa"". www.szkolnictwo.pl. Retrieved 2022-10-03.
  4. ^ (in English) Marci Shore (2006). Caviar and ashes: a Warsaw generation's life and death in Marxism, 1918-1968. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press. pp. 74–75. ISBN 978-0-300-11092-0. Retrieved 2009-10-19.
  5. ^ "Lokomotywa - interpretacja, środki stylistyczne, analiza - Julian Tuwim". poezja.org (in Polish). Retrieved 2022-10-03.
  6. ^ Mitzner, Piotr (2016). "At Home and Abroad. Julian Tuwim and the Russian Emigration". Acta Universitatis Lodziensis. Folia Litteraria Polonica. 36 (6): 111–128. doi:10.18778/1505-9057.36.08. ISSN 2353-1908.
  7. ^ "Julian Tuwim - biografia, wiersze, utwory". poezja.org (in Polish). Retrieved 2022-10-03.
  8. ^ Recorded by Naxos Records: "Naxos 8.572873". www.naxos.com.

External links Edit

  • at culture.pl
  • English translations of Julian Tuwim’s poetry
  • Julian Tuwim in English Translation (translated by Pacze Moj)
    • The ABCs ("Abecadło")
    • Bird ("Ptak")
    • Bird Radio ("Ptasie radio")
    • Birds Gossip ("Ptasie plotki")
    • Glasses ("Okulary")
    • Kitten ("Kotek")
    • Letters ("Litery")
    • Little River ("Rzeczka")
    • A Page from Human History ("Karta z dziejów ludzkości")
    • Scherzo
    • Storm (or Love) ("Burza (albo Miłość)")
    • Winter ("Zima")
  • Julian Tuwim We Polish Jews...
  • Julian Tuwim at poezja.org
  • Julian Tuwim: The Quirks and Dark Secrets of a Polish-Jewish Poet on Culture.pl

julian, tuwim, tuwim, redirects, here, other, uses, tuwim, disambiguation, september, 1894, december, 1953, known, also, under, pseudonym, oldlen, lyricist, polish, poet, born, Łódź, then, part, russian, partition, educated, Łódź, warsaw, where, studied, philo. Tuwim redirects here For other uses see Tuwim disambiguation Julian Tuwim 13 September 1894 27 December 1953 known also under the pseudonym Oldlen as a lyricist 1 was a Polish poet born in Lodz then part of the Russian Partition He was educated in Lodz and in Warsaw where he studied law and philosophy at Warsaw University After Poland s return to independence in 1918 Tuwim co founded the Skamander group of experimental poets with Antoni Slonimski and Jaroslaw Iwaszkiewicz He was a major figure in Polish literature admired also for his contribution to children s literature He was a recipient of the prestigious Golden Laurel of the Polish Academy of Literature in 1935 2 Julian TuwimJulian TuwimBorn 1894 09 13 September 13 1894Lodz Congress PolandDiedDecember 27 1953 1953 12 27 aged 59 Zakopane PolandOccupationPoetNationalityPolishLiterary movementSkamanderNotable awardsGolden Laurel of the Polish Academy of LiteratureSpouseStefania Tuwimowa since 1919 ChildrenEdward Tuwim Wozniak Ewa Tuwim Wozniak adopted citation needed RelativesIrena Tuwim sister a poet herself Kazimierz Krukowski cousin Contents 1 Life and work 2 World War II and after 3 Notable poems 4 Tuwim s poems set to music 5 Further reading 6 Notes and references 7 External linksLife and work EditTuwim was born into a family of assimilated Jews The surname comes from the Hebrew tovim טובים meaning good ones His parents Izydor and Adela provided Julian with a comfortable middle class upbringing He was not a particularly diligent student and had to repeat the sixth grade In 1905 the family had to flee from Lodz to Wroclaw Breslau in order to escape possible repercussions following Izydor s involvement in the Revolution of 1905 Initially Tuwim s poetry even more than that of the other Skamandrites represented a decisive break with turn of the 20th century mannerism It was characterized by an expression of vitality optimism in praise of urban life His poems celebrated everyday life in the city with its triviality and vulgarity Tuwim often used vernacular language in his work along with slang as well as poetic dialogue nbsp Portrait of Tuwim by Witkacy His collections Czyhanie na Boga In Lurking for God 1918 Sokrates tanczacy Dancing Socrates 1920 Siodma jesien Seventh Autumn 1922 and Wierszy tom czwarty Poems Volume Four 1923 are typical of his early work In his later collections Slowa we krwi Words in the Blood 1926 Rzecz Czarnoleska The Czarnolas Matter 1929 Biblia cyganska The Gypsy Bible 1933 and Tresc gorejaca A Burning Matter 1933 Tuwim became restless and bitter and wrote with fervour and vehemence about the emptiness of urban existence He also drew more heavily from the romantic and classicist traditions while perfecting his form and style and becoming a virtuoso wordsmith nbsp Julian Tuwim Monument by sculptor Wojciech GryniewiczFrom the very beginning and throughout his artistic career Tuwim was satirically inclined He supplied sketches and monologues to numerous cabarets In his poetry and articles he derided obscurantism and bureaucracy as well as militaristic and nationalistic trends in politics His burlesque Bal w Operze The Ball at the Opera 1936 is regarded as his best satirical poem In 1918 Tuwim co founded the cabaret comedy troupe named Picador and worked as a writer or artistic director with many other comedy troupes such as Czarny Kot 1917 1919 Quid pro Quo 1919 1932 Banda Stara Banda 1932 1935 and finally Cyrulik Warszawski 1935 1939 Since 1924 Tuwim was a staff writer at Wiadomosci Literackie where he wrote a weekly column titled Camera Obscura He also wrote for the satirical magazine Szpilki 3 Tuwim displayed his caustic sense of humour and unyielding individuality in works such as Poem in which the author politely but firmly implores the vast hosts of his brethren to kiss his arse Here Tuwim systematically enumerates and caricatures various personalities of the European social scene of the mid 1930s perfumed cafe intellectuals drab socialists fascist jocks Zionist doctors repressed Catholics and so on and ends every stanza by asking each to perform the action indicated in the title The poem ends with a note to the would be censor who would surely be tempted to expunge all mention of this piece for its breach of public standards His poem Do prostego czlowieka To the Common Man first published on 7 October 1929 in Robotnik provoked a storm of attacks on Tuwim both from left wing circles which criticized the poem s bourgeois expression of pacifist sentiment and from right wing groups which accused Tuwim of calling for the disarmament of the young state 4 Julian s aunt was married to Adam Czerniakow and his uncle from his mother s side was Arthur Rubinstein World War II and after EditIn 1939 at the beginning of World War II and the German occupation of Poland Tuwim emigrated through Romania first to France and after France s capitulation to Brazil by way of Portugal and finally to the US where he settled in 1942 In 1939 1941 he collaborated with the emigre weekly Wiadomosci Polskie but broke off the collaboration due to differences in views on the attitude towards the Soviet Union In 1942 1946 he worked with the monthly Nowa Polska published in London and with leftist Polish American newspapers He was affiliated with the Polish section of the International Workers Organization from 1942 He was also a member of the Association of Writers From Poland a member of the board in 1943 nbsp Tuwim s grave in Warsaw s Powazki Cemetery nbsp Tuwim St in ChrzanowDuring this time he wrote Kwiaty Polskie Polish Flowers an epic poem in which he remembers with nostalgia his early childhood in Lodz In April 1944 he published a manifesto entitled My Zydzi Polscy We Polish Jews Tuwim returned to Poland after the war in 1946 but did not produce much in Stalinist Poland He died in 1953 at the age of 59 in Zakopane Although Tuwim was well known for serious poetry he also wrote satirical works and children s poems for example Lokomotywa The Locomotive pl 1938 tr 1940 translated into many languages 5 He also wrote well regarded translations of Pushkin and other Russian poets 6 7 Russian Soviet poet Yelizaveta Tarakhovskaya translated most of Tuwim s children s poetry into Russian citation needed Notable poems EditCzyhanie na Boga Lurking for God 1918 Sokrates tanczacy Dancing Socrates 1920 Siodma jesien The Seventh Autumn 1921 Wierszy tom czwarty Poems volume four 1923 Murzynek Bambo The little black boy Bambo 1923 or 1924 published 1935 Czary i czarty polskie Sorcery and Deuces of Poland 1924 Wypisy czarnoksieskie The Sorcery Reader 1924 A to pan zna And do you know this sir 1925 Czarna msza Black Mass 1925 Tysiac dziwow prawdziwych A thousand true wonders 1925 Slowa we krwi Words in the blood 1926 Tajemnice amuletow i talizmanow Secrets of amulets and talismans 1926 Strofy o poznym lecie stanzas on a late summer Rzecz czarnoleska The Czarnolas affair 1929 Jezdziec miedziany The brazen rider 1932 Biblia cyganska i inne wiersze The Gypsy Bible and other poems 1932 Jarmark rymow The rhyme market 1934 Polski slownik pijacki i antologia bachiczna The Polish drunk s lexicon and anthology of Bacchus 1935 Tresc gorejaca A Burning Matter 1936 Lokomotywa The Locomotive 1938 Rzepka The Turnip 1938 Bal w Operze A ball at the opera 1936 published 1946 Kwiaty polskie Flowers from Poland 1940 1946 published 1949 Pegaz deba czyli panoptikum poetyckie Oaken Pegasus or the poetical panoply 1950 Piorem i piorkiem With pen and quill 1951 Tuwim s poems set to music EditKarol Szymanowski Slopiewnie for voice and piano op 46bis 1921 Witold Lutoslawski Piosenki dziecinne Children s Songs 1952 Spozniony slowik The overdue nightingale 1947 O Panu Tralalinskim About Mr Tralalinski 1947 for voice and piano also arr for orchestra Several of his poems were set to music by Zygmunt Konieczny and sung by Ewa Demarczyk including Tomaszow and Grande Valse Brillante this text is part of the Kwiaty Polskie poem which references the Chopin composition several times Mieczyslaw Weinberg Symphony No 8 Polish Flowers Op 83 1964 8 Krzysztof Meyer Quartettino for voice flute cello and piano 1966 Symphony No 2 1967 Spiewy polskie Polish Songs for voice and orchestra 1974 David Bruce Piosenki for soprano baritone and ensemble 2006 setting of 11 songs Piosenki at David Bruce s website Akurat Do Prostego Czlowieka Czeslaw Niemen Wspomnienie Marek Grechuta Mandarynki i pomaranczeFurther reading EditKeane Barry 2004 Skamander The Poets and Their Poetry Agade Warszawa ISBN 83 87111 29 5 Mortkowicz Olczakowa Hanna 1961 Bunt wspomnien Panstwowy Instytut Wydawniczy Notes and references Edit Biographical notes at his song Co nam zostalo z tych lat on YouTube Julian Tuwim 1894 1953 Archived 2012 04 26 at the Wayback Machine Qlturka pl Europejski Fundusz Rozwoju Regionalnego Retrieved December 12 2011 Julian Tuwim poeta dla dzieci i doroslych Ogolnopolski Katalog Szkolnictwa www szkolnictwo pl Retrieved 2022 10 03 in English Marci Shore 2006 Caviar and ashes a Warsaw generation s life and death in Marxism 1918 1968 New Haven Conn Yale University Press pp 74 75 ISBN 978 0 300 11092 0 Retrieved 2009 10 19 Lokomotywa interpretacja srodki stylistyczne analiza Julian Tuwim poezja org in Polish Retrieved 2022 10 03 Mitzner Piotr 2016 At Home and Abroad Julian Tuwim and the Russian Emigration Acta Universitatis Lodziensis Folia Litteraria Polonica 36 6 111 128 doi 10 18778 1505 9057 36 08 ISSN 2353 1908 Julian Tuwim biografia wiersze utwory poezja org in Polish Retrieved 2022 10 03 Recorded by Naxos Records Naxos 8 572873 www naxos com External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Julian Tuwim Julian Tuwim at culture pl English translations of Julian Tuwim s poetry To the simple man Archived 2018 03 06 at the Wayback Machine Do prostego czlowieka 1929 The Dancing Socrates Archived 2011 05 14 at the Wayback Machine Sokrates tanczacy translated by A Gilloe The Locomotive Archived 2011 05 14 at the Wayback Machine Lokomotywa translated by Walter Whipple The Saturday Night Song Archived 2011 05 14 at the Wayback Machine Grass Archived 2011 05 14 at the Wayback Machine Julian Tuwim in English Translation translated by Pacze Moj The ABCs Abecadlo Bird Ptak Bird Radio Ptasie radio Birds Gossip Ptasie plotki Glasses Okulary Kitten Kotek Letters Litery Little River Rzeczka A Page from Human History Karta z dziejow ludzkosci Scherzo Storm or Love Burza albo Milosc Winter Zima Julian Tuwim We Polish Jews Julian Tuwim at poezja org Julian Tuwim The Quirks and Dark Secrets of a Polish Jewish Poet on Culture pl Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Julian Tuwim amp oldid 1156971281, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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