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Documents en rayon : 8

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Résumé : Au gré de sept promenades, de Cracovie à Zakopane, le lecteur découvre différentes facettes de l'art en Pologne, à travers l'architecture, la peinture, la sculpture et l'art décoratif.

Résumé : Modeste ouvrier de Wolbrom, petite ville polonaise située près de Cracovie et d'Auschwitz, Josef Erlich fait vivre de l'intérieur le déroulement de ce jour sacré durant lequel se tisse le lien entre le Juif et son Dieu. La préparation du shabbat commence dès le jeudi et s'achève le samedi soir par une cérémonie qui distingue le jour sacré des autres.

Résumé : Raconter un pays, c'est raconter sa vie dans un pays. Dans cette balade cracovienne, ce sont les voix de quelques poètes qui surtout tinteront hors de la rumeur ambiante et scanderont le tempo de la marche.

Résumé : Unfinished Utopia is a social and cultural history of Nowa Huta, dubbed Poland's "first socialist city" by Communist propaganda of the 1950s. Work began on the new town, located on the banks of the Vistula River just a few miles from the historic city of Kraków, in 1949. By contrast to its older neighbor, Nowa Huta was intended to model a new kind of socialist modernity and to be peopled with "new men," themselves both the builders and the beneficiaries of this project of socialist construction. Nowa Huta was the largest and politically most significant of the socialist cities built in East Central Europe after World War II; home to the massive Lenin Steelworks, it epitomized the Stalinist program of forced industrialization that opened the cities to rural migrants and sought fundamentally to transform the structures of Polish society.Focusing on Nowa Huta's construction and steel workers, youth brigade volunteers, housewives, activists, and architects, Katherine Lebow explores their various encounters with the ideology and practice of Stalinist mobilization by seeking out their voices in memoirs, oral history interviews, and archival records, juxtaposing these against both the official and unofficial transcripts of Stalinism. Far from the gray and regimented landscape we imagine Stalinism to have been, the fledgling city was a colorful and anarchic place where the formerly disenfranchised (peasants, youth, women) hastened to assert their leading role in "building socialism"—but rarely in ways that authorities had anticipated.

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