@ARTICLE{Tyszkowska-Kasprzak_Elżbieta_The_2024, author={Tyszkowska-Kasprzak, Elżbieta}, volume={vol. LXXIII}, number={No 1}, pages={29-50}, journal={Slavia Orientalis}, howpublished={online}, year={2024}, publisher={Komitet Słowianoznawstwa PAN}, abstract={The article presents an analysis of the thread of Yelena Katishonok’s novel Jack Who Built the House (2021), related to the theme of the Katyn massacre. In exploring the context and method of incorporating historical material into a literary text, we proceed from the basic concepts of the “New Historicism”. In the narrative about the fates of modern heroes, the writer weaves a thread related to the history of Poland, namel the arrests of Polish officers in 1939, the Katyn massacre, the formation of the Polish Anders’ Army on the territory of the USSR and the commemoration of the victims in Katyn after the war. The fate of the character associated with this thread, Stanislaw Warzynski, is in many ways the biography of a Polish artist who survived in Katyn, Józef Czapski. Katishonok depicts not only memories of historical events, but above all the efforts of several generations to commemorate the victims.}, type={Artykuł}, title={The Тheme of the Katyn Мassacre in the Novel by Yelena Katishonok Jack Who Built the House}, URL={http://czasopisma.pan.pl/Content/132102/2024-01-SOR-02.pdf}, doi={10.24425/slo.2024.150659}, keywords={Katyn massacre, Yelena Katishonok, contemporary Russian prose, Russian emigration literature}, }