Adam Wawrosz
Adam Wawrosz | |
---|---|
Born | Końska, Austria-Hungary | 24 December 1913
Died | 18 December 1971 Třinec, Czechoslovakia | (aged 57)
Occupation | Poet, writer |
Language | Polish, Cieszyn Silesian dialect |
Citizenship | Czechoslovak |
Adam Wawrosz (24 December 1913 – 18 December 1971) was a Polish Czech poet, writer, and activist from the Trans-Olza region of Czechoslovakia. He is considered the most important writer of the folk literature of Cieszyn Silesia.[1]
Biography
Wawrosz was born in the village of Końska (now part of Třinec) to a tailor's family as the youngest of nine children. His father died in World War I and his mother was left with seven children. After the death of his father Wawrosz was raised in the village of Tyra, where he also attended local Polish primary school. Wawrosz later graduated from a course for tailors in Horní Suchá, and from a course in puppetry in Senieji Trakai.
After the outbreak of
Wawrosz wrote in literary Polish and Cieszyn Silesian dialect. Texts written in dialect form a backbone of his works. The ones written in literary Polish are mostly documentary in character, as some of them were written in concentration camps. The ones written in dialect focus on the life of ordinary people of Cieszyn Silesia, their life, culture and traditions. Wawrosz wrote poetry, prose and also plays for amateur theatres.
Wawrosz's poetry from the concentration camps can be seen for example in the poem Lato (Summer) from Niezapominajki (Forget-me-nots) poetry collection.
Works
- Niezapominajki (1954, 1968) – poetry collection
- Na śćmiywku (1959) – prose
- Z naszej nolepy (1969) – prose
- Z Adamowej dzichty (1977) – posthumous selection of his poetic and prosaic works
References
- ^ OCLC 233485106.
- OCLC 189531468. Archived from the originalon 2011-07-18. Retrieved 2010-01-23.
Further reading
- Sikora, Władysław (2008-05-27). "O Adamie Wawroszu". Głos Ludu. p. 3.
- Wawrosz, Adam (1954). Niezapominajki. Třinec: Biblioteka KZ RRZ.