Tytuł pozycji:
Południowa Afryka nad Niemnem : transnarodowość w sercu krajów : przypadek "Heshels Kingdom" Dana Jacobsona
The paper investigates the representation of Central Europe and its hinterlands
in selected works by 20th-century South African writers. It pays special attention
to Dan Jacobson’s Heshel’s Kingdom about Jacobson’s travel to Lithuania in
search of the writer’s “middle-European” patrimony. Drawing on previously
unpublished archival records, the study argues that Jacobson’s book merges
Central European hinterlands (their histories, identities, landscapes) with South
African ones in a radical act of re-mapping both areas. The paper also insists
on recognising a distinctive mode of conflating Central Europe and South
Africa. This hinternational poetics annuls the existing imperial cartography
and builds transnational connections between different hinterlands and
their pasts. Additionally, the article demonstrates how the need to “unlearn”
imperial history allows for a geographic/spatial overlap between the “heart
of the country” and the “core of Europe,” as well as creation of a network of
transnational solidarity and implication across nations and ethnicities.