Published: 2020-02-071

“my body was opened for public view...” The Metaphorising of the Sick Body in the 20th- and 21st-Century Polish Poetry by Women

Beata Morzyńska-Wrzosek
Prace Literaturoznawcze
Section: Representations of the change of the 20th and 21st centuries
https://doi.org/10.31648/pl.4721

Abstract

This article discusses selected metaphors of the sick body used in the works of Polish female
poets in the 20th and 21st centuries. The analysis adopts the perspective of anthropological studies and
reveals that these metaphors function as a representation of essential aspects of one’s perception and of
an individual’s struggle to redefine their identity in a situation of health loss. The metaphorical expression
of the sick body is most often tangible and refers to the classic image of “a body as a container.”
As far as an indicating scope of imaging is concerned, one may find various types of metaphors which
characterise issues relating to the acts of breaking body boundaries as well as penetrating it, which is to
be viewed as the confirmation of going beyond the physicality of one’s existence.

Keywords:

contemporary Polish women’s poetry, anthropological reflection, the experience of disease, metaphors of the sick body

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Citation rules

Morzyńska-Wrzosek, B. (2020). “my body was opened for public view.” The Metaphorising of the Sick Body in the 20th- and 21st-Century Polish Poetry by Women. Prace Literaturoznawcze, (7), 233–250. https://doi.org/10.31648/pl.4721

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