Juliusz Kleiner

Juliusz Kleiner (April 24, 1886, Lwów March 23, 1957, Kraków) was a Polish historian and literary theorist.

Juliusz Kleiner
Born(1886-04-24)24 April 1886
DiedMarch 23, 1957(1957-03-23) (aged 70)
Academic background

Education and early life

Kleiner finished high school in Lwów and then studied Polish and German literature as well as philosophy at the University of Lwów. In 1908, Kleiner was awarded a doctorate in philosophy. In 1910 and 1911 he studied abroad in Germany and France.[1]

Working life

In 1912 he was habilitated at the University of Lwów. Between 1916 and 1920 he was a professor at University of Warsaw and after that at University of Lwów. Beginning in 1919 he was a member the Polish Academy of Sciences (PAU), from 1933 of the Polish Academy of Literature and from 1951 of Polish Academy of Sciences (PAN).

Second World War

During the Soviet occupation of Lwów he retained his position at the University, teaching one of the few remaining courses in Polish. In 1940 he succeeded in advocating his best scientific pupil Stefania Skwarczyńska to be released from labour camp in Kazakhstan. Then during the Nazi occupation, Skwarczyńska hid him as "Jan Zalutyński" in the Teleżyński family (Wilkołaz in Lublin area) and later in the Żółtowski family (Milejów).[2]

In 1940 and 1941, Juliusz Kleiner advocated for the release of a Polish woman who had been deported to a forced labour camp in Kazakhstan.[3]

After the war he settled in Lublin. Between 1944 and 1947 at the Catholic University of Lublin (now "John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin"). In 1947 he moved to Kraków and took a position at the Jagiellonian University.

Published works

  • "On Konrad Wallenrod", Twórczosc, No. 4, 1945[4]
  • Zarys Dziejów Literatury Polskiej 1963
  • Zarys Dziejow Literatury Polskiej Jezyka Polskiego Tom Drugi Wydanie II co-author Aleksander Bruckner, 1947
  • Sentymentalizm I Preromantyzm
  • Pojęcie idei u Berkeleya [The Concept of Idea in Berkeley] (in Polish). Lwów: Nakładem Polskiego Towarzystwa we Lwowie. 1910.

References

  1. "PAN Lublin". Pan-ol.lublin.pl. Retrieved 2013-10-08.
  2. "Maintenance Of Human-Fed Live Lice In The Laboratory And Production Of Weigl'S Exanthematous Typhus Vaccine". Lwow.com.pl. Retrieved 2013-10-08.
  3. "Death by a Thousand Cuts: SR, April 2003". Ruf.rice.edu. Retrieved 2013-10-08.
  4. Czeslaw Zgorzelski, 'Adam Mickiewicz in the Light of Postwar Polish Criticism: A Bibliographical Survey', American Slavic and East European Review, Vol. 7, No. 4, December 1948, pp. 369-373 at 371


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.