Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Stefan Kisielewski

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Stefan Kisielewski

Role
  
Writer


Education
  
University of Warsaw

Children
  
Waclaw Kisielewski

Stefan Kisielewski The Folly of Classical Liberalism The Imaginative


Died
  
September 27, 1991, Warsaw, Poland

Parents
  
Salomea Szapiro, Zygmunt Kisielewski

Music director
  
Tonight a City Will Die, An adventure in stripes, Turniej

Stefan kisielewski o politykach


Stefan Kisielewski (March 7, 1911 in Warsaw – September 27, 1991 in Warsaw, Poland), nicknames Kisiel, Julia Hołyńska, Teodor Klon, Tomasz Staliński, was a Polish writer, publicist, composer and politician, and one of the members of Znak, one of the founders of the Unia Polityki Realnej, the Polish libertarian and conservative political party.

Contents

Stefan Kisielewski The Conspiracyquot A Danger to the Soul The Imaginative

Stefan kisielewski o socjalizmie wywiad z roku 1987


Biography

Stefan Kisielewski Portret Stefana Kisielewskiego quotWielcy ludzie wolnociquot

Kisielewski was born to a Polish father Zygmunt Kisielewski and a Jewish mother Salomea Szapiro.

Stefan Kisielewski Stefan Kisielewski KisielStef Twitter

In 1927 he entered the State Conservatory of Music in Warsaw, where he received three diplomas: in theory (1934, under Kazimierz Sikorski), in composition (1937, also under K. Sikorski) and in pedagogical piano (1937, under Jerzy Lefeld). He also studied Polish literature and philosophy at Warsaw University and completed his composition studies in Paris, in the years 1938–39.

Stefan Kisielewski Fryderyk Chopin Centrum Informacji Stefan Kisielewski

As a composer, Kisielewski remained firmly rooted in French neo-classicism, although his writings supported contemporary musical trends in Poland more broadly (Thomas 2001).

His writing and political thought were generally marked by pragmatism and support for liberalism.

In 1968, for criticizing censorship in communist Poland (at the meeting of the Polish Writers' Union he used the designation 'dyktatura ciemniaków' – 'a dictatorship of dunces' – which became famous in Poland), he was forbidden to publish for three years. He was also beaten up by so-called "unknown perpetrators" (a euphemism for perpetrators of criminal acts of political violence who in all likelihood were members of the Communist secret police). In 1981 he coined the sentence "It's not a crisis, it's a result" to describe the down turn of the Polish economy at that time as a result of socialism. Another one of his famous statements was "socialism heroically overcomes difficulties unknown in any other system", referring to the fact that many of the economic and social ills found under socialism were self-created.

In 1990, together with the magazine Wprost, he established the Kisiel Prize.

Music essays

  • Gwiazdozbiór muzyczny (1958),
  • Muzyka i mózg (1974)
  • Political essays

  • Polityka i sztuka (1949),
  • Felietony zdjęte przez cenzurę – Warszawa 1998
  • Rzeczy małe – Warszawa 1998
  • Dzienniki – Warszawa 1997 (wydanie II)
  • 100 razy głową w ścianę (Paryż 1972), Warszawa 1997
  • Wołanie na puszczy – Warszawa 1997
  • Testament Kisiela – Warszawa 1992
  • Abecadło Kisiela – Warszawa 1990
  • Na czym polega socjalizm? Stosunki Kościół-Państwo w PRL – Poznań 1990 (wydanie II)
  • Kisiel przedwojenny – Warszawa 2001.
  • Various essays

  • Rzeczy małe (1956),
  • Opowiadania i podróże (1959),
  • Z literackiego lamusa (1979),
  • Materii pomieszanie (Londyn 1973),
  • Moje dzwony trzydziestolecia (Chicago 1978).
  • Novels

  • Sprzysiężenie (1947),
  • Zbrodnia w dzielnicy Północnej (1948).
  • Widziane z góry i Cienie w pieczarze (1971),
  • Romans zimowy (1972),
  • Śledztwo (1974),
  • Ludzie z akwarium (1976),
  • Przygoda w Warszawie (1977).
  • Wszystko inaczej – Warszawa 1991 (wydanie IV)
  • Musical compositions

  • Capriccio energico, for violin and piano (1956)
  • Concerto, for chamber orchestra (1948)
  • Concerto, for piano and orchestra (1980–91)
  • Cosmos I, for orchestra (1970)
  • Danse vive, for piano (1939)
  • Dialogi, for 14 instruments (1970)
  • Divertimento, for flute and string orchestra (1964)
  • Impresja kapryśna, for flute alone (1982)
  • Intermezzo, for clarinet and piano (1951)
  • Kaprys wiejski [Rustic Caprice], for piano (1952)
  • Kołysanka [Lullaby], for piano (1968)
  • Melodia kurpiowska [Kurpian Melody], for female chorus and folk ensemble (1951)
  • Perpetuum mobile, for orchestra (1955)
  • Podróż w czasie [A Journey in Time], for string orchestra (1965)
  • Rapsodia wiejska [Rustic Rhapsody], for chamber orchestra (1950)
  • Serenade, for piano (1945, rev. 1974)
  • Signały sportowe [Sports Signals], overture (1966)
  • Sonata, for clarinet and, piano (1972)
  • Sonata no. 1, for piano
  • Sonata no. 2, for piano (1945, rev. 1955)
  • Spotkania na pustyni [Meetings in a Desert], for ten players (1969)
  • String Quartet (1935)
  • Suite, for flute and clarinet (1961)
  • Suite, for oboe and piano (1954)
  • Suite, for piano (1955)
  • Symfonia w kwadracie [Symphony in a Square], for orchestra (1978)
  • Symphony no. 1 (1939, lost)
  • Symphony no. 2 (1951)
  • Symphony, for 15 players (1961)
  • 3 sceny burzliwe [Three Stormy Scenes], for piano (1983)
  • References

    Stefan Kisielewski Wikipedia