@article{3481d2ac-70e6-4a63-826a-19d47f36b339, author = {Joanna Zach }, title = {Whitman and Miłosz’s America}, journal = {Przekładaniec}, volume = {Issues in English}, number = {Issue 25/2011– Between Miłosz and Milosz}, year = {2013}, issn = {1425-6851}, pages = {81-89},keywords = {exile; the lyrical “I” and the “I” of dithyramb; fi nding a home in homelessness}, abstract = {This paper investigates the ambiguous process of Czesław Miłosz’s integration into America (both its nature and culture) in the context of his literary commitments and “private obligations” to American poetry. It was a long and painful process, a constant struggle with the state of exile, feelings of homelessness and uprootedness that fi nally showed the poet the “new identity” of the modern man, bound to recognise his unstable, tenuous position in space and time. According to Miłosz, America was a testing ground for all mankind, and the very core of American literature had always been the question: “Who am I?” Thus, Miłosz’s serious involvement in American history and culture gave him a new perspective on global civilisation; it helped him to recreate his own identity and to strike a balance between homelessness and belonging.}, doi = {10.4467/16891864ePC.13.017.1206}, url = {https://ejournals.eu/en/journal/przekladaniec/article/whitman-and-miloszs-america} }