Abstrakt: | The demand that the public sphere, including culture, should be depoliticized after the
transformations which took place in 1989 has proved to be baseless. Polish writers were
challenged with the task of describing the events from Polish history and the political, social,
cultural and economic changes that were taking place. Literature made an attempt to review
the previous system and this issue seemed to be interesting for writers with both conservative
and leftist views. One of the authors who delve into this kind of political novel is Bronisław
Wildstein, whose artistic work has been imbued with political disputes in which he speaks
out forcefully. It is not a cliché to call the novels of this writer and columnist fictionalized
political manifestos. Wildstein unwaveringly raises the issues of history and politics as the
things which determine our lives. Simultaneously, he refers to the tradition of prose analyzing
the responsibility for public events. The writer tries to critically review the Polish People’s
Republic (PRL) and its myths (including the Solidarity myth). Moreover, among the subjects
frequently discussed one may find media policy and the world of politics from the inside. |