Imre Kertész Kolleg Jena

Dr Mikołaj Kunicki

Fellow Mikołaj Kunicki

February - August 2018
e-mail mikunicki@gmail.com

Mikołaj Kunicki has been member of the Faculty of History at the University of Oxford since 2013. From 2013 to 2016 he was the director of Programme on Modern Poland and Senior Research Fellow at St Antony's College. Before coming to Oxford, he taught history at the University of Notre Dame and the University of California at Berkeley. Kunicki received his PhD in History from Stanford University in 2004. He also holds MA degrees from the University of Warsaw, Central European University in Budapest, and School of Slavonic and East European Studies in London. He is the author of Between the Brown and the Red: Nationalism, Catholicism and Communism in Twentieth Century Poland (Ohio University Press, 2012) as well as articles and book chapters on 20th-century Polish history, cinema, nationalism and contemporary politics.

Research project at the Kolleg

My project, Creating the New Past and Entertaining Patriots: National Communist Cinema in People's Poland, 1956-1970, is a single-authored monograph, which demonstrates how the party state legitimized itself through mainstream cinema, which blended nationalism and Marxism, didacticism and mass entertainment, often broadly obeying the Hollywood generic conventions. Across East Central Europe, popular war movies, historical epics and native versions of Westerns syncretized past and present, memory and myth, ethnocentric nationalism and socialist modernity, ideological gospel and consumerism. In Gomułka's Poland, these films magnified the role of home grown commmunists, utilized, however selectively, the Polish nationalist canon, and partly acknowledged and rehabilitated non-communist military and resisters. Focused on World War II and its aftermath, especially the absorption of the Western Territories annexed from Germany, this cinema promoted the founding myth of the communist regime in Poland and elsewhere in the Soviet bloc, that of the all-embracing and victorious anti-fascist struggle. Subjected to border shifts, population transfers and ethnic cleansing, People's Poland had new borders and ethnically homogeneous population. In this respect, the presence of the Western Territories on Polish movie screens was highly significant. The regime had to symbolically reclaim these lands by cultivating a 'pioneers' myth, which acknowledged not only the role of the Soviet and Polish military in the 'recovery' (rather than 'conquest') of the Western Territories, but, above all, that of settlers, people who came from different regions, class backgrounds and even political persuasions - Poles All. Germanophobia was one of the old propaganda constructs adopted by the Gomułka regime. After the signing of the mutual recognition treaty between the Federal Republic of Germany and People's Poland and the subsequent fall of Gomułka in December 1970, the production of national communist and anti-German actions movies dramatically decreased. My project investigates the link between popular culture and authoritarian politics, examining the relationship of the party state and filmmakers which oscillated between dictate, mutual accommodation, and negotiated autonomy. It also traces the erosion of institutional censorship and its replacement by what Miklós Haraszti defined as 'the velvet prison,' in which the state displayed a substantial permissiveness and occasionally co-opted dissent. It adds to conventional views on the relationship between popular culture and ideology in former communist states and encourages new lines of research in the fields of cultural history and film studies.

Main areas of research

  • Nationalism and National Communism in East Central Europe
  • Church-State relations and Catholic politics in People's Poland
  • Cultural history and film studies
  • Politics of history 

Positions and memberships

  • National Manager for the UK and researcher of UK, US and French collections in Horizon 2020 Project COURAGE: Cultural Resistance to Communism in East-Central Europe, 2016-2018
  • Director, Programme on Modern Poland, St Antony's College, University of Oxford, 2013-2016
  • Member of Polish Studies Association (PSA)
  • Member of Association for Slavic, East European and Eurasian Studies (ASEEES)
  • Member of European Network for Cinema and Media Studies (NECS)

Monograph

Mikołaj Kunicki,Between the Brown and the Red: Nationalism, Catholicism and Communism in 20th-Century Poland-The Politics of Bolesław Piasecki(Athens: Ohio University Press, 2012).

Articles (journals)

Mikołaj Kunicki, 'Optimism against All Odds: Polish National Identity in War Films of Jerzy Passendorfer',Sprawy Narodowościowe49 (2017).

Mikołaj Kunicki, 'A Church-State Conflict: Jerzy Kawalerowicz's Mother Joan of Angels and Cinematic Projections of Catholicism in Gomułka's Poland',Iluminace. Journal of Film Theory, History, and Aesthetics28:4 (2016): 5-23.

Mikołaj Kunicki, 'Heroism, Raison d'état, and National Communism: Red Nationalism in the Cinema of People's Poland',Contemporary European History21, no. 2 (2012): 235-256.

Mikołaj Kunicki, 'The Red and the Brown: Bolesław Piasecki, the Polish Communists, and the anti-Zionist Campaign in Poland, 1967-1968,"East European Politics and Society19, no. 2 (2005): 185-225.

Mikołaj Kunicki, 'Unwanted Collaborators: Leon Kozłowski, Władysław Studnicki, and the Problem of Collaboration among the Polish Conservative Politicians in World War II',European Review of History8, no. 2 (2001): 203-220.

Articles (books)

Mikołaj Kunicki, 'Poland's Wild West and East: Polish Westerns of the 1960s", inPopular Cinemas in Central Europe: Film Cultures and Histories, edited by Dorota Ostrowska, Zsuzsanna Varga and Francesco Pitassio (London and New York: I.B. Tauris, 2017): 157-172.

Mikołaj Kunicki, 'Pionere, Siedler und Revolverhelden: Die "Rückgewinnung" der Westgebite im Polnischen Spielfilm der 1960er-Jahre' inDer lange Weg nach Hause: Konstruktionen von Heimat im europäischen Spielfilm, edited by Dietmar Müller, Lars Karl and Katherina Seibert (Berlin: Metropol Verlag, 2014): 190-210.

Mikołaj Kunicki, 'Between Accommodation, Resistance, and Dialogue: Church-State Relations in Communist Poland, 1945-1989', inPeaceful Coexistence or Iron Curtain: Austria, Neutrality and Eastern Europe in the Cold War and Détente, 1955-1989(Vienna: LIT, 2009): 393-411.

Reviews

review of Robert E. Alvis,White Eagle Black Madonna: One Thousand Years of the Polish Catholic Tradition(New York: Fordham University Press, 2016) inSlavic Review4 (2017): 1079-1080.

review of Paul Brykczynski,Primed for Violence: Murder, Antisemitism, and Democratic Politics in Interwar Poland(Madison: The University of Wisconsin Press, 2016) inThe American Historical Review4 (2017): 1339-1340.

review of Halik Kochanski,The Eagle Unbowed: Poland and the Poles in the Second World War(London: Allen Lane, 2012) inCosmopolitan Review1-2 (2013).

review of Włodzimierz Borodziej,The Warsaw Uprising of 1944(Madison: The University of Wisconsin Press, 2006) inCanadian Slavonic Papers3-4 (2007): 397-400.