Cudzoziemka
Cudzoziemka is a Polish psychological novel by Maria Kuncewiczowa, published as a book in 1936. Earlier, the novel appeared in episodes in the newspaper. Cudzoziemka is considered a classic of the interwar period of Polish literature. The novel was published in 1944 in an English translation by B. W. A. Massey.
Content
The protagonist, Róża Żabczyńska, was born in the half of 19th century in Taganrog, Russia, to a Polish family. As a girl, she is deeply affected by her ethnic differences. However, her alienation grows even bigger when she moves to Warsaw in order to take up violin lessons. She finds out that she is a stranger wherever she comes. The young girl experiences a dramatic love disappointment and then – as it later proves – an artistic failure.She decides to marry a man she does not love. Her family life is a losing streak. She descends into madness even harder a couple of years later, when her beloved son, Kazimierz, dies at an early age.
The womanly sensitivity of Róża, confronted with her life disappointments, turns her into a cruel wife and a mean mother, humiliating all the people around her.
The purpose of Cudzoziemka is to show the psychological truth about sorrow, and especially about woman's sorrow. On the other hand, the novel illustrates the art of narrative.